2005 UEFA Champions League Final

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2005 UEFA Champions League Final
Final2005.jpg
Event 2004–05 UEFA Champions League
Liverpool won 3–2 on penalties
Date 25 May 2005
Venue Atatürk Olympic Stadium, Istanbul
Man of the Match Steven Gerrard (Liverpool)
Referee Manuel Mejuto González (Spain)
Attendance 70,024
2004
2006

The 2005 UEFA Champions League Final was the final match of the 2004–05 UEFA Champions League, Europe's primary club football competition. The showpiece event was contested between Liverpool of England and Milan of Italy at the Atatürk Stadium in Istanbul, Turkey on 25 May 2005. Liverpool, who had won the competition four times, were appearing in their sixth final, and their first since 1985. Milan, who had won the competition six times, were appearing in their second final in three years and tenth overall.

Each club needed to progress through the group stage and knockout rounds to reach the final, playing 12 matches in total. Liverpool finished second in their group behind 2004 runners-up Monaco and subsequently beat Bayer Leverkusen, Juventus and Chelsea to progress to the final. Milan won their group ahead of Barcelona and faced Manchester United, Internazionale and PSV Eindhoven before reaching the final.

Milan were regarded as favourites before the match and took the lead within the first minute through captain Paolo Maldini. Milan striker Hernán Crespo added two more goals before half-time to make it 3–0. In the second half Liverpool launched a comeback and scored three goals in a dramatic six-minute spell to level the scores at 3–3, with goals from Steven Gerrard, Vladimír Šmicer and Xabi Alonso. The scores remained the same during extra time, and a penalty shootout was required to decide the champions. The score was 3–2 to Liverpool when Andriy Shevchenko's penalty was saved by Liverpool goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek. Thus Liverpool won their fifth European Cup, were awarded the trophy permanently, and claimed the UEFA Badge of Honour.

Widely regarded as one of the greatest finals in the competition's history,[1][2][3] the match is often referred to as the "Miracle of Istanbul".[4][5][6]

Contents

[edit] Route to the final

Teams qualified for the Champions League group stage, either directly or through three preliminary rounds, based on both their position in the preceding domestic league and the strength of that league.[7] Each club needed to progress through the group stage and knockout rounds to reach the final, playing 12 matches in total. Liverpool finished second in their group behind 2004 Champions League runners-up AS Monaco and subsequently beat Bayer Leverkusen, Juventus and Chelsea to progress to the final. Milan won their group ahead of Barcelona and faced Manchester United, Inter Milan and PSV Eindhoven before reaching the final.[8] Liverpool entered the competition in the third qualifying round after finishing fourth in the 2003–04 FA Premier League. They faced Austrian side Grazer AK and won the first leg 2–0 at Grazer after two goals from captain Steven Gerrard. They lost the second leg 1–0 at Anfield but progressed to the group stage by virtue of winning the tie 2–1 on aggregate. Milan entered the competition in the group stage after winning Serie A. The group stages were contested as eight double round-robin groups of four teams, the top two qualifying for the knockout stages.[9] Knockout ties were decided based on home and away matches.[10]

Milan Round Liverpool
Opponent Result Legs Qualifying phase Opponent Result Legs
Third qualifying round[11] Austria Grazer AK 2–1 0–1 home; 2–0 away
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Italy Milan 6 4 1 1 10 3 +7 13
Spain Barcelona 6 3 1 2 9 6 +3 10
Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk 6 2 0 4 5 9 −4 6
Scotland Celtic 6 1 2 3 4 10 −6 5
Group stage[12][13]
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
France AS Monaco 6 4 0 2 10 4 +6 12
England Liverpool 6 3 1 2 6 3 +3 10
Greece Olympiacos 6 3 1 2 5 5 0 10
Spain Deportivo 6 0 2 4 0 9 −9 2
Opponent Result Legs Knockout stage Opponent Result Legs
England Manchester United 2–0 1–0 away; 1–0 home First knockout round[14] Germany Bayer Leverkusen 6–2 3–1 home; 3–1 away
Italy Internazionale 5–0 2–0 home; 3–0 away Quarter-finals[15] Italy Juventus 2–1 2–1 home; 0–0 away
Netherlands PSV Eindhoven 3–3 (a) 2–0 home; 1–3 away Semi-finals[16] England Chelsea 1–0 0–0 away; 1–0 home

[edit] Build-up

The Atatürk Olympic Stadium, which hosted the final for the first time.

The 2005 final was the sixth time Liverpool had reached the final and it was their first appearance since the 1985 European Cup Final, when they lost 1–0 to Juventus and were subsequently banned from European competition for an indefinite period due to the Heysel Stadium Disaster. They had previously won the European Cup on four occasions in 1977, 1978, 1981 and 1984. The match was Milan's tenth appearance in the final. They had won on six occasions (1963, 1969, 1989, 1990, 1994, 2003), and lost three times (1958, 1993, 1995). In total the teams had participated in 14 finals between them.[17] Prior to the game, Milan were assured of entering the Champions League next season after finishing second in Serie A.[18] Liverpool meanwhile had failed to finish in the top four in the Premier League, and had to win the final to enter the competition the following season. Even if they did win the match, they were not assured of a place after UEFA failed to confirm whether they would allow Liverpool to defend the championship.[19] The Football Association supported Liverpool, stating, "We have already submitted a written request to have an additional place, should they win the Champions League".[20] Milan manager Carlo Ancelotti had his own view on the situation: "I think a team that wins should have the right to defend it but we may just do the English federation a favour and solve this".[21]

Each team was allocated 20,000 tickets for the final, out of a total of 69,500. UEFA auctioned 7,500 tickets for the final through its website, while another 14,500 were distributed to its "football family". The Turkish Football Federation also had 7,500 tickets available for fans from their country, but there were concerns these tickets would be sold on the black market. Hotel rooms in the city were scarce, with the 100,000 available quickly booked by travel agents and fans.[22] 30,000 Liverpool fans made the trip to Istanbul, but only 20,000 were expected to have tickets. The BBC reported early arrivals were lively but there was no violence and the mood between the two fans was friendly.[23]

Milan were regarded as favourites and their team included many players who had experienced success in the competition. The most notable was captain Paolo Maldini, who had won the competition four times previously, all with Milan, and Clarence Seedorf who had won the competition three times with three different clubs. Liverpool had been considered underdogs throughout the competition, but had beaten more favoured opposition, including Juventus and Chelsea, to reach the final. Liverpool manager Rafael Benítez acknowledged this: "Maybe Milan are favourites, but we have confidence, and we can win".[24] Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger felt Liverpool would win the match: "I fancy Liverpool as Milan look jaded physically and certainly mentally, by losing the title, I think they have never had a better chance than now to beat Milan". Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher was not so optimistic stating that the Liverpool side were not as good as the one that had won the UEFA Cup in 2001: "No disrespect to the squad we have got now but it is obvious we are not as strong as we were when we won the UEFA Cup in 2001. Back then we had a settled team and that season when we went into games against Barcelona and Roma, we always felt we were as good as them".[25]

Milan were expected to field a 4–4–2 formation, and there was much speculation about who would partner Andriy Shevchenko in attack. Filippo Inzaghi and Jon Dahl Tomasson were touted, but it was expected that on-loan striker Hernán Crespo would be chosen. This was echoed by Milan manager Ancelotti: "I will not say if he will play from the start, but he will definitely play".[24] Liverpool were also expected to adopt a 4–4–2 formation. Dietmar Hamann was expected to start ahead of Igor Bišćan, and when questioned over whether Djibril Cissé or Milan Baroš would start as main striker, Benítez replied, "Both are good enough, maybe both can play, why not?"[24]

[edit] Match

[edit] First half

Liverpool fielded a 4–4–1–1 formation, with the surprise inclusion in the squad being Harry Kewell, who played just behind Milan Baroš, who himself had been picked ahead of Djibril Cissé. The inclusion of Kewell meant Dietmar Hamann was left on the substitutes' bench and Xabi Alonso and Steven Gerrard started in the centre of midfield. Milan fielded a 4–4–2 diamond formation, with Hernán Crespo preferred to Jon Dahl Tomasson and Filippo Inzaghi, who was not included in the match day squad. Liverpool lined up in their red home kit, whilst Milan wore a changed strip of all white. Liverpool won the toss and kicked off.[26][27]

Milan scored within the first minute of the match after captain Paolo Maldini volleyed in an Andrea Pirlo free kick that had been conceded by Djimi Traoré. The goal made Maldini the oldest scorer in the history of the competition.[27] Liverpool responded almost immediately; John Arne Riise, who was picked out by a corner kick from Steven Gerrard, hit a volley from the edge of the penalty box. His shot was cleared only for Gerrard to cross in from the right wing, which Sami Hyypiä headed towards goal producing a save out of Dida. Milan almost extended their lead in the 13th minute, after Crespo's header was cleared off the goal line by Luis García. A few minutes later, Liverpool made a substitution after Harry Kewell picked up a groin injury; he was replaced by Vladimír Šmicer. Soon after, Kaká passed through to Andriy Shevchenko who put his shot past Liverpool goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek, but Shevchenko was adjudged to have been in an offside position and the goal did not stand. Shevchenko had another chance to score a few minutes later; after being played onside by Traore, his shot was saved by Dudek after he came under pressure from the Liverpool defence. Luis García had two chances to score following Shevchenko's shot; the first shot from the edge of the penalty area went well over the crossbar and after he was headed through by Baroš his next shot went wide. Straight after this attack, Crespo went through on goal only to be flagged for offside. Almost immediately after this, Liverpool had a penalty claim turned down after Alessandro Nesta allegedly handballed. Milan countered and scored; Kaka dribbled the ball into the Liverpool half and passed to Shevchenko, who passed to Crespo at the far post to score and make it 2–0. Minutes later, Crespo extended Milan's lead with a chip over Dudek after Kaka provided the assist.[26]

[edit] Second half

At the start of the second half, Liverpool made a substitution with Dietmar Hamann replacing Steve Finnan. Following this, they decided to play three in defence and five in midfield in an attempt to reduce the deficit. Liverpool had the best chance early on with Xabi Alonso sending an effort from 35 yards (32 m) narrowly past Milan's right hand post. Two minutes later, Andriy Shevchenko had a strong free kick from just outside the Liverpool box saved. A minute after this, Liverpool scored through captain Steven Gerrard, who headed in John Arne Riise's cross. Soon afterwards, Liverpool scored again; Vladimír Šmicer beat Dida in the Milan goal to leave Liverpool a goal behind. Three minutes after Šmicer's goal Liverpool were awarded a penalty, after Steven Gerrard was judged to have been fouled by Gennaro Gattuso. Xabi Alonso's penalty was saved, but he scored from the rebound to equalise for Liverpool. Milan and Liverpool had chances to take the lead after this, but Clarence Seedorf and Riise failed to score.

Milan almost took the lead in the 70th minute, after Dudek dropped a low cross towards Shevchenko, whose effort was cleared off the line by Traore. Gerrard then had a chance to score but he sent his shot over the crossbar. About ten minutes later García could not control a pass from Gerrard which led to a Milan attack, Crespo played the ball back to Kaka, whose subsequent shot was blocked by Jamie Carragher. A number of substitutions were made before the end of full time with Liverpool replacing Milan Baroš with Djibril Cissé, while Milan replaced Hernán Crespo and Clarence Seedorf with Jon Dahl Tomasson and Serginho respectively. Milan had the last chance before full time but Kaka failed to direct Jaap Stam's header towards goal, meaning the final would go to extra time for the 13th time in the competition's history.[28]

[edit] Extra time

Liverpool kicked off the first half of extra time. Pirlo had a chance in the early stages, but he put his shot over the crossbar. Tomasson came close in the later stages of the first period of extra time, but he could not make contact with the ball. Vladimir Šmicer required treatment for cramp towards the end of the first period, as a number of Liverpool players felt fatigued. Liverpool had the most of the early exchanges after winning two corners, but could not score. Shortly afterwards, Milan make their final substitution replacing Gennaro Gattuso with Rui Costa. The best chance of the second half came near the end when Shevchenko shot at goal. Dudek saved only for it to rebound back out to Shevchenko, who again shot from under 6 yards (5.5 m), which Dudek again saved by pushing the shot over the bar. Liverpool had one last chance at the end of extra time, but John Arne Riise's free kick shot was blocked and following this the referee signalled the end of extra time, which meant a penalty shootout would decide the championship.[28]

[edit] Penalties

Liverpool and Milan had each won their last European Cups after winning penalty shootouts, and it was also the second time in three years that the final would be decided in such a way.[27] Milan were first to take a penalty, but Serginho shot over the crossbar after attempts from Jerzy Dudek to distract him, which mimicked Bruce Grobbelaar's "spaghetti legs" antics during the shootout in the 1984 final. Dietmar Hamann took Liverpool's first penalty and, despite having a broken toe,[29] he scored to put Liverpool 1–0 up. Andrea Pirlo was next for Milan, and his penalty was saved by Dudek who dived to his right. Cisse then scored his penalty to put Liverpool 2–0 up. Tomasson scored Milan's next penalty to make the score 2–1 in Liverpool's favour. Riise was next for Liverpool, but his penalty was saved by Dida. Kaka then scored the subsequent penalty to level the scores at 2–2. Vladimír Šmicer took the next Liverpool penalty, and he scored to give them a one goal advantage. Shevchenko, who had scored the winning penalty in the 2003 final, then had to score or Liverpool would win.[30] He hit his penalty straight down the middle of the goal. Dudek went down to his right, but blocked the shot with his left hand. Liverpool thus won the penalty shootout by a score of 3–2.[26][28]

[edit] Details

25 May 2005
21:45 EEST
Milan Italy 3–3 (a.e.t.) England Liverpool Atatürk Olympic Stadium, Istanbul
Attendance: 70,024
Referee: Manuel Mejuto González (Spain)
Maldini Goal 1'
Crespo Goal 39'44'
Report
[31][32]
Gerrard Goal 54'
Šmicer Goal 56'
Alonso Goal 60'
  Penalties  
Serginho Missed (hit crossbar)
Pirlo Missed (saved)
Tomasson Scored
Kaká Scored
Shevchenko Missed (saved)
2–3 Scored Hamann
Scored Cissé
Missed (saved) Riise
Scored Šmicer
Milan
Liverpool
GK 1 Brazil Dida
RB 2 Brazil Cafu
CB 31 Netherlands Jaap Stam
CB 13 Italy Alessandro Nesta
LB 3 Italy Paolo Maldini (c)
DM 21 Italy Andrea Pirlo
RM 8 Italy Gennaro Gattuso Substituted off in the 112th minute 112'
LM 20 Netherlands Clarence Seedorf Substituted off in the 86th minute 86'
AM 22 Brazil Kaká
CF 7 Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko
CF 11 Argentina Hernán Crespo Substituted off in the 85th minute 85'
Substitutes:
GK 46 Italy Christian Abbiati
DF 4 Georgia (country) Kakha Kaladze
DF 5 Italy Alessandro Costacurta
MF 10 Portugal Rui Costa Substituted on in the 112th minute 112'
MF 24 France Vikash Dhorasoo
MF 27 Brazil Serginho Substituted on in the 86th minute 86'
FW 15 Denmark Jon Dahl Tomasson Substituted on in the 85th minute 85'
Manager:
Italy Carlo Ancelotti
Milan vs Liverpool 2005-05-25.svg
GK 1 Poland Jerzy Dudek
RB 3 Republic of Ireland Steve Finnan Substituted off in the 46th minute 46'
CB 23 England Jamie Carragher Booked in the 75th minute 75'
CB 4 Finland Sami Hyypiä
LB 21 Mali Djimi Traoré
DM 14 Spain Xabi Alonso
RM 10 Spain Luis García
CM 8 England Steven Gerrard (c)
LM 6 Norway John Arne Riise
SS 7 Australia Harry Kewell Substituted off in the 23rd minute 23'
CF 5 Czech Republic Milan Baroš Booked in the 81st minute 81' Substituted off in the 85th minute 85'
Substitutes:
GK 20 England Scott Carson
DF 17 Spain Josemi
MF 16 Germany Dietmar Hamann Substituted on in the 46th minute 46'
MF 18 Spain Antonio Núñez
MF 25 Croatia Igor Bišćan
FW 9 France Djibril Cissé Substituted on in the 85th minute 85'
FW 11 Czech Republic Vladimír Šmicer Substituted on in the 23rd minute 23'
Manager:
Spain Rafael Benítez

Man of the Match:
England Steven Gerrard (Liverpool)
Assistant referees:
Spain Clemente Plou (Spain)
Spain Oscar Samaniego (Spain)
Fourth official:
Spain Arturo Dauden Ibáñez (Spain)

Match rules

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Seven named substitutes.
  • Maximum of three substitutions.

[edit] Statistics

First half[33]
Milan Liverpool
Goals scored 3 0
Total shots 7 5
Shots on target 5 1
Ball possession 56% 44%
Corner kicks 2 1
Fouls committed 8 7
Offsides 5 1
Yellow cards 0 0
Red cards 0 0
Second half and extra time[31]
Milan Liverpool
Goals scored 0 3
Total shots 15 10
Shots on target 5 6
Ball possession 54% 46%
Corner kicks 8 3
Fouls committed 8 16
Offsides 2 4
Yellow cards 0 2
Red cards 0 0
Overall[34]
Milan Liverpool
Goals scored 3 3
Total shots 22 15
Shots on target 10 7
Ball possession 55% 45%
Corner kicks 10 4
Fouls committed 16 23
Offsides 7 5
Yellow cards 0 2
Red cards 0 0

[edit] Post-match events

By winning the European Cup for a fifth time, Liverpool earned the privilege of wearing the UEFA badge of honour and the right to keep the trophy (under normal competition rules, the winning club can keep the trophy for only 10 months, as they must deliver it to UEFA two months before the next year's final). The 2005–06 participants competed for a new (identical) trophy.[35] The rule to keep the trophy which had been in effect since the 1968–69 season[36] was changed for 2009-10 so that the actual trophy remained with UEFA at all times, thus Liverpool was the fifth and last club to have accomplished this feat.[37]

The Liverpool team parading the Champions League trophy in Liverpool city centre in the wake of their victory.

Liverpool celebrated their victory by parading the trophy around Liverpool in an open-top double-decker bus the day after the final. They were cheered by approximately 1 million supporters, with an estimated 300,000 fans located around St George's Hall – the final destination of the parade. Business experts estimated that one in five workers took time off following the victory. It was also estimated that Liverpudlians drank around 10,000 bottles of champagne after the match, with supermarket chain Sainsbury's stating: "We've never seen anything like it. We would usually expect to sell this much champagne at Christmas".[38]

The European Champion Clubs' Cup trophy won by Liverpool in Istanbul, on display in the club's museum a few weeks after the match.

Liverpool manager Rafael Benítez admitted after the match that the manner of his side's victory had stunned him and he stated: "My problem is that I don't have words to express the things that I feel at this moment".[39] Benítez was also prepared to break up his winning side after the final with a number of players expected to leave the club to make way for new arrivals. One of those leaving was Vladimír Šmicer, who had scored Liverpool's second goal in Istanbul.

Milan were similarly astonished at the manner in which they had lost the final. Manager Carlo Ancelotti said, "We had six minutes of madness in which we threw away the position we had reached until then".[40] The result compounded Milan's failure to win Serie A a week before the match. Milan's vice-president, Adriano Galliani, played down the loss, asserting: "Even if we come second in the league, and second in the Champions League, this is not a disastrous season for us". Captain Paolo Maldini was less optimistic, stating that the reverse was a "huge disappointment", but he added that Milan would accept the defeat and "go out with their heads high".[41]

Much discussion after the final centered around the future of Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard who had been linked with a move to rivals Chelsea. Gerrard stated in the immediate aftermath of the victory, "How can I think of leaving Liverpool after a night like this?"[42] Media reports then quoted Gerrard as saying he wished to leave Liverpool, citing events that had occurred in the month after the Champions League victory as the reason. On 6 July, however, Liverpool chief executive Rick Parry released a statement confirming that Gerrard would remain at the club,[43] and Gerrard signed a new four-year contract on 8 July.[44]

Despite winning the competition, Liverpool's place in next season's Champions League was still in doubt. Prior to the 2005 Champions League Final, the FA had decided on 5 May that only the top four finishers in the Premier League would qualify and Liverpool ended their domestic season in 5th place behind Everton. UEFA initially maintained that each country could only have four Champions League spots and suggested that the FA could nominate Liverpool instead of Everton.[45] Liverpool faced a three-week wait to discover if they would be allowed to defend their title. UEFA came to a decision on 10 June, confirming that both Everton and Liverpool would be able to compete in the Champions League; however Liverpool were entered into the first qualifying round, and were given no "country protection"; meaning they could face another English club at any stage of the competition.[46] The UEFA Executive Committee also amended the regulations for future competitions so that the holders would have the right to defend their title and therefore qualify automatically, though at the expense of the lowest placed team in those countries that had more than one qualifier.[35]

As champions, Liverpool faced CSKA Moscow (winners of the 2005 UEFA Cup Final) in the 2005 UEFA Super Cup, held on 26 August. Liverpool won the match 3–1 after extra time.[47] Liverpool's victory in Istanbul also meant they qualified for the 2005 FIFA Club World Championship. Liverpool beat Deportivo Saprissa 3-0 in the semi-final, and played Copa Libertadores champions São Paulo in the final, losing 1–0 after having three goals disallowed.[48]

[edit] References

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