1989–90 UEFA Cup

1989–90 UEFA Cup
Tournament details
Dates9 August 1989 – 16 May 1990
Teams65
Final positions
ChampionsItaly Juventus (2nd title)
Runners-upItaly Fiorentina
Tournament statistics
Matches played128
Goals scored329 (2.57 per match)
Attendance2,464,303 (19,252 per match)
Top scorer(s)Falko Götz (Köln)
Karl-Heinz Riedle (Werder Bremen)
6 goals each

The 1989–90 UEFA Cup was the 19th season of the UEFA Cup, the secondary club football competition organised by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). The final was played over two legs at the Stadio Comunale Vittorio Pozzo, Turin, Italy, and at the Stadio Partenio, Avellino, Italy. The competition was won by Juventus, who defeated fellow Italian team Fiorentina by an aggregate result of 3–1 to claim their second UEFA Cup title.

This was the first final between two Italian sides in the UEFA competitions history and the third between two clubs of the same country. This was the fifth and final season in which all English clubs were banned from European football competitions

Association team allocation

[edit]

A total of 65 teams from 31 UEFA member associations participated in the 1988–89 UEFA Cup. 63 teams entered from the first round, competing over six knock-out rounds, while two other teams competed in a preliminary round.

The association ranking based on the UEFA country coefficients is used to determine the number of participating teams for each association:

  • Associations 1–3 each have four teams qualify.
  • Associations 4–8 each have three teams qualify.
  • Associations 9–21 each have two teams qualify.
  • Associations 22–32 each have one team qualify.

Due to the ongoing English ban, their first birth was allocated to association 9, gaining a third birth. As two associations were tied for 10th place in the UEFA rankings, both of them qualified a third team for a preliminary round, whose winner would take the remaining English birth in the first round.

Association ranking

[edit]

For the 1989–90 UEFA Cup, the associations are allocated places according to their 1988 UEFA country coefficients, which takes into account their performance in European competitions from 1983–84 to 1987–88.

Association ranking for 1989–90 UEFA Cup
Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
1 Italy Italy 41.082 4
2 Soviet Union Soviet Union 37.550
3 West Germany West Germany 36.165
4 Spain Spain 34.799 3
5 Belgium Belgium 31.800
6 Portugal Portugal 28.183
7 Scotland Scotland 27.700
8 Netherlands Netherlands 26.633
9 Austria Austria 26.500
=10 France France 23.200
=10 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia 23.200
12 England England 22.094 0 [Note ENG]
13 Sweden Sweden 21.500 2
14 Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 21.300
15 Romania Romania 20.466
16 East Germany East Germany 18.750
17 Greece Greece 17.916
Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
18 Hungary Hungary 17.500 2
19 Switzerland Switzerland 15.000
20 Finland Finland 13.664
- Wales Wales 13.000 0 [Note WAL]
21 Poland Poland 12.750 2
22 Bulgaria Bulgaria 11.916 1
23 Denmark Denmark 10.916
24 Albania Albania 9.666
25 Turkey Turkey 7.999
26 Norway Norway 6.666
27 Cyprus Cyprus 6.332
28 Northern Ireland Northern Ireland 4.999
29 Iceland Iceland 3.999
30 Republic of Ireland Republic of Ireland 2.665
31 Malta Malta 1.666
32 Luxembourg Luxembourg 1.665
  • ^
    England: Since the Heysel Stadium disaster in 1985, all English football clubs were placed under an indefinite ban by Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) from all European competitions, which would be lifted in 1990–91. As England was twelfth in the UEFA rankings after three years of ban had been tabulated, their two births were to be transferred as a third birth for associations 9 and 10. While the first one went to Austria, both France and Yugoslavia were tied as the association 10. Therefore, both countries were awarded a third birth for a special preliminary round to obtain the remaining spot in the first round. In England, League Cup winners Nottingham Forest and Norwich City would have qualified by league position. Had England retained the four European places it held before the ban, Derby County and Tottenham Hotspur would have also qualified.
  • ^
    Wales: There was no national league in Wales before 1992 and the only competition organised by the Football Association of Wales was the Welsh Cup so Wales had just a single participant in European competitions, the winner (or best placed Welsh team as several English teams also competed) of the Welsh Cup which competed in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup. Its virtual ranking is only an original research, because the UEFA country ranking was only used to allocate the UEFA Cup spots at time, so Wales was not included.
  • Teams

    [edit]

    The labels in parentheses show how each team qualified for competition:

    • TH: Title holders
    • CW: Cup winners
    • CR: Cup runners-up
    • LC: League Cup winners
    • 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, etc.: League position
    • P-W: End-of-season European competition play-offs winners
    Qualified teams for 1989–90 UEFA Cup
    First round
    Italy Napoli (2nd)TH Italy Juventus (4th) Italy Atalanta (6th) Italy Fiorentina (P-W)
    Soviet Union Dynamo Kyiv (2nd) Soviet Union Spartak Moscow (4th) Soviet Union Žalgiris Vilnius (5th) Soviet Union Zenit (6th)
    West Germany Köln (2nd) West Germany Werder Bremen (3rd) West Germany Hamburg (4th) West Germany Stuttgart (5th)
    Spain Valencia (3rd) Spain Atlético Madrid (4th) Spain Zaragoza (5th) Belgium RFC Liège (3rd)
    Belgium Club Brugge (4th) Belgium Antwerp (5th) Portugal Porto (2nd) Portugal Boavista (3rd)
    Portugal Sporting CP (4th) Scotland Aberdeen (2nd) Scotland Dundee United (4th) Scotland Hibernian (5th)
    Netherlands Ajax (2nd) Netherlands Twente (3rd) Netherlands Feyenoord (4th) Austria Austria Wien (3rd)
    Austria Rapid Wien (4th) Austria First Vienna (5th) France Paris Saint-Germain (2nd) France Sochaux (4th)
    Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade (2nd) Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Rad (4th) Sweden IFK Göteborg (3rd) Sweden Örgryte (4th)
    Czechoslovakia Baník Ostrava (2nd) Czechoslovakia Plastika Nitra (3rd) Romania Victoria București (3rd) Romania Flacăra Moreni (4th)
    East Germany Karl-Marx-Stadt (3rd) East Germany Hansa Rostock (4th) Greece Olympiacos (2nd) Greece Iraklis (4th)
    Hungary MTK (3rd) Hungary Videoton (4th) Switzerland Sion (3rd) Switzerland Wettingen (4th)
    Finland Kuusysi (2nd) Finland RoPS (3rd) Poland Katowice (2nd) Poland Górnik Zabrze (3rd)
    Bulgaria Vitosha Sofia (2nd) Denmark Næstved (2nd) Albania Apolonia (4th)[Note ALB] Turkey Galatasaray (3rd)
    Norway Lillestrøm (2nd) Cyprus Apollon Limassol (2nd) Northern Ireland Glentoran (2nd) Iceland ÍA (3rd)
    Republic of Ireland Dundalk (2nd) Malta Valletta (2nd) Luxembourg Jeunesse Esch (2nd)
    Preliminary round
    France Auxerre (5th) Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dinamo Zagreb (5th)[Note YUG]

    Notes

    1. ^
      Albania: Partizani finished second in the 1988–89 Albanian National Championship, but couldn't compete in the UEFA Cup, as it was serving a 4-year ban from European competitions, which was eventually reduced to two years. The ban was imposed in late 1987, due to the violent play against Benfica in the first round of the 1987–88 European Cup, and its subsequent disqualification. Apolonia, the next-best team not yet qualified for European competition, took its spot in the UEFA Cup.
    2. ^
      Yugoslavia: Hajduk Split finished third in the 1988–89 Yugoslav First League, but it was banned in November 1987 from entering any UEFA competition for two seasons, due to crowd trouble during the club's 1987–88 European Cup Winners' Cup second round return leg against Marseille, which came after repeated prior incidents at Hajduk's European home matches throughout early-to-mid 1980s. The ban was only enacted on seasons where Hadjuk Split would've qualified for European competition, with this being the first instance. Dinamo Zagreb, the next-best team not yet qualified for European competition, took its spot in the UEFA Cup.

    Schedule

    [edit]

    The schedule of the competition was as follows. Matches were scheduled for Tuesdays and Wednesdays, with each legs of both semifinals now being held over consecutive days. Matches for the first and second round were held on Tuesdays, while other rounds were held on Wednesdays, except for the Antwerp vs Stuttgart match-up in the third round.

    Schedule for 1989–90 UEFA Cup
    Round First leg Second leg
    Preliminary round 9 August 1989 23 August 1989
    First round 12 September 1989 26 September 1989
    Second round 17 October 1989 31 October 1989
    Third round 21–22 November 1989 5–6 December 1989
    Quarter-finals 7 March 1990 21 March 1990
    Semi-finals 3–4 April 1990 17–18 April 1990
    Final 2 May 1990 16 May 1990

    Preliminary round

    [edit]
    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    Auxerre France 3–2 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dinamo Zagreb 0–1 3–1

    First leg

    [edit]
    Auxerre France0–1Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dinamo Zagreb
    Report Šuker 79'

    Second leg

    [edit]
    Dinamo Zagreb Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia1–3France Auxerre
    Panadić 54' Report Kovács 33'
    Otokoré 36', 57'
    Attendance: 28,471
    Referee: Ulf Eriksson (Sweden)

    Auxerre won 3–2 on aggregate.

    First round

    [edit]
    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    Austria Wien Austria 4–0 Netherlands Ajax 1–0 3–0
    Vitosha Sofia Bulgaria 3–4 Belgium Antwerp 0–0 3–4
    Apollon Limassol Cyprus 1–4 Spain Zaragoza 0–3 1–1
    Aberdeen Scotland 2–2 (a) Austria Rapid Wien 2–1 0–1
    Hibernian Scotland 4–0 Hungary Videoton 1–0 3–0
    Atlético Madrid Spain 1–1 (1–3 p) Italy Fiorentina 1–0 0–1 (a.e.t.)
    Valencia Spain 4–2 Romania Victoria București 3–1 1–1
    Kuusysi Finland 2–3 France Paris Saint-Germain 0–0 2–3
    RoPS Finland 2–1 Poland GKS Katowice 1–1 1–0
    Auxerre France 8–0 Albania Apolonia 5–0 3–0
    Sochaux France 12–0 Luxembourg Jeunesse Esch 7–0 5–0
    Iraklis Greece 1–2 Switzerland Sion 1–0 0–2
    Glentoran Northern Ireland 1–5 Scotland Dundee United 1–3 0–2
    ÍA Iceland 1–6 Belgium RFC Liège 0–2 1–4
    Atalanta Italy 0–2 Soviet Union Spartak Moscow 0–0 0–2
    Valletta Malta 1–7 Austria First Vienna 1–4 0–3
    Lillestrøm Norway 1–5 West Germany Werder Bremen 1–3 0–2
    Twente Netherlands 1–4 Belgium Club Brugge 0–0 1–4
    Górnik Zabrze Poland 2–5 Italy Juventus 0–1 2–4
    Sporting CP Portugal 0–0 (3–4 p) Italy Napoli 0–0 0–0 (a.e.t.)
    Porto Portugal 4–1 Romania Flacăra Moreni 2–0 2–1
    Köln West Germany 5–1 Czechoslovakia Plastika Nitra 4–1 1–0
    Stuttgart West Germany 3–2 Netherlands Feyenoord 2–0 1–2
    Örgryte Sweden 2–7 West Germany Hamburg 1–2 1–5
    Wettingen Switzerland 5–0 Republic of Ireland Dundalk 3–0 2–0
    Galatasaray Turkey 1–3 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade 1–1 0–2
    Dynamo Kyiv Soviet Union 6–1 Hungary MTK 4–0 2–1
    Zenit Leningrad Soviet Union 3–1 Denmark Næstved 3–1 0–0
    Žalgiris Vilnius Soviet Union 2–1 Sweden IFK Göteborg 2–0 0–1
    Rad Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 2–3 Greece Olympiacos 2–1 0–2
    Karl-Marx-Stadt East Germany 3–2 Portugal Boavista 1–0 2–2 (a.e.t.)
    Hansa Rostock East Germany 2–7 Czechoslovakia Baník Ostrava 2–3 0–4

    First leg

    [edit]
    Austria Wien Austria1–0Netherlands Ajax
    Degeorgi 18' Report
    Attendance: 10,000

    Vitosha Sofia Bulgaria0–0Belgium Antwerp
    Report

    Apollon Limassol Cyprus0–3Spain Zaragoza
    Report Juanito 44' (pen.)
    Pardeza 73'
    Pablo Alfaro 84'
    Attendance: 6,490


    Hibernian Scotland1–0Hungary Videoton
    Mitchell 25' Report


    Valencia Spain3–1Romania Victoria București
    Toni 36'
    Fenoll 48'
    Flores 71'
    Report Coraș 61'

    Kuusysi Finland0–0France Paris Saint-Germain
    Report

    RoPS Finland1–1Poland GKS Katowice
    Tiainen 43' Report Kubisztal 2'

    Auxerre France5–0Albania Apolonia
    Boli 20'
    Vahirua 51', 56'
    Pogaçë 62' (o.g.)
    Guerreiro 73'
    Report

    Sochaux France7–0Luxembourg Jeunesse Esch
    Lada 6', 25'
    Silvestre 22'
    Oudjani 47', 70'
    Carrasco 88'
    Petry 90' (o.g.)
    Report

    Iraklis Greece1–0Switzerland Sion
    Toutziaris 28' Report

    Glentoran Northern Ireland1–3Scotland Dundee United
    Jameson 68' Report Cleland 31'
    McInally 71'
    Hinds 85'
    Attendance: 5,814
    Referee: Keith Burge (Wales)

    ÍA Iceland0–2Belgium RFC Liège
    Report Ernès 7'
    Waseige 81'

    Atalanta Italy0–0Soviet Union Spartak Moscow
    Report

    Valletta Malta1–4Austria First Vienna
    Zarb 63' (pen.) Report Camilleri 17' (o.g.)
    Balzis 42'
    Vidreis 51'
    Heraf 86'
    Attendance: 1,520

    Lillestrøm Norway1–3West Germany Werder Bremen
    Pedersen 87' Report Eilts 10'
    Bode 15', 71'

    Twente Netherlands0–0Belgium Club Brugge
    Report

    Górnik Zabrze Poland0–1Italy Juventus
    Report Zavarov 72'

    Sporting CP Portugal0–0Italy Napoli
    Report

    Porto Portugal2–0Romania Flacăra Moreni
    Zé Carlos 36'
    Branco 56'
    Report
    Attendance: 25,000

    Köln West Germany4–1Czechoslovakia Plastika Nitra
    Götz 8', 56', 61'
    Littbarski 73' (pen.)
    Report Hipp 21'

    Stuttgart West Germany2–0Netherlands Feyenoord
    Walter 21'
    Allgöwer 48'
    Report
    Attendance: 18,641

    Örgryte Sweden1–2West Germany Hamburg
    Roth 71' Report Furtok 8'
    Jensen 80'
    Attendance: 3,454
    Referee: Allan Gunn (England)

    Wettingen Switzerland3–0Republic of Ireland Dundalk
    Cleary 42' (o.g.)
    Corneliusson 66'
    Löbmann 69'
    Report

    Galatasaray Turkey1–1Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade
    Hasan 35' Report Mrkela 11'

    Dynamo Kyiv Soviet Union4–0Hungary MTK
    Protasov 12'
    Rats 23', 33'
    Yakovenko 55'
    Report
    Attendance: 35,000

    Zenit Leningrad Soviet Union3–1Denmark Næstved
    Chukhlov 22'
    Stepanov 60'
    Popelnukha 74'
    Report Jørgensen 19' (pen.)
    Attendance: 8,200
    Referee: Eero Aho (Finland)

    Žalgiris Vilnius Soviet Union2–0Sweden IFK Göteborg
    Fridrikas 36', 88' Report
    Attendance: 15,200

    Rad Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia2–1Greece Olympiacos
    Nestorović 37'
    Đoinčević 53'
    Report Tsalouchidis 89'
    Attendance: 5,000
    Referee: Joe Worrall (England)

    Karl-Marx-Stadt East Germany1–0Portugal Boavista
    Köhler 17' Report

    Hansa Rostock East Germany2–3Czechoslovakia Baník Ostrava
    Wahl 27', 38' (pen.) Report Kula 57'
    Hýravý 66'
    Horváth 75'
    Attendance: 20,320
    Referee: Kaj Natri (Finland)

    Second leg

    [edit]
    Ajax Netherlands0–3Austria Austria Wien
    Wouters 44' Report Pleva 98'
    Attendance: 23,221

    The match was abandoned in the 104th minute with the score at 1–1 after Austria Wien's goalkeeper Franz Wohlfahrt was struck by an iron rod thrown from the home stand. As a result, Ajax had to concede the match by default and were excluded from competing in European football for a year. Austria Wien won 4–0 on aggregate.


    Antwerp Belgium4–3Bulgaria Vitosha Sofia
    Geilenkirchen 85'
    Claesen 90', 90+2'
    Quaranta 90+5'
    Report Slavchev 6'
    Donkov 87'
    Mihtarski 89'
    Attendance: 7,000

    Antwerp won 4–3 on aggregate.


    Zaragoza Spain1–1Cyprus Apollon Limassol
    Pardeza 89' Report Pittas 39' (pen.)

    Zaragoza won 4–1 on aggregate.


    Rapid Wien Austria1–0Scotland Aberdeen
    Fjørtoft 18' Report
    Attendance: 19,000

    2–2 on aggregate; Rapid Wien won on away goals.


    Hibernian won 4–0 on aggregate.


    1–1 on aggregate; Fiorentina won 3–1 on penalties.


    Victoria București Romania1–1Spain Valencia
    Hanganu 52' Report Toni 37'
    Attendance: 7,300
    Referee: Luigi Agnolin (Italy)

    Valencia won 4–2 on aggregate.


    Paris Saint-Germain France3–2Finland Kuusysi
    Sušić 18'
    Vujović 57'
    Calderón 68'
    Report Remes 14'
    Lius 90' (pen.)
    Attendance: 9,437

    Paris Saint-Germain won 3–2 on aggregate.


    GKS Katowice Poland0–1Finland RoPS
    Report Karila 59'
    Attendance: 3,185
    Referee: Arsen Hoxha (Albania)

    RoPS won 2–1 on aggregate.


    Apolonia Albania0–3France Auxerre
    Report Scifo 20', 31'
    Cocard 72'

    Auxerre won 8–0 on aggregate.


    Jeunesse Esch Luxembourg0–5France Sochaux
    Report Carrasco 8'
    Thomas 27', 28', 54'
    Silvestre 39'

    Sochaux won 12–0 on aggregate.


    Sion Switzerland2–0Greece Iraklis
    Baljić 75'
    López 79'
    Report

    Sion won 2–1 on aggregate.


    Dundee United Scotland2–0Northern Ireland Glentoran
    Clark 25'
    Gallacher 47'
    Report
    Attendance: 9,344

    Dundee United won 5–1 on aggregate.


    RFC Liège Belgium4–1Iceland ÍA
    Ernès 5', 19'
    Wégria 40'
    Boffin 83'
    Report Pétursson 22'

    RFC Liège won 6–1 on aggregate.


    Spartak Moscow Soviet Union2–0Italy Atalanta
    Cherenkov 28'
    Rodionov 88'
    Report
    Attendance: 49,987
    Referee: Bo Karlsson (Sweden)

    Spartak Moscow won 2–0 on aggregate.


    First Vienna Austria3–0Malta Valletta
    Jenisch 20'
    Balzis 57', 78'
    Report

    First Vienna won 7–1 on aggregate.


    Werder Bremen West Germany2–0Norway Lillestrøm
    Neubarth 66'
    Sauer 89'
    Report
    Attendance: 9,873
    Referee: Charles Agius (Malta)

    Werder Bremen won 5–1 on aggregate.


    Club Brugge Belgium4–1Netherlands Twente
    Booy 7'
    Disztl 18'
    Staelens 20'
    Farina 32'
    Report Paus 24'

    Club Brugge won 4–1 on aggregate.


    Juventus won 5–2 on aggregate.


    0–0 on aggregate; Napoli won 4–3 on penalties.


    Flacăra Moreni Romania1–2Portugal Porto
    Beldie 52' Report Magalhães 21'
    Águas 89'
    Attendance: 8,000

    Porto won 4–1 on aggregate.


    Plastika Nitra Czechoslovakia0–1West Germany Köln
    Report Higl 33'

    Köln won 5–1 on aggregate.


    Feyenoord Netherlands2–1West Germany Stuttgart
    Keur 21'
    van Geel 52' (pen.)
    Report Sigurvinsson 66'
    Attendance: 21,736

    Stuttgart won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Hamburg West Germany5–1Sweden Örgryte
    von Heesen 25'
    Beiersdorfer 35'
    Furtok 79'
    Eck 88'
    Fischer 89'
    Report Grandelius 76'
    Attendance: 10,000

    Hamburg won 7–2 on aggregate.


    Dundalk Republic of Ireland0–2Switzerland Wettingen
    Report Löbmann 42', 53'
    Attendance: 1,361

    Wettingen won 5–0 on aggregate.


    Red Star Belgrade Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia2–0Turkey Galatasaray
    Lukić 3'
    Pančev 66'
    Report
    Attendance: 46,866

    Red Star Belgrade won 3–1 on aggregate.


    MTK Hungary1–2Soviet Union Dynamo Kyiv
    Jován 87' Report Zayets 10'
    Salenko 88'

    Dynamo Kyiv won 6–1 on aggregate.


    Næstved Denmark0–0Soviet Union Zenit Leningrad
    Report
    Attendance: 4,182
    Referee: Rune Larsson (Sweden)

    Zenit Leningrad won 3–1 on aggregate.


    IFK Göteborg Sweden1–0Soviet Union Žalgiris Vilnius
    M. Nilsson 53' Report
    Attendance: 4,670
    Referee: John Lloyd (Wales)

    Žalgiris Vilnius won 2–1 on aggregate.


    Olympiacos Greece2–0Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Rad
    Détári 35'
    Anastopoulos 76'
    Report
    Attendance: 26,052
    Referee: Carlo Longhi (Italy)

    Olympiacos won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Boavista Portugal2–2 (a.e.t.)East Germany Karl-Marx-Stadt
    João Pinto 40', 91' Report Heidrich 104'
    Mehlhorn 119'
    Attendance: 6,820
    Referee: Alain Delmer (France)

    Karl-Marx-Stadt won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Baník Ostrava Czechoslovakia4–0East Germany Hansa Rostock
    Nečas 28'
    Chýlek 43'
    Záleský 83'
    Pěcháček 77'
    Report
    Attendance: 8,140

    Baník Ostrava won 7–2 on aggregate.

    Second round

    [edit]
    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    First Vienna Austria 3–3 (a) Greece Olympiacos 2–2 1–1
    Antwerp Belgium 6–3 Scotland Dundee United 4–0 2–3
    Club Brugge Belgium 4–6 Austria Rapid Wien 1–2 3–4
    Hibernian Scotland 0–1 Belgium RFC Liège 0–0 0–1 (a.e.t.)
    Zaragoza Spain 1–2 West Germany Hamburg 1–0 0–2 (a.e.t.)
    RoPS Finland 0–8 France Auxerre 0–5 0–3
    Paris Saint-Germain France 1–3 Italy Juventus 0–1 1–2
    Fiorentina Italy 1–1 (a) France Sochaux 0–0 1–1
    Porto Portugal 5–4 Spain Valencia 3–1 2–3
    Werder Bremen West Germany 5–2 Austria Austria Wien 5–0 0–2
    Köln West Germany 3–1 Soviet Union Spartak Moscow 3–1 0–0
    Sion Switzerland 3–5 East Germany Karl-Marx-Stadt 2–1 1–4
    Wettingen Switzerland 1–2 Italy Napoli 0–0 1–2
    Dynamo Kyiv Soviet Union 4–1 Czechoslovakia Baník Ostrava 3–0 1–1
    Zenit Leningrad Soviet Union 0–6 West Germany Stuttgart 0–1 0–5
    Red Star Belgrade Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 5–1 Soviet Union Žalgiris Vilnius 4–1 1–0

    First leg

    [edit]

    Antwerp Belgium4–0Scotland Dundee United
    Geilenkirchen 22'
    Van Rooij 23', 31'
    Claesen 47'
    Report
    Attendance: 6,822

    Club Brugge Belgium1–2Austria Rapid Wien
    Christiaens 23' Report Keglevits 87'
    Pfeifenberger 90'
    Attendance: 17,993
    Referee: David Syme (Scotland)

    Hibernian Scotland0–0Belgium RFC Liège
    Report
    Attendance: 18,010

    Zaragoza Spain1–0West Germany Hamburg
    Sirakov 88' Report

    RoPS Finland0–5