2012 UEFA Europa League Final

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2012 UEFA Europa League Final
2012 UEFA Europa League Final.jpg
Event 2011–12 UEFA Europa League
Date 9 May 2012
Venue Arena Națională, Bucharest
Man of the Match Radamel Falcao (Atlético Madrid)[1]
Referee Wolfgang Stark (Germany)[2]
Attendance 52,347[3]
Weather Cloudy
15 °C (59 °F)
100% humidity
2011
2013

The 2012 UEFA Europa League Final was the final match of the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League, the 41st season of Europe's secondary club football tournament organised by UEFA (after the UEFA Champions League), and the 3rd season since it was renamed from the UEFA Cup to the UEFA Europa League. The match was played on 9 May 2012 at the Arena Națională in Bucharest, Romania,[4][5] and was contested between two Spanish sides – Atlético Madrid and Athletic Bilbao. The match ended with Atlético Madrid winning 3–0, with Radamel Falcao scoring two goals and Diego scoring another.

The winners earned the right to play against Chelsea, the winners of the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League, in the 2012 UEFA Super Cup.

Venue

Lua error in Module:Details at line 30: attempt to call field '_formatLink' (a nil value). The Arena Națională was announced by UEFA as the venue of the 2012 final on 30 January 2010.[6] This was the first final of a European football club competition hosted by Romania.

The stadium was built on the site of the former national stadium, and opened on 6 September 2011 with a UEFA Euro 2012 Group D qualifier match between Romania and France.

Background

The final was preceded by an opening ceremony.

This was the second consecutive Europa League final contested by two teams from the same nation, and the ninth time overall (including UEFA Cup).[7] The only other all-Spanish final of UEFA's second club competition was the 2007 UEFA Cup Final, when Sevilla defeated Espanyol. That was also the last final where both finalist teams had played only in the UEFA Cup/Europa League in their routes to the final (rather than dropping down from the UEFA Champions League, either after the early knockout rounds or after the group stage).

Both teams have played in one previous Europa League/UEFA Cup final. Atlético Madrid won the first Europa League final after its renaming in 2010, beating Fulham 2–1 after extra time. Athletic Bilbao lost in 1977 to Juventus on away goals after the tie finished 2–2 on aggregate. The two teams have never met in European competition before. They have met each other in three Copa del Rey finals, with Athletic Bilbao winning two and Atlético Madrid winning one. In the 2011–12 La Liga season, Athletic Bilbao won their home fixture 3–0 and Atlético Madrid won their home fixture 2–1.[8]

After losing to Udinese on 20 October 2011, Atlético Madrid went on a run of 11 straight victories to the final, a record in European football, winning their remaining group games to top their group and then defeating four knockout opponents both home and away.

Road to final

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Spain Atlético Madrid Round Spain Athletic Bilbao
Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Qualifying phase Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg
Norway Strømsgodset 4–1 2–1 (H) 2–0 (A) Third qualifying round Bye
Portugal Vitória Guimarães 6–0 2–0 (H) 4–0 (A) Play-off round Turkey Trabzonspor n/a 0–0 Cancelled
Opponent Result Group stage Opponent Result
Scotland Celtic 2–0 (H) Matchday 1 Slovakia Slovan Bratislava 2–1 (A)
France Rennes 1–1 (A) Matchday 2 France Paris Saint-Germain 2–0 (H)
Italy Udinese 0–2 (A) Matchday 3 Austria Red Bull Salzburg 2–2 (H)
Italy Udinese 4–0 (H) Matchday 4 Austria Red Bull Salzburg 1–0 (A)
Scotland Celtic 1–0 (A) Matchday 5 Slovakia Slovan Bratislava 2–1 (H)
France Rennes 3–1 (H) Matchday 6 France Paris Saint-Germain 2–4 (A)
Group I winner
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Spain Atlético Madrid 6 4 1 1 11 4 +7 13
Italy Udinese 6 2 3 1 6 7 −1 9
Scotland Celtic 6 1 3 2 6 7 −1 6
France Rennes 6 0 3 3 5 10 −5 3
Final standings Group F winner
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Spain Athletic Bilbao 6 4 1 1 11 8 +3 13
Austria Red Bull Salzburg 6 3 1 2 11 8 +3 10
France Paris Saint-Germain 6 3 1 2 8 7 +1 10
Slovakia Slovan Bratislava 6 0 1 5 4 11 −7 1
Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Knockout phase Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg
Italy Lazio 4–1 3–1 (A) 1–0 (H) Round of 32 Russia Lokomotiv Moscow 2–2 (a) 1–2 (A) 1–0 (H)
Turkey Beşiktaş 6–1 3–1 (H) 3–0 (A) Round of 16 England Manchester United 5–3 3–2 (A) 2–1 (H)
Germany Hannover 96 4–2 2–1 (H) 2–1 (A) Quarter-finals Germany Schalke 04 6–4 4–2 (A) 2–2 (H)
Spain Valencia 5–2 4–2 (H) 1–0 (A) Semi-finals Portugal Sporting CP 4–3 1–2 (A) 3–1 (H)

Pre-match

Ticketing

Athletic Bilbao fans in Bucharest before the match

The two finalist teams received 9,000 tickets each for distribution to their supporters. 20,000 tickets have been sold to local football fans with a further 3,000 tickets available for sale to fans worldwide via UEFA.com, with prices between 100 RON and 500 RON. The remaining tickets are allocated to the local organising committee, UEFA’s 53 national football associations, and commercial and broadcast partners.[10]

Ambassador

Former Romanian player Miodrag Belodedici was named as the ambassador for the final.[11]

Match

Details

Atlético Madrid
Athletic Bilbao
GK 13 Belgium Thibaut Courtois
RB 20 Spain Juanfran
CB 2 Uruguay Diego Godín
CB 23 Brazil Miranda
LB 6 Brazil Filipe Luís
CM 4 Spain Mario Suárez
CM 14 Spain Gabi (c)
RW 22 Brazil Diego Substituted off 90'
AM 7 Spain Adrián Substituted off 88'
LW 11 Turkey Arda Turan Substituted off 90+3'
CF 9 Colombia Radamel Falcao Booked 26'
Substitutes:
GK 25 Spain Sergio Asenjo
DF 3 Spain Antonio López
DF 18 Spain Álvaro Domínguez Substituted in 90+3'
MF 8 Argentina Eduardo Salvio Substituted in 88'
MF 12 Brazil Paulo Assunção
MF 19 Spain Koke Substituted in 90'
FW 41 Spain Pedro Martín
Manager:
Argentina Diego Simeone
Atlético Madrid vs Athletic Bilbao 2012-05-09.svg
GK 1 Spain Gorka Iraizoz
RB 15 Spain Andoni Iraola (c)
CB 24 Spain Javi Martínez
CB 5 Venezuela Fernando Amorebieta Booked 64'
LB 3 Spain Jon Aurtenetxe Substituted off 46'
RM 21 Spain Ander Herrera Booked 22' Substituted off 63'
CM 8 Spain Ander Iturraspe Substituted off 46'
LM 10 Spain Óscar de Marcos
RW 14 Spain Markel Susaeta Booked 90+1'
LW 19 Spain Iker Muniain
CF 9 Spain Fernando Llorente
Substitutes:
GK 13 Spain Raúl
DF 6 Spain Mikel San José
MF 11 Spain Igor Gabilondo
MF 17 Spain Iñigo Pérez Booked 75' Substituted in 46'
MF 23 Spain Borja Ekiza
FW 2 Spain Gaizka Toquero Substituted in 63'
FW 28 Spain Ibai Gómez Substituted in 46'
Manager:
Argentina Marcelo Bielsa

Man of the Match:
Colombia Radamel Falcao (Atlético Madrid)[1]

Assistant referees:
Jan-Hendrik Salver (Germany)
Mike Pickel (Germany)
Fourth official:
Stéphane Lannoy (France)
Additional assistant referees:
Florian Meyer (Germany)
Deniz Aytekin (Germany)

Match rules[12]

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

Statistics

See also

References

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External links