2001–02 UEFA Cup

2001–02 UEFA Cup
De Kuip, in Rotterdam, hosted the final.
Dates9 August 2001 – 8 May 2002
Final positions
Champions Feyenoord (2nd title)
Runners-up Borussia Dortmund
Tournament statistics
Matches played204
Goals scored552 (2.71 per match)
Attendance2,889,630 (14,165 per match)
Top scorer(s)Pierre van Hooijdonk (Feyenoord)
8 goals

The 2001–02 UEFA Cup was won by Feyenoord at their home ground in the final against Borussia Dortmund. It was the second time they won the competition.

Liverpool could not defend their title as they automatically qualified for the 2001–02 UEFA Champions League and also reached the knockout stage.

Association team allocation

A total of 145 teams from 51 UEFA associations participated in the 2001–02 UEFA Cup. Associations are allocated places according to their 2000 UEFA league coefficient.[1]

Below is the qualification scheme for the 2001–02 UEFA Cup:

Association ranking

Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
1  Spain 59.599 3 +1(UCL)
2  Italy 55.927 +1(UCL)
3  Germany 44.403 +1(UCL)
4  France 42.727 +2(UCL)
+2(IT)
5  England 41.455 +1(IT)
6  Netherlands 36.666 +3(UCL)
7  Russia 29.275 4 +1(UCL)
8  Czech Republic 29.124 +1(UCL)
9  Greece 28.866 2
10  Portugal 24.549
11  Turkey 23.850
12  Ukraine 23.166 +1(UCL)
13  Norway 22.100
14  Switzerland 21.000 +1(UCL)
15  Scotland 20.500 +2(UCL)
16  Austria 20.500 3 +1(UCL)
17  Belgium 19.050
18  Denmark 18.175 +1(UCL)
Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
19  Poland 18.000 3 +1(UCL)
20  Romania 17.833 +1(UCL)
21  Croatia 16.124 +1(UCL)
22  Sweden 15.533 2 +1(UCL)
23  Hungary 15.416
24  Israel 13.541
25  Slovakia 12.832 +1(UCL)
+1(FP)
26  Slovenia 11.831
27  Cyprus 11.498
28  FR Yugoslavia 11.415 +1(UCL)
29  Bulgaria 10.540 +1(UCL)
30  Georgia 9.666
31  Latvia 8.332
32  Finland 8.041 +1(UCL)
+1(FP)
33  Belarus 7.583 +1(FP)
34  Moldova 6.333
35  Iceland 6.332
Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
36  Macedonia 5.081 2
37  Lithuania 4.665
38  Estonia 2.582
39  Wales 2.332
40  Armenia 2.249
41  Republic of Ireland 1.665
42  Malta 1.498
43  Northern Ireland 1.498
44  Faroe Islands 1.415
45  Luxembourg 1.332
46  Azerbaijan 1.249
47  Liechtenstein 1.000 1
48  Albania 0.832 2
49  Bosnia and Herzegovina 0.500
50  Andorra 0.000 1
51  San Marino 0.000
Notes
  • (FP): Additional fair play berth (Finland, Slovakia, Belarus)
  • (UCL): Additional teams transferred from the UEFA Champions League
  • (IT): Additional teams from Intertoto Cup

Distribution

Teams entering in this round Teams advancing from previous round Teams transferred from Champions League
Qualifying round
(82 teams)
  • 31 domestic cup winners from associations 19–49
  • 33 domestic league runners-up from associations 16–49
  • 13 domestic league third-placed teams from associations 9–21
  • 3 teams from the Fair Play rankings
  • 2 domestic league champions teams from Andorra and San Marino
First round
(96 teams)
  • 18 domestic cup winners from associations 1–18
  • 2 domestic league third-placed teams from associations 7–8
  • 5 domestic league fourth-placed teams from associations 4–8
  • 8 domestic league fifth-placed teams from associations 1–8
  • 3 domestic league sixth-placed teams from associations 1–3
  • 3 winners of the Intertoto Cup
  • 41 winners from the qualifying round
  • 16 losing teams from Champions League qualifying
Second round
(48 teams)
  • 48 winners from the first round
Third round
(32 teams)
  • 24 winners from the second round
  • 8 third placed teams from the Champions League first group stage
Fourth round
(16 teams)
  • 16 winners from the third round
Play-offs
(8 teams)
  • 8 winners from the fourth round play the quarter-finals, semi-finals and final

Redistribution rules

A UEFA Cup place is vacated when a team qualify for both the Champions League and the UEFA Cup, or qualify for the UEFA Cup by more than one method. When a place is vacated, it is redistributed within the national association by the following rules:

  • When the domestic cup winners (considered as the "highest-placed" qualifier within the national association) also qualify for the Champions League, their UEFA Cup place is vacated, and the remaining UEFA Cup qualifiers are moved up one place, with the final place (with the earliest starting round) taken by the domestic cup runners-up, provided they do not already qualify for the Champions League or the UEFA Cup. Otherwise, this place is taken by the highest-placed league finisher which do not qualify for the UEFA Cup yet.
  • When the domestic cup winners also qualify for the UEFA Cup through league position, their place through the league position is vacated, and the UEFA Cup qualifiers which finish lower in the league are moved up one place, with the final place taken by the highest-placed league finisher which do not qualify for the UEFA Cup yet.
  • A place vacated by the League Cup winners is taken by the highest-placed league finisher which do not qualify for the UEFA Cup yet.
  • A Fair Play place is taken by the highest-ranked team in the domestic Fair Play table which do not qualify for the Champions League or UEFA Cup yet.

Teams

The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:

  • CW: Cup winners
  • CR: Cup runners-up
  • LC: League Cup winners
  • Nth: League position
  • P-W: End-of-season European competition play-off winners
  • FP: Fair play
  • IT: Intertoto Cup winners
  • CL: Relegated from the Champions League
    • GS: Third-placed teams from the group stage
    • Q3: Losers from the third qualifying round
Third round
Mallorca (CL GS) Lyon (CL GS) PSV Eindhoven (CL GS) Lokomotiv Moscow (CL GS)
Borussia Dortmund (CL GS) Lille (CL GS) Feyenoord (CL GS) Celtic (CL GS)
First round
Zaragoza (CW) Chelsea (6th) Gençlerbirliği (CW) Tirol Innsbruck (CL Q3)
Valencia (5th) Twente (CW) Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk (3rd) Copenhagen (CL Q3)
Celta Vigo (6th) Roda JC (4th) Odd Grenland (CW) Wisła Kraków (CL Q3)
Fiorentina (CW) Utrecht (5th) Servette (CW) Steaua București (CL Q3)
Internazionale (5th) Torpedo Moscow (3rd) Hibernian (3rd) Hajduk Split (CL Q3)
Milan (6th) Anzhi Makhachkala (4th) Kärnten (CW) Halmstads BK (CL Q3)
Hertha BSC (5th) Dynamo Moscow (5th) Westerlo (CW) Inter Bratislava (CL Q3)
SC Freiburg (6th) Chernomorets Novorossiysk (6th) Silkeborg (CW) Red Star Belgrade (CL Q3)
Union Berlin (CR) Viktoria Žižkov (CW) Parma (CL Q3) Levski Sofia (CL Q3)
Strasbourg (CW) Sigma Olomouc (3rd) Ajax (CL Q3) Haka (CL Q3)
Bordeaux (4th) Marila Příbram (4th) Slavia Prague (CL Q3) Troyes (IC)
Sedan (5th) Slovan Liberec (6th) Shakhtar Donetsk (CL Q3) Paris Saint-Germain (IC)
Leeds United (4th) PAOK (CW) Grasshopper (CL Q3) Aston Villa (IC)
Ipswich Town (5th) Sporting CP (3rd) Rangers (CL Q3)
Qualifying round
AEK Athens (3rd) Varteks (4th) HJK (CW) Sliema Wanderers (2nd)
Marítimo (CR) IF Elfsborg (CW) Jokerit (2nd) Birkirkara (CR)
Gaziantepspor (3rd) Helsingborgs IF (2nd) Belshina Bobruisk (CW) Glentoran (CW)
CSKA Kyiv (CR) Debrecen (CW) BATE Borisov (2nd) Glenavon (2nd)
Viking (3rd) Dunaferr (2nd) Zimbru Chișinău (2nd) (CW)
St. Gallen (3rd) Maccabi Tel Aviv (CW) Nistru Otaci (CR) HB (2nd)
Kilmarnock (4th) Hapoel Tel Aviv (2nd) ÍA (CW) Etzella Ettelbruck (CW)
Rapid Wien (2nd) Slovan Bratislava (2nd) Fylkir (2nd) Grevenmacher (2nd)
GAK (3rd) Ružomberok (3rd) Pelister (CW) Shafa Baku (CW)
Club Brugge (2nd) HIT Gorica (CW) Vardar (2nd) Neftçi (2nd)
Standard Liège (3rd) Olimpija Ljubljana (2nd) Atlantas (CW) Vaduz (CW)
Brøndby (2nd) Apollon Limassol (CW) Žalgiris (2nd) Tirana (CW)
Midtjylland (4th) Olympiakos Nicosia (2nd) Narva Trans (CW) Dinamo Tirana (3rd)
Polonia Warsaw (CW) Partizan (CW) Flora (2nd) Brotnjo (2nd)
Pogoń Szczecin (2nd) Obilić (3rd) Cwmbrân Town (2nd) Sarajevo (3rd)
Legia Warsaw (3rd) Litex Lovech (CW) Total Network Solutions (CR) FC Santa Coloma (1st)
Dinamo București (CW) CSKA Sofia (2nd) Mika (CW) Cosmos (1st)
Brașov (3rd) Locomotive Tbilisi (2nd) Ararat Yerevan (2nd) Matador Púchov (FP)
Rapid București (4th) Dinamo Tbilisi (3rd) Shelbourne (2nd) MYPA (FP)
Dinamo Zagreb (CW) Ventspils (2nd) Longford Town (CR) Shakhtyor Soligorsk (FP)
Osijek (3rd) Dinaburg (CR)

Round and draw dates

The schedule of the competition was as follows.[2] Matches were scheduled for Thursdays apart from the final, which took place on a Wednesday, though exceptionally could take place on Tuesdays or Wednesdays due to scheduling conflicts.

Schedule for 2001–02 UEFA Cup
Round Draw date First leg Second leg
Qualifying round 22 June 2001 9 August 2001 23 August 2001
First round 24 August 2001 20 September 2001[a] 27 September 2001
Second round 28 September 2001 18 October 2001 1 November 2001
Third round 2 November 2001 22 November 2001 6 December 2001
Fourth round 12 December 2001 21 February 2002 28 February 2002
Quarter-finals 14 March 2002 21 March 2002
Semi-finals 22 March 2002 4 April 2002 11 April 2002
Final 8 May 2002 at Feijenoord Stadion, Rotterdam
  1. ^ The first leg matches of the first round, originally scheduled in principle for 13 September, were postponed to the following week due to the September 11 attacks.[3]

Qualifying round

The first legs were played on 9 August, and the second legs were played on 23 August 2001.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Cosmos 0–3 Rapid Wien0–10–2
Pelister 3–4 St. Gallen0–23–2
Dinamo București 4–1 Dinamo Tirana1–03–1
Olimpija Ljubljana 7–0 Shafa Baku4–03–0
Midtjylland 5–1 Glentoran1–14–0
Narva Trans 3–5 IF Elfsborg3–0[a]0–5
Club Brugge 10–1 ÍA4–06–1
Obilić 5–1 4–01–1
Brașov 7–1 Mika5–12–0
Viking 2–1 Brotnjo1–01–1
CSKA Kyiv 4–0 Jokerit2–02–0
Vardar 1–6 Standard Liège0–31–3
HJK 3–1 Ventspils2–11–0
Cwmbrân Town 0–5 Slovan Bratislava0–40–1
Marítimo 2–0 Sarajevo1–01–0
Fylkir 3–2 Pogoń Szczecin2–11–1
Dinamo Zagreb 2–0 Flora1–01–0
Glenavon 0–2 Kilmarnock0–10–1
Tirana 4–5 Apollon Limassol3–21–3
Ararat Yerevan 0–5 Hapoel Tel Aviv0–20–3
Etzella Ettelbruck 1–6 Legia Warsaw0–41–2
Zimbru Chișinău 1–4 Gaziantepspor0–01–4
Dinaburg 2–2 (a) Osijek2–10–1
Neftçi 0–1 HIT Gorica0–00–1
HB 2–6 GAK2–20–4
Atlantas 0–12 Rapid București0–40–8
Matador Púchov 4–2 Sliema Wanderers3–01–2
Longford Town 1–3 Litex Lovech1–10–2
Brøndby 5–0 Shelbourne2–03–0
FC Santa Coloma 1–8 Partizan0–11–7
Maccabi Tel Aviv 7–0 Žalgiris6–01–0
Shakhtyor Soligorsk 2–5 CSKA Sofia1–21–3
MYPA 2–5 Helsingborgs IF1–31–2
Dinamo Tbilisi 2–5 BATE Borisov2–10–4
Debrecen 3–1 Nistru Otaci3–00–1
Polonia Warsaw 6–0 Total Network Solutions4–02–0
Birkirkara 1–1 (a) Locomotive Tbilisi0–01–1
AEK Athens 8–0 Grevenmacher6–02–0
Ružomberok 3–1 Belshina Bobruisk3–10–0
Olympiakos Nicosia 6–4 Dunaferr2–24–2
Vaduz 4–9 Varteks3–31–6
Notes:
  1. ^ Narva Trans awarded 3–0 as Elfsborg fielded an ineligible player, Christian Lundström. The score at the moment was 1–3.

First round

The first round featured the 41 winners of the qualifying round, joined by 36 directly qualified teams, the 16 losers of the Champions League third qualifying round and the 3 winners for the Intertoto Cup. The first legs were played on 11, 18, 19 and 20 September, and the second legs were played on 25 and 27 September 2001.

The matches scheduled for 12 September were postponed due to the September 11 attacks.[4][3][5] Most of the postponed fixtures were rescheduled for 20 September,[6] with all matches observing a moment of silence.[7]

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Inter Bratislava 1–3 Litex Lovech1–00–3
Internazionale 6–0 Brașov3–03–0
Servette 2–1 Slavia Prague1–01–1
Roda JC 6–1 Fylkir3–03–1
CSKA Kyiv 3–2 Red Star Belgrade3–20–0
Gençlerbirliği 1–2 Halmstads BK1–10–1
AEK Athens 4–3 Hibernian2–02–3 (a.e.t.)
Olimpija Ljubljana 2–4 Brøndby2–40–0
Utrecht 6–3 GAK3–03–3
Slovan Liberec 2–1 Slovan Bratislava2–00–1
Copenhagen 4–2 Obilić2–02–2
CSKA Sofia 4–2 Shakhtar Donetsk3–01–2
Standard Liège 4–2 Strasbourg2–02–2
BATE Borisov 0–6 Milan0–20–4
Chernomorets Novorossiysk 0–6 Valencia0–10–5
Aston Villa 3–3 (a) Varteks2–31–0
Parma 3–0 HJK1–02–0
HIT Gorica 1–3 Osijek1–20–1
Ipswich Town 3–2 Torpedo Moscow1–12–1
Kilmarnock 1–3 Viking1–10–2
Ajax 5–0 Apollon Limassol2–03–0
Zaragoza 5–1 Silkeborg3–02–1
Dinamo București 2–6 Grasshopper1–31–3
Marila Příbram 5–3 Sedan4–01–3
Troyes 6–2 Ružomberok6–10–1
Legia Warsaw 10–2 IF Elfsborg4–16–1
Westerlo 0–3 Hertha BSC0–20–1
Chelsea 5–0 Levski Sofia3–02–0
Kärnten 0–4 PAOK0–00–4
Dynamo Moscow 1–0 Birkirkara1–00–0
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 1–2 Fiorentina0–01–2
St. Gallen 3–2 Steaua București2–11–1
Bordeaux 6–4 Debrecen5–11–3
Hapoel Tel Aviv 2–1 Gaziantepspor1–01–1
Haka 1–4 Union Berlin1–10–3
Partizan 2–5 Rapid Wien1–01–5
Celta Vigo 7–4 Sigma Olomouc4–03–4
Midtjylland 2–6 Sporting CP0–32–3
Anzhi Makhachkala 0–1[a] Rangers
Hajduk Split 2–3 Wisła Kraków2–20–1
Paris Saint-Germain 3–0 Rapid București0–03–0 (a.e.t.)[b]
Marítimo 1–3 Leeds United1–00–3
Olympiakos Nicosia 3–9 Club Brugge2–21–7
Odd Grenland 3–3 (a) Helsingborgs IF2–21–1
Viktoria Žižkov 0–1 Tirol Innsbruck0–00–1
Dinamo Zagreb 3–3 (a) Maccabi Tel Aviv2–21–1
Polonia Warsaw 1–4 Twente1–20–2
Matador Púchov 1–2 SC Freiburg0–01–2
Notes:
  1. ^ Only one leg was played, in a neutral venue in Warsaw, Poland, due to security concerns in Russia.
  2. ^ Paris Saint-Germain were awarded a 3–0 win because there was a blackout in Bucharest at that time and the match was abandoned.

Second round

The second round featured the 41 winners of the first round. The first legs were played on 16 and 18 October, and the second legs were played on 30 October and 1 November 2001.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Roda JC 5–3 Maccabi Tel Aviv4–11–2
Legia Warsaw 2–7 Valencia1–11–6
SC Freiburg 4–2 St. Gallen0–14–1
Bordeaux 4–0 Standard Liège2–02–0
Fiorentina 4–2 Tirol Innsbruck2–02–2
Ipswich Town 3–1 Helsingborgs IF0–03–1
Paris Saint-Germain 6–2 Rapid Wien4–02–2
Union Berlin 0–2 Litex Lovech0–20–0
Copenhagen 1–0 Ajax0–01–0
Internazionale 2–1 Wisła Kraków2–00–1
PAOK 8–3 Marila Příbram6–12–2
Rangers 7–2 Dynamo Moscow3–14–1
Halmstads BK 1–7 Sporting CP0–11–6
Zaragoza 0–1 Servette0–00–1
Leeds United 6–5 Troyes4–22–3
CSKA Kyiv 0–7 Club Brugge0–20–5
Utrecht 1–3 Parma1–30–0
Osijek 3–5 AEK Athens1–22–3
Viking 0–3 Hertha BSC0–10–2
Grasshopper 6–4 Twente4–12–3
Varteks 3–6 Brøndby3–10–5
Hapoel Tel Aviv 3–1 Chelsea2–01–1
Celta Vigo 3–4 Slovan Liberec3–10–3
Milan 3–0 CSKA Sofia2–01–0

Final phase

In the final phase, teams played against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the one-match final. The mechanism of the draws for each round was as follows:[8]

  • In the draws for the third and fourth rounds, teams were seeded and divided into groups containing an equal number of seeded and unseeded teams. In each group, the seeded teams were drawn against the unseeded teams, with the first team drawn hosting the first leg. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.
  • In the draws for the quarter-finals onwards, there were no seedings and teams from the same association could be drawn against each other.

Bracket

Third roundFourth roundQuarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
Ipswich Town112
Internazionale044 Internazionale325
AEK Athens314 AEK Athens123
Litex Lovech213 Internazionale112
Valencia (p)101 (5) Valencia101
Celtic011 (4) Valencia325
Servette033 Servette022
Hertha BSC000 Internazionale022
PAOK314 Feyenoord123
PSV Eindhoven246 PSV Eindhoven011
Grasshopper123 Leeds United000
Leeds United224 PSV Eindhoven112 (4)
Rangers (p)000 (4) Feyenoord (p)112 (5)
Paris Saint-Germain000 (3) Rangers123
Feyenoord123 Feyenoord134 8 May – Rotterdam
SC Freiburg022 Feyenoord3
Club Brugge404 Borussia Dortmund2
Lyon (a)134 Lyon112
Slovan Liberec325 Slovan Liberec145
Mallorca112 Slovan Liberec000
Fiorentina000 Borussia Dortmund044
Lille123 Lille101
Copenhagen000 Borussia Dortmund (a)101
Borussia Dortmund112 Borussia Dortmund415
Hapoel Tel Aviv213 Milan033
Lokomotiv Moscow101 Hapoel Tel Aviv022
Parma134 Parma011
Brøndby101 Hapoel Tel Aviv101
Bordeaux101 Milan022
Roda JC022 Roda JC011 (2)
Milan213 Milan (p)101 (3)
Sporting CP011

Third round

The draw for the third round was held on 2 November 2001, 13:00 CET.[9] The first legs were played on 20 and 22 November, and the second legs were played on 4 and 6 December 2001.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
PAOK 4–6 PSV Eindhoven3–21–4
Fiorentina 0–3 Lille0–10–2
Valencia 1–1 (5–4 p) Celtic1–00–1 (a.e.t.)
Servette 3–0 Hertha BSC0–03–0
Ipswich Town 2–4 Internazionale1–01–4
Rangers 0–0 (4–3 p)[a] Paris Saint-Germain0–00–0 (a.e.t.)
Feyenoord 3–2 SC Freiburg1–02–2
AEK Athens 4–3 Litex Lovech3–21–1
Grasshopper 3–4 Leeds United1–22–2
Parma 4–1[a] Brøndby1–13–0
Bordeaux 1–2 Roda JC1–00–2
Slovan Liberec 5–2 Mallorca3–12–1
Hapoel Tel Aviv 3–1 Lokomotiv Moscow2–11–0
Copenhagen 0–2 Borussia Dortmund0–10–1
Milan 3–1[a] Sporting CP2–01–1
Club Brugge 4–4 (a) Lyon4–10–3
Notes:
  1. ^ a b c Order of legs reversed after original draw.[10]

Fourth round

The draw for the fourth round was held on 12 December 2001, 12:00 CET.[11][12][13][14] The first legs were played on 19 and 21 February, and the second legs were played on 28 February 2002.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Internazionale 5–3 AEK Athens3–12–2
Valencia 5–2 Servette3–02–2
PSV Eindhoven 1–0 Leeds United0–01–0
Rangers 3–4 Feyenoord1–12–3
Lyon 2–5 Slovan Liberec1–11–4
Lille 1–1 (a) Borussia Dortmund1–10–0
Hapoel Tel Aviv 2–1 Parma0–02–1
Roda JC 1–1 (2–3 p)[a] Milan0–11–0 (a.e.t.)
Notes:
  1. ^ Order of legs reversed after original draw.[14]

Quarter-finals

The draw for the quarter-finals was held on 12 December 2001, 12:00 CET, immediately after the fourth round draw.[11][14] The first legs were played on 14 March, and the second legs were played on 21 March 2002.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Internazionale 2–1 Valencia1–11–0
PSV Eindhoven 2–2 (4–5 p) Feyenoord1–11–1 (a.e.t.)
Slovan Liberec 0–4[a] Borussia Dortmund0–00–4
Hapoel Tel Aviv 1–2[a] Milan1–00–2
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Order of legs reversed after original draw.[14]

Semi-finals

The draw for the semi-finals was held on 22 March 2002, 13:00 CET.[15] The first legs were played on 4 April, and the second legs were played on 11 April 2002.[16]

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Internazionale 2–3 Feyenoord0–12–2
Borussia Dortmund 5–3[a] Milan4–01–3
Notes:
  1. ^ Order of legs reversed after original draw.[16]

Final

The final was played on 8 May 2002 at Feijenoord Stadion in Rotterdam, Netherlands.

Feyenoord 3–2 Borussia Dortmund
  • Van Hooijdonk 33' (pen.), 40'
  • Tomasson 50'
Report

Top goalscorers

Rank Player Club Goals[18] Minutes played
1 Pierre van Hooijdonk Feyenoord 8 750'
2 Mário Jardel Sporting CP 6 490'
Richard Núñez Grasshopper 516'
Mohamed Kallon Internazionale 902'
5 Jan Nezmar Slovan Liberec 5 355'
Yiasoumis Yiasoumi PAOK 382'
Pauleta Bordeaux 539'
Márcio Amoroso Borussia Dortmund 644'
Milan Osterc Hapoel Tel Aviv 797'

See also

References

  1. ^ "UEFA European Cups 2001/2002: Results and Qualification". Archived from the original on 19 December 2011. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
  2. ^ "UEFA European Football Calendar 2001/2002". Bert Kassies. Retrieved 31 January 2025.
  3. ^ a b "UEFA postpones fixtures". UEFA. Union of European Football Associations. 12 September 2001. Archived from the original on 7 November 2001. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  4. ^ Bond, David (12 September 2001). "European matches are suspended". Evening Standard. p. 77. Retrieved 3 August 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ "Clubs back decision to postpone". UEFA. Union of European Football Associations. 12 September 2001. Archived from the original on 8 January 2002. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  6. ^ "UEFA reschedules postponed matches". UEFA. Union of European Football Associations. 13 September 2001. Archived from the original on 2 December 2001. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  7. ^ "One minute's silence at this week's UEFA matches". UEFA. Union of European Football Associations. 18 September 2001. Archived from the original on 31 October 2001. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  8. ^ "Regulations of the UEFA Cup 2001/2002" (PDF). Union of European Football Associations. 2001. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  9. ^ "UEFA club competitions draws in Geneva on Friday" (PDF). UEFA. Union of European Football Associations. 30 October 2001. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  10. ^ "Tough Uefa draw for British sides". The Guardian. 2 November 2001. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
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