2001–02 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds

The qualifying rounds for the 2001–02 UEFA Champions League began on 11 July 2001. In total, there were three qualifying rounds which provided 16 clubs to join the group stage.

Times are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA.

Teams

Key to colours
Qualify for the group stage
Eliminated in the Third qualifying round; Advanced to the UEFA Cup first round
Third qualifying round
Team Coeff.
Barcelona 108.604
Lazio 105.119
Parma 81.119
Liverpool 73.643
Borussia Dortmund 73.315
Mallorca 60.604
Bayer Leverkusen 56.315
Dynamo Kyiv 55.915
Ajax 55.123
Lokomotiv Moscow 53.853
Rosenborg 53.799
Slavia Prague 50.395
Panathinaikos 37.183
Grasshopper 28.936
Celtic 25.310
Fenerbahçe 24.987
Lille 21.175
Tirol Innsbruck 17.873
Second qualifying round
Team Coeff.
Galatasaray 71.987
Porto 68.136
Anderlecht 43.075
Rangers 38.310
Steaua București 26.894
Brann 21.799
Shakhtar Donetsk 20.915
Red Star Belgrade 19.707
Copenhagen 18.587
Wisła Kraków 16.749
Halmstads BK 16.103
Ferencváros 15.541
Inter Bratislava 15.332
Maccabi Haifa 15.061
Hajduk Split 11.998
Maribor 10.998
Lugano 10.936
Omonia 5.415
First qualifying round
Team Coeff.
Levski Sofia 9.831
Skonto 8.915
Torpedo Kutaisi 4.833
Haka 4.270
KR 3.665
Bohemians 3.498
Slavia Mozyr 3.416
Sheriff Tiraspol 2.249
Kaunas 2.248
Barry Town 2.082
Sloga Jugomagnat 1.748
Levadia Maardu 1.248
Araks-Impeks 1.081
Shamkir 0.832
Valletta 0.831
Linfield 0.664
Željezničar 0.500
F91 Dudelange 0.332
VB 0.332
Vllaznia 0.249

First qualifying round

The draw for this round was performed on 22 June 2001 in Geneva, Switzerland.

Seeding

Seeded Unseeded

Levski Sofia
Skonto
Torpedo Kutaisi
Haka
KR
Bohemians
Slavia Mozyr
Sheriff Tiraspol
Kaunas
Barry Town

Sloga Jugomagnat
Levadia Maardu
Araks-Impeks
Shamkir
Valletta
Linfield
Željezničar
F91 Dudelange
VB
Vllaznia

Summary

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Araks-Impeks 0–3 Sheriff Tiraspol0–10–2
Linfield 0–1 Torpedo Kutaisi0–00–1
Bohemians 3–0 Levadia Maardu3–00–0
F91 Dudelange 2–6 Skonto1–61–0
Levski Sofia 4–0 Željezničar4–00–0
VB 0–5 Slavia Mozyr0–00–5
Valletta 0–5 Haka0–00–5
Sloga Jugomagnat 1–1 (a) Kaunas0–01–1
KR 2–2 (a) Vllaznia2–10–1
Barry Town 3–0 Shamkir2–01–0

Matches

Araks-Impeks 0–1 Sheriff Tiraspol
Report
  • Barburoș 60'
Attendance: 9,700
Referee: Athanassios Briakos (Greece)
Sheriff Tiraspol 2–0 Araks-Impeks
Report

Sheriff Tiraspol won 3–0 on aggregate.


Linfield 0–0 Torpedo Kutaisi
Report
Attendance: 2,699
Referee: Jouni Hyytiä (Finland)
Torpedo Kutaisi 1–0 Linfield
Report
Attendance: 7,130
Referee: Jack van Hulten (Netherlands)

Torpedo Kutaisi won 1–0 on aggregate.


Bohemians 3–0 Levadia Maardu
Report
Attendance: 3,832
Referee: Dieter Schoch (Switzerland)
Levadia Maardu 0–0 Bohemians
Report
Attendance: 1,034
Referee: Knud Stadsgaard (Denmark)

Bohemians won 3–0 on aggregate.


F91 Dudelange 1–6 Skonto
Report
Attendance: 1,068
Referee: Marian Salomir (Romania)
Skonto 0–1 F91 Dudelange
Report
Attendance: 1,500
Referee: Jon Skjervold (Norway)

Skonto won 6–2 on aggregate.


Levski Sofia 4–0 Željezničar
Report
Željezničar 0–0 Levski Sofia
Report
Attendance: 3,000
Referee: Bruno Derrien (France)

Levski Sofia won 4–0 on aggregate.


VB 0–0 Slavia Mozyr
Report
Attendance: 540
Referee: David Malcolm (Northern Ireland)
Slavia Mozyr 5–0 VB
Report
Attendance: 2,150
Referee: John McDermott (Republic of Ireland)

Slavia Mozyr won 5–0 on aggregate.


Valletta 0–0 Haka
Report
Attendance: 1,726
Referee: Paul McKeon (Republic of Ireland)
Haka 5–0 Valletta
Report
Attendance: 2,423
Referee: Miroslav Liba (Czech Republic)

Haka won 5–0 on aggregate.


Sloga Jugomagnat 0–0 Kaunas
Report
Attendance: 2,538
Referee: Franz-Xaver Wack (Germany)
Kaunas 1–1 Sloga Jugomagnat
Report
Attendance: 660
Referee: Eric Blareau (Belgium)

1–1 on aggregate; Sloga Jugomagnat won on away goals.


KR 2–1 Vllaznia
Report
Attendance: 1,373
Referee: Bernhard Brugger (Austria)
Vllaznia 1–0 KR
Report

2–2 on aggregate; Vllaznia won on away goals.


Barry Town 2–0 Shamkir
Report
Attendance: 1,992
Shamkir 0–1 Barry Town
Report

Barry Town won 3–0 on aggregate.

Second qualifying round

The draw for this round was performed on 22 June 2001 in Geneva, Switzerland.

Seeding

Seeded Unseeded

Galatasaray
Porto
Anderlecht
Rangers
Steaua București
Brann
Shakhtar Donetsk

Red Star Belgrade
Copenhagen
Wisła Kraków
Halmstads BK
Inter Bratislava
Maccabi Haifa
Hajduk Split

Maribor
Lugano
Levski Sofia[†]
Skonto[†]
Omonia
Torpedo Kutaisi[†]
Haka[†]

Vllaznia[†]
Bohemians[†]
Slavia Mozyr[†]
Sheriff Tiraspol[†]
Sloga Jugomagnat[†]
Barry Town[†]
Ferencváros[‡]

Notes
  1. Winners of the previous qualifying round whose identity was not known at the time of the draw. Teams in italics defeated a team with a higher coefficient in the previous qualifying round, thus effectively taking the coefficient of their defeated opponent in the draw for this round.
  2. Hungarian champions Ferencváros were treated as unseeded club by default for second qualifying round as the 2000–01 Nemzeti Bajnokság I was not finished by the date of the draw (22 June 2001).[1]

Summary

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Haka 3–1 Maccabi Haifa0–13–0[a]
Shakhtar Donetsk 4–2 Lugano3–01–2
Omonia 2–3 Red Star Belgrade1–11–2
Ferencváros 0–0 (4–5 p) Hajduk Split0–00–0 (a.e.t.)
Porto 9–3 Barry Town8–01–3
Maribor 1–6 Rangers0–31–3
Galatasaray 6–1 Vllaznia2–04–1
Slavia Mozyr 0–2 Inter Bratislava0–10–1
Anderlecht 6–1 Sheriff Tiraspol4–02–1
Torpedo Kutaisi 2–4 Copenhagen1–11–3
Levski Sofia 1–1 (a) Brann0–01–1
Skonto 1–3 Wisła Kraków1–20–1
Bohemians 1–4 Halmstads BK1–20–2
Steaua București 5–1 Sloga Jugomagnat3–02–1
Notes:
  1. ^ UEFA awarded Haka a 3–0 win due to Maccabi Haifa fielding suspended player Walid Badir in the second leg. The original match had ended in a 4–0 win for Maccabi Haifa.[2]

Matches

Haka 0–1 Maccabi Haifa
Report
Maccabi Haifa 0–3
Awarded[note 8]
Haka
Report
Attendance: 8,000
Referee: Zoran Arsić (FR Yugoslavia)

Haka won 3–1 on aggregate.


Shakhtar Donetsk 3–0 Lugano
Report
Attendance: 31,714
Lugano 2–1 Shakhtar Donetsk
Report
Attendance: 3,300
Referee: Juan Ansuátegui Roca (Spain)

Shakhtar Donetsk won 4–2 on aggregate.


Omonia 1–1 Red Star Belgrade
Report
Red Star Belgrade 2–1 Omonia
Report
Attendance: 18,145
Referee: Lutz Michael Fröhlich (Germany)

Red Star Belgrade won 3–2 on aggregate.


Ferencváros 0–0 Hajduk Split
Report
Attendance: 9,259
Referee: Mikko Vuorela (Finland)
Hajduk Split 0–0 (a.e.t.) Ferencváros
Report
Penalties
5–4
Attendance: 26,400
Referee: Orhan Erdemir (Turkey)

0–0 on aggregate; Hajduk Split won 5–4 on penalties.


Porto 8–0 Barry Town
Report
Attendance: 43,050
Referee: Georgios Kasnaferis (Greece)
Barry Town 3–1 Porto
Report
Attendance: 2,377
Referee: Dani Koren (Israel)

Porto won 9–3 on aggregate.


Maribor 0–3 Rangers
Report
Rangers 3–1 Maribor
Report
  • Starčevič 16'
Attendance: 50,045
Referee: Jorge Coroado (Portugal)

Rangers won 6–1 on aggregate.


Galatasaray 2–0 Vllaznia
Report
Attendance: 14,804
Referee: Paulo Paraty (Portugal)
Vllaznia 1–4 Galatasaray
Report

Galatasaray won 6–1 on aggregate.


Slavia Mozyr 0–1 Inter Bratislava
Report
Attendance: 2,420
Referee: Steve Dunn (England)
Inter Bratislava 1–0 Slavia Mozyr
Report
Attendance: 2,500
Referee: Edo Trivković (Croatia)

Inter Bratislava won 2–0 on aggregate.


Anderlecht 4–0 Sheriff Tiraspol
Report
Attendance: 21,055
Referee: Tomasz Mikulski (Poland)
Sheriff Tiraspol 1–2 Anderlecht
Report

Anderlecht won 6–1 on aggregate.


Torpedo Kutaisi 1–1 Copenhagen
Report
Copenhagen 3–1 Torpedo Kutaisi
Report
  • Kutateladze 90+3'
Attendance: 14,345
Referee: Pascal Garibian (France)

Copenhagen won 4–2 on aggregate.


Levski Sofia 0–0 Brann
Report
Attendance: 13,780
Brann 1–1 Levski Sofia
Report
Attendance: 10,902
Referee: Jacek Granat (Poland)

1–1 on aggregate; Levski Sofia won on away goals.


Skonto 1–2 Wisła Kraków
Report
Attendance: 2,000
Referee: Leif Sundell (Sweden)
Wisła Kraków 1–0 Skonto
Report

Wisła Kraków won 3–1 on aggregate.


Bohemians 1–2 Halmstads BK
Report
Attendance: 4,225
Referee: Erol Ersoy (Turkey)
Halmstads BK 2–0 Bohemians
Report
Attendance: 3,643
Referee: Ivan Dobrinov (Bulgaria)

Halmstads BK won 4–1 on aggregate.


Steaua București 3–0 Sloga Jugomagnat
Report
Attendance: 9,200
Referee: Pasquale Rodomonti (Italy)
Sloga Jugomagnat 1–2 Steaua București
Report

Steaua București won 5–1 on aggregate.

Third qualifying round

The draw for this round was performed on 20 July 2001 in Nyon, Switzerland.

Seeding

Seeded Unseeded

Barcelona
Lazio
Parma
Liverpool
Borussia Dortmund
Galatasaray[†]
Porto[†]
Mallorca

Bayer Leverkusen
Dynamo Kyiv
Ajax
Lokomotiv Moscow
Rosenborg
Slavia Prague
Anderlecht[†]
Rangers[†]

Panathinaikos
Grasshopper
Steaua București[†]
Celtic
Fenerbahçe
Levski Sofia[†]
Lille
Shakhtar Donetsk[†]

Red Star Belgrade[†]
Copenhagen[†]
Tirol Innsbruck
Wisła Kraków[†]
Halmstads BK[†]
Inter Bratislava[†]
Haka[†]
Hajduk Split[†]

Notes
  1. Winners of the previous qualifying round whose identity was not known at the time of the draw. Teams in italics defeated a team with a higher coefficient in the previous qualifying round, thus effectively taking the coefficient of their defeated opponent in the draw for this round.

Summary

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Shakhtar Donetsk 1–5 Borussia Dortmund0–21–3
Lokomotiv Moscow 3–2 Tirol Innsbruck3–10–1[a]
Steaua București 3–5 Dynamo Kyiv2–41–1
Haka 1–9 Liverpool0–51–4
Hajduk Split 1–2 Mallorca1–00–2 (a.e.t.)
Red Star Belgrade 0–3 Bayer Leverkusen0–00–3
Wisła Kraków 3–5 Barcelona3–40–1
Copenhagen 3–5 Lazio2–11–4
Inter Bratislava 3–7 Rosenborg3–30–4
Halmstads BK 3–4 Anderlecht2–31–1
Slavia Prague 1–3 Panathinaikos1–20–1
Galatasaray 3–2 Levski Sofia2–11–1
Ajax 2–3 Celtic1–31–0
Porto 5–4 Grasshopper2–23–2
Parma 1–2 Lille0–21–0
Rangers 1–2 Fenerbahçe0–01–2
Notes:
  1. ^ UEFA decided to replay the second leg (which originally ended in 1–0 win to Lokomotiv) after accepting Tirol's protest on refereeing mistake, which resulted in Lokomotiv player not being shown a red card after receiving a second yellow card.[3]

Matches

Shakhtar Donetsk 0–2 Borussia Dortmund
Report
Attendance: 31,714
Borussia Dortmund 3–1 Shakhtar Donetsk
Report
Attendance: 47,000

Borussia Dortmund won 5–1 on aggregate.


Lokomotiv Moscow 3–1 Tirol Innsbruck
Report
Tirol Innsbruck Annulled[note 11]
(0–1)
Lokomotiv Moscow
Report
Attendance: 15,400
Tirol Innsbruck 1–0 Lokomotiv Moscow
Report
Attendance: 14,900

Lokomotiv Moscow won 3–2 on aggregate.


Steaua București 2–4 Dynamo Kyiv
Report
Attendance: 15,300
Dynamo Kyiv 1–1 Steaua București
Report
Attendance: 16,800

Dynamo Kyiv won 5–3 on aggregate.


Haka 0–5 Liverpool
Report
Liverpool 4–1 Haka
Report
Attendance: 31,602
Referee: Terje Hauge (Norway)

Liverpool won 9–1 on aggregate.


Hajduk Split 1–0 Mallorca
Report
Attendance: 26,922
Referee: Alain Sars (France)
Mallorca 2–0 (a.e.t.) Hajduk Split
Report

Mallorca won 2–1 on aggregate.


Red Star Belgrade 0–0 Bayer Leverkusen
Report
Attendance: 37,169
Bayer Leverkusen 3–0 Red Star Belgrade
Report
Attendance: 22,500

Bayer Leverkusen won 3–0 on aggregate.


Wisła Kraków 3–4 Barcelona
Report
Attendance: 7,506
Barcelona 1–0 Wisła Kraków
Report
Attendance: 58,233

Barcelona won 5–3 on aggregate.


Copenhagen 2–1 Lazio
Report
Attendance: 37,516
Lazio 4–1 Copenhagen
Report
Attendance: 37,133

Lazio won 5–3 on aggregate.


Inter Bratislava 3–3 Rosenborg
Report
Rosenborg 4–0 Inter Bratislava
Report
Attendance: 15,212

Rosenborg won 7–3 on aggregate.


Halmstads BK 2–3 Anderlecht
Report
Attendance: 3,876
Anderlecht 1–1 Halmstads BK
Report

Anderlecht won 4–3 on aggregate.


Slavia Prague 1–2 Panathinaikos
Report
Panathinaikos 1–0 Slavia Prague
Report

Panathinaikos won 3–1 on aggregate.


Galatasaray 2–1 Levski Sofia
Report
Levski Sofia 1–1 Galatasaray
Report

Galatasaray won 3–2 on aggregate.


Ajax 1–3 Celtic
Report
Celtic 0–1 Ajax
Report
Attendance: 58,575

Celtic won 3–2 on aggregate.


Porto 2–2 Grasshopper
Report
Attendance: 46,142
Grasshopper 2–3 Porto
Report
Attendance: 16,066

Porto won 5–4 on aggregate.


Parma 0–2 Lille
Report
Lille 0–1 Parma
Report
Attendance: 14,358
Referee: Graham Poll (England)

Lille won 2–1 on aggregate.


Rangers 0–0 Fenerbahçe
Report
Attendance: 49,472
Fenerbahçe 2–1 Rangers
Report

Fenerbahçe won 2–1 on aggregate.

Notes

  1. ^ Araks-Impeks played their home match at Vazgen Sargsyan Republican Stadium in Yerevan, as their regular home venue Ayg Stadium in Ararat did not meet UEFA criteria.
  2. ^ F91 Dudelange played their home match at Stade Josy Barthel in Luxembourg City, instead of their regular venue Stade Jos Nosbaum in Dudelange.
  3. ^ VB played their home match at Tórsvøllur stadium in Tórshavn, instead of their regular home venue Á Eiðinum stadium in Vágur.
  4. ^ a b Sloga Jugomagnat played their home matches at Philip II Arena in Skopje, instead of their regular home venue Čair Stadium.
  5. ^ KR played their home match at Laugardalsvöllur in Reykjavík, instead of their regular venue KR-völlur in Reykjavík.
  6. ^ a b Vllaznia played their home matches at Qemal Stafa Stadium in Tirana, as their regular venue Loro Boriçi Stadium in Shkodër was closed for renovation.
  7. ^ Shamkir played their home match at Tofiq Bahramov Republican Stadium in Baku, instead of their regular venue Shamkir City Stadium in Şəmkir.
  8. ^ The second leg originally ended 4–0 to Maccabi Haifa but they were later ruled to have forfeited the match after fielding suspended player Walid Badir; Haka were therefore awarded the second leg 3–0.
  9. ^ Skonto played their Second qualifying round home match at Daugava Stadium in Riga, instead of their regular venue Skonto Stadium.
  10. ^ Lokomotiv Moscow played their home match at Saturn Stadium in Ramenskoye, as their regular home venue Lokomotiv Stadium in Moscow was closed for renovation.
  11. ^ The Tirol Innsbruck v Lokomotiv Moscow second leg match, which Lokomotiv Moscow originally won 1–0, was annulled and replayed after UEFA admitted a referee mistake as Lokomotiv player was not expelled after receiving two yellow cards.[3]
  12. ^ Haka played their Third qualifying round home match at Helsinki Olympic Stadium in Helsinki, instead of their regular venue Tehtaan kenttä in Valkeakoski.

References

  1. ^ "Seeding in the Champions League 2001/2002". kassiesa.net.
  2. ^ "Finland's Haka Valkeakoski get Champions League win by default". kassiesa.net. 3 August 2001.
  3. ^ a b "Control & Disciplinary Body accepts FC Tirol Innsbruck protest" (PDF). UEFA. 24 August 2001.