2014–15 UEFA Champions League qualifying

2014–15 UEFA Champions League qualifying was the preliminary phase of the 2014–15 UEFA Champions League, prior to the competition proper. Qualification consisted of the qualifying phase (first to third rounds) and the play-off round. It was played from 1 July to 27 August 2014. A total of 55 teams competed in the qualifying phase and play-off round to decide 10 of the 32 places in the group stage.[1]

All times were CEST (UTC+2).

Round and draw dates

All draws were held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.[2]

Round Draw date and time First leg Second leg
First qualifying round 23 June 2014, 12:00[3] 1–2 July 2014 8–9 July 2014
Second qualifying round 15–16 July 2014 22–23 July 2014
Third qualifying round 18 July 2014, 12:00[4] 29–30 July 2014 5–6 August 2014
Play-off round 8 August 2014, 12:00[5] 19–20 August 2014 26–27 August 2014

Format

In the qualifying phase and play-off round, each tie was played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that scored more goals on aggregate over the two legs advanced to the next round. If the aggregate score was level, the away goals rule was applied, i.e. the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then 30 minutes of extra time was played. The away goals rule was again applied after extra time, i.e. if there were goals scored during extra time and the aggregate score was still level, the visiting team advanced by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the tie was decided by penalty shoot-out.[1]

In the draws for each round, teams were seeded based on their UEFA club coefficients at the beginning of the season, with the teams divided into seeded and unseeded pots. A seeded team was drawn against an unseeded team, with the order of legs in each tie decided randomly. Due to the limited time between matches, the draws for the second and third qualifying rounds took place before the results of the previous round were known. For these draws (or in any cases where the result of a tie in the previous round was not known at the time of the draw), the seeding was carried out under the assumption that the team with the higher coefficient of an undecided tie advanced to this round, which means if the team with the lower coefficient was to advance, it simply took the seeding of its defeated opponent. Prior to the draws, UEFA may form "groups" in accordance with the principles set by the Club Competitions Committee, but they were purely for convenience of the draw and for ensuring that teams from the same association were not drawn against each other, and did not resemble any real groupings in the sense of the competition.[1]

Teams

There were two routes which the teams were separated into during qualifying:

  • Champions Route, which included all domestic champions which did not automatically qualify for the group stage.
  • League Route (also called the Non-champions Path or the Best-placed Path), which included all domestic non-champions which did not automatically qualify for the group stage.

A total of 55 teams (40 in Champions Route, 15 in League Route) were involved in the qualifying phase and play-off round. The 10 winners of the play-off round (5 in Champions Route, 5 in League Route) advanced to the group stage to join the 22 automatic qualifiers. The 15 losers of the third qualifying round entered the Europa League play-off round, and the 10 losers of the play-off round entered the Europa League group stage.[1]

Below were the participating teams (with their 2014 UEFA club coefficients),[6] grouped by their starting rounds.[7]

Key to colours
Winners of the play-off round advanced to the group stage
Losers of the play-off round entered the Europa League group stage
Losers of the third qualifying round entered the Europa League play-off round

Champions Route

Third qualifying round
Team Coeff
Red Bull Salzburg 46.185
APOEL 37.650
AaB 5.260
Second qualifying round
Team Coeff
Steaua București 39.451
Celtic 36.813
BATE Borisov 33.725
Sparta Prague 28.870
Dinamo Zagreb 23.925
Ludogorets Razgrad 18.125
Maccabi Tel Aviv 17.875
Sheriff Tiraspol 17.075
Maribor 16.200
Legia Warsaw 15.275
Partizan 14.825
Debrecen 10.325
Slovan Bratislava 8.700
Aktobe 8.150
Ventspils 7.750
Qarabağ 7.575
HJK 7.435
Dinamo Tbilisi 6.975
Malmö FF 6.265
KR 5.350
F91 Dudelange 4.975
Strømsgodset 4.855
The New Saints 4.850
St Patrick's Athletic 4.775
Skënderbeu 4.600
Rabotnicki 4.550
Valletta 4.466
Zrinjski Mostar 4.000
Cliftonville 3.225
Žalgiris 3.050
Sutjeska 2.450
First qualifying round
Team Coeff
Levadia Tallinn 4.575
HB 3.175
FC Santa Coloma 2.166
Banants 1.325
La Fiorita 0.699
Lincoln Red Imps 0.000

League Route

Play-off round
Team Coeff
Arsenal 112.949
Porto 105.459
Bayer Leverkusen 70.328
Napoli 61.387
Athletic Bilbao 54.542
Third qualifying round
Team Coeff
Zenit Saint Petersburg 73.899
Lille 45.300
Copenhagen 45.260
Standard Liège 38.260
Beşiktaş 32.840
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 32.193
Panathinaikos 30.220
Feyenoord 13.362
Grasshopper 9.645
AEL Limassol 7.650

First qualifying round

Seeding

A total of six teams played in the first qualifying round.[8] The draw was held on 23 June 2014.[9]

Seeded Unseeded

Levadia Tallinn
HB
FC Santa Coloma

Banants
La Fiorita
Lincoln Red Imps

Summary

The first legs were played on 1 and 2 July, and the second legs were played on 8 July 2014.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
FC Santa Coloma 3–3 (a) Banants1–02–3
Lincoln Red Imps 3–6 HB1–12–5
La Fiorita 0–8 Levadia Tallinn0–10–7

Matches

FC Santa Coloma 1–0 Banants
  • Pujol 5'
Report
Attendance: 323
Referee: Jens Maae (Denmark)
Banants 3–2 FC Santa Coloma
Report
  • Lima 20'
  • Casals 90+4'
Attendance: 1,400
Referee: Nikolay Yordanov (Bulgaria)

3–3 on aggregate; FC Santa Coloma won on away goals.


Lincoln Red Imps 1–1 HB
Report
HB 5–2 Lincoln Red Imps
Report
Attendance: 1,068
Referee: Vadims Direktorenko (Latvia)

HB won 6–3 on aggregate.


La Fiorita 0–1 Levadia Tallinn
Report
  • Tamm 90+3'
Attendance: 438
Referee: Dejan Jakimovski (Macedonia)
Levadia Tallinn 7–0 La Fiorita
Report
Attendance: 1,455
Referee: Chris Reisch (Luxembourg)

Levadia Tallinn won 8–0 on aggregate.

Second qualifying round

Seeding

A total of 34 teams played in the second qualifying round:[8] 31 teams which entered in this round, and the three winners of the first qualifying round. The draw was held on 23 June 2014.[9]

Group 1 Group 2 Group 3
Seeded Unseeded Seeded Unseeded Seeded Unseeded

BATE Borisov
Maccabi Tel Aviv
Sheriff Tiraspol
Maribor
Aktobe

Dinamo Tbilisi
Skënderbeu
Zrinjski Mostar
Sutjeska
FC Santa Coloma[†]

Celtic
Sparta Prague
Partizan
Debrecen
Slovan Bratislava
Ventspils

Malmö FF
KR
The New Saints
Levadia Tallinn[†]
Cliftonville
HB[†]

Steaua București
Dinamo Zagreb
Ludogorets Razgrad
Legia Warsaw
Qarabağ
HJK

F91 Dudelange
Strømsgodset
St Patrick's Athletic
Rabotnicki
Valletta
Žalgiris

Notes
  1. Winners of the first qualifying round, whose identity was not known at the time of the draw.

Summary

The first legs were played on 15 and 16 July, and the second legs were played on 22 and 23 July 2014.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
BATE Borisov 1–1 (a) Skënderbeu0–01–1
FC Santa Coloma 0–3[a] Maccabi Tel Aviv0–10–2
Dinamo Tbilisi 0–4 Aktobe0–10–3
Zrinjski Mostar 0–2 Maribor0–00–2
Sheriff Tiraspol 5–0 Sutjeska2–03–0
Sparta Prague 8–1 Levadia Tallinn7–01–1
Malmö FF 1–0 Ventspils0–01–0
Slovan Bratislava 3–0 The New Saints1–02–0
KR 0–5[b] Celtic0–10–4
Cliftonville 0–2 Debrecen0–00–2
Partizan 6–1 HB3–03–1
Legia Warsaw 6–1 St Patrick's Athletic1–15–0
Rabotnicki 1–2 HJK0–01–2
Dinamo Zagreb 4–0 Žalgiris2–02–0
Ludogorets Razgrad 5–1 F91 Dudelange4–01–1
Valletta 0–5 Qarabağ0–10–4
Strømsgodset 0–3 Steaua București0–10–2
Notes:
  1. ^ Order of legs reversed after original draw, due to the 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict.[10]
  2. ^ Order of legs reversed after original draw.

Matches

BATE Borisov 0–0 Skënderbeu
Report
Attendance: 12,671
Skënderbeu 1–1 BATE Borisov
Report
Attendance: 6,200
Referee: Ante Vučemilović-Šimunović Jr. (Croatia)

1–1 on aggregate; BATE Borisov won on away goals.


FC Santa Coloma 0–1 Maccabi Tel Aviv
Report
Attendance: 494
Referee: Lasha Silagava (Georgia)
Maccabi Tel Aviv 2–0 FC Santa Coloma
Report
Attendance: 100
Referee: Ioannis Anastasiou (Cyprus)

Maccabi Tel Aviv won 3–0 on aggregate.


Dinamo Tbilisi 0–1 Aktobe
Report
Aktobe 3–0 Dinamo Tbilisi
Report

Aktobe won 4–0 on aggregate.


Zrinjski Mostar 0–0 Maribor
Report
Maribor 2–0 Zrinjski Mostar
Report
Attendance: 7,500

Maribor won 2–0 on aggregate.


Sheriff Tiraspol 2–0 Sutjeska
Report
Attendance: 6,351
Referee: Clayton Pisani (Malta)
Sutjeska 0–3 Sheriff Tiraspol
Report
Attendance: 1,450
Referee: Alexander Harkam (Austria)

Sheriff Tiraspol won 5–0 on aggregate.


Sparta Prague 7–0 Levadia Tallinn
Report
Levadia Tallinn 1–1 Sparta Prague
Report
Attendance: 1,150

Sparta Prague won 8–1 on aggregate.


Malmö FF 0–0 Ventspils
Report
Attendance: 8,831
Ventspils 0–1 Malmö FF
Report

Malmö FF won 1–0 on aggregate.


Slovan Bratislava 1–0 The New Saints
Report
The New Saints 0–2 Slovan Bratislava
Report
Attendance: 1,140

Slovan Bratislava won 3–0 on aggregate.


KR 0–1 Celtic
Report
Attendance: 1,520
Referee: Andreas Pappas (Greece)
Celtic 4–0 KR
Report

Celtic won 5–0 on aggregate.


Cliftonville 0–0 Debrecen
Report
Attendance: 1,750
Debrecen 2–0 Cliftonville
Report

Debrecen won 2–0 on aggregate.


Partizan 3–0 HB
Report
Attendance: 11,758
Referee: Sven Bindels (Luxembourg)
HB 1–3 Partizan
Report
Attendance: 1,150
Referee: Dimitar Meckarovski (Macedonia)

Partizan won 6–1 on aggregate.


Legia Warsaw 1–1 St Patrick's Athletic
Report
Attendance: 11,075
St Patrick's Athletic 0–5 Legia Warsaw
Report

Legia Warsaw won 6–1 on aggregate.


Rabotnicki 0–0 HJK
Report
Attendance: 1,500
HJK 2–1 Rabotnicki
Report

HJK won 2–1 on aggregate.


Dinamo Zagreb 2–0 Žalgiris
Report
Attendance: 4,211
Žalgiris 0–2 Dinamo Zagreb
Report
Attendance: 4,000

Dinamo Zagreb won 4–0 on aggregate.


Ludogorets Razgrad 4–0 F91 Dudelange
Report
Attendance: 4,104
Referee: Richard Trutz (Slovakia)
F91 Dudelange 1–1 Ludogorets Razgrad
Report

Ludogorets Razgrad won 5–1 on aggregate.


Valletta 0–1 Qarabağ
Report
Qarabağ 4–0 Valletta
Report

Qarabağ won 5–0 on aggregate.


Strømsgodset 0–1 Steaua București
Report
Steaua București 2–0 Strømsgodset
Report
Attendance: 25,000
Referee: Eitan Shemeulevitch (Israel)

Steaua București won 3–0 on aggregate.

Third qualifying round

Seeding

A total of 30 teams played in the third qualifying round:[12]

  • Champions Route: three teams which entered in this round, and the 17 winners of the second qualifying round.
  • League Route: ten teams which entered in this round.

The draw was held on 18 July 2014.[13]

Champions Route League Route
Group 1 Group 2
Seeded Unseeded Seeded Unseeded Seeded Unseeded

Red Bull Salzburg
Celtic[†]
BATE Borisov[†]
Dinamo Zagreb[†]
Sheriff Tiraspol[†]

Legia Warsaw[†]
Debrecen[†]
Slovan Bratislava[†]
Qarabağ[†]
AaB

Steaua București[†]
APOEL
Sparta Prague[†]
Ludogorets Razgrad[†]
Maccabi Tel Aviv[†]

Maribor[†]
Partizan[†]
Aktobe[†]
Malmö FF[†]
HJK[†]

Zenit Saint Petersburg[‡]
Lille
Copenhagen
Standard Liège
Beşiktaş

Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk[‡]
Panathinaikos
Feyenoord
Grasshopper
AEL Limassol

Notes
  1. Winners of the second 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 second qualifying round, thus effectively taking the coefficient of their defeated opponent in the draw for the third qualifying round.
  2. On 17 July 2014, the UEFA emergency panel ruled that Ukrainian and Russian clubs would not be drawn against each other "until further notice" due to the political unrest between the countries.[11] Therefore, Russian club Zenit Saint Petersburg and Ukrainian club Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk could not be drawn into the same tie.

Summary

The first legs were played on 29 and 30 July, and the second legs were played on 5 and 6 August 2014.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Champions Route
Qarabağ 2–3 Red Bull Salzburg2–10–2
Debrecen 2–3 BATE Borisov1–01–3
Slovan Bratislava 2–1 Sheriff Tiraspol2–10–0
AaB 2–1 Dinamo Zagreb0–12–0
Legia Warsaw 4–4 (a) Celtic4–10–3[a]
Aktobe 3–4 Steaua București2–21–2
Maribor 3–2 Maccabi Tel Aviv1–02–2
HJK 2–4 APOEL2–20–2
Sparta Prague 4–4 (a) Malmö FF4–20–2
Ludogorets Razgrad 2–2 (a) Partizan0–02–2
League Route
AEL Limassol 1–3 Zenit Saint Petersburg1–00–3
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 0–2 Copenhagen0–00–2
Feyenoord 2–5 Beşiktaş1–21–3
Grasshopper 1–3 Lille0–21–1
Standard Liège 2–1 Panathinaikos0–02–1
Notes:
  1. ^ Because of a clerical error by Legia Warsaw involving Bartosz Bereszyński, who was suspended for three matches as a result of a red card on matchday 6 of the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League group stage, UEFA awarded Celtic a 3–0 win. The error involved Legia Warsaw not registering the suspended player for the St. Patrick's Athletic tie the previous round, which meant those two matches did not count towards his suspension. The original match had ended in a 2–0 win for Legia Warsaw.[14]

Matches

Qarabağ 2–1 Red Bull Salzburg
Report
Red Bull Salzburg 2–0 Qarabağ
Report

Red Bull Salzburg won 3–2 on aggregate.


Debrecen 1–0 BATE Borisov
Report
Attendance: 10,191
BATE Borisov 3–1 Debrecen
Report
Attendance: 12,788

BATE Borisov won 3–2 on aggregate.


Slovan Bratislava 2–1 Sheriff Tiraspol
Report
Sheriff Tiraspol 0–0 Slovan Bratislava
Report
Attendance: 8,753
Referee: István Vad (Hungary)

Slovan Bratislava won 2–1 on aggregate.


AaB 0–1 Dinamo Zagreb
Report
Dinamo Zagreb 0–2 AaB
Report
Attendance: 8,235

AaB won 2–1 on aggregate.


Legia Warsaw 4–1 Celtic
Report
Celtic 3–0
Awarded[note 5]
Legia Warsaw
Report

4–4 on aggregate; Celtic won on away goals.


Aktobe 2–2 Steaua București
Report
Steaua București 2–1 Aktobe
Report

Steaua București won 4–3 on aggregate.


Maribor 1–0 Maccabi Tel Aviv
Report
Attendance: 8,120
Maccabi Tel Aviv 2–2 Maribor
Report

Maribor won 3–2 on aggregate.


HJK 2–2 APOEL
Report
Attendance: 10,189
Referee: Paweł Gil (Poland)
APOEL 2–0 HJK
Report
Attendance: 14,271
Referee: Liran Liany (Israel)

APOEL won 4–2 on aggregate.


Sparta Prague 4–2 Malmö FF
Report
Attendance: 12,833
Malmö FF 2–0 Sparta Prague
Report
Attendance: 19,322
Referee: Ruddy Buquet (France)

4–4 on aggregate; Malmö FF won on away goals.


Ludogorets Razgrad 0–0 Partizan
Report
Attendance: 6,000
Referee: Kenn Hansen (Denmark)
Partizan 2–2 Ludogorets Razgrad
Report
Attendance: 18,504

2–2 on aggregate; Ludogorets Razgrad won on away goals.


AEL Limassol 1–0 Zenit Saint Petersburg
Report
Zenit Saint Petersburg 3–0 AEL Limassol
Report

Zenit Saint Petersburg won 3–1 on aggregate.


Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 0–0 Copenhagen
Report
Attendance: 23,410
Copenhagen 2–0 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
Report
Attendance: 18,875

Copenhagen won 2–0 on aggregate.


Feyenoord 1–2 Beşiktaş
Report
Attendance: 44,000
Referee: Luca Banti (Italy)
Beşiktaş 3–1 Feyenoord
  • Ba 28', 80', 86'
Report

Beşiktaş won 5–2 on aggregate.


Grasshopper 0–2 Lille
Report
Attendance: 7,700
Lille 1–1 Grasshopper
Report

Lille won 3–1 on aggregate.


Standard Liège 0–0 Panathinaikos
Report
Panathinaikos 1–2 Standard Liège
Report

Standard Liège won 2–1 on aggregate.

Play-off round

Seeding

A total of 20 teams played in the play-off round:[17]

  • Champions Route: the ten Champions Route winners of the third qualifying round.
  • League Route: five teams which entered in this round, and the five League Route winners of the third qualifying round.

The draw was held on 8 August 2014.[18]

Champions Route League Route
Seeded Unseeded Seeded Unseeded

Red Bull Salzburg
Steaua București
APOEL
Celtic
BATE Borisov

Ludogorets Razgrad
Maribor
Slovan Bratislava
Malmö FF
AaB

Arsenal
Porto
Zenit Saint Petersburg
Bayer Leverkusen
Napoli

Athletic Bilbao
Lille
Copenhagen
Standard Liège
Beşiktaş

Summary

The first legs were played on 19 and 20 August, and the second legs were played on 26 and 27 August 2014.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Champions Route
Maribor 2–1 Celtic1–11–0
Red Bull Salzburg 2–4 Malmö FF2–10–3
AaB 1–5 APOEL1–10–4
Steaua București 1–1 (5–6 p) Ludogorets Razgrad1–00–1 (a.e.t.)
Slovan Bratislava 1–4 BATE Borisov1–10–3
League Route
Beşiktaş 0–1 Arsenal0–00–1
Standard Liège 0–4 Zenit Saint Petersburg0–10–3
Copenhagen 2–7 Bayer Leverkusen2–30–4
Lille 0–3 Porto0–10–2
Napoli 2–4 Athletic Bilbao1–11–3

Matches

Maribor 1–1 Celtic
Report
Celtic 0–1 Maribor
Report
Attendance: 55,415[20]

Maribor won 2–1 on aggregate.


Red Bull Salzburg 2–1 Malmö FF
Report
Malmö FF 3–0 Red Bull Salzburg
Report
Attendance: 20,361[22]

Malmö FF won 4–2 on aggregate.


AaB 1–1 APOEL
Report
APOEL 4–0 AaB
Report
Attendance: 18,746[20]

APOEL won 5–1 on aggregate.


Steaua București 1–0 Ludogorets Razgrad
Report
Attendance: 35,342[21]
Referee: Felix Brych (Germany)

1–1 on aggregate; Ludogorets Razgrad won 6–5 on penalties.


Slovan Bratislava 1–1 BATE Borisov
Report
BATE Borisov 3–0 Slovan Bratislava
Report
Attendance: 12,970[20]

BATE Borisov won 4–1 on aggregate.


Beşiktaş 0–0 Arsenal
Report
Arsenal 1–0 Beşiktaş
Report
Attendance: 59,946[22]

Arsenal won 1–0 on aggregate.


Standard Liège 0–1 Zenit Saint Petersburg
Report
Zenit Saint Petersburg 3–0 Standard Liège
Report

Zenit Saint Petersburg won 4–0 on aggregate.


Copenhagen 2–3 Bayer Leverkusen
Report
Bayer Leverkusen 4–0 Copenhagen
Report
Attendance: 23,321[22]

Bayer Leverkusen won 7–2 on aggregate.


Lille 0–1 Porto
Report
Porto 2–0 Lille
Report

Porto won 3–0 on aggregate.


Napoli 1–1 Athletic Bilbao
Report
Attendance: 49,872[21]
Athletic Bilbao 3–1 Napoli
Report
Attendance: 49,017[22]

Athletic Bilbao won 4–2 on aggregate.

Statistics

There were 212 goals in 90 matches in the qualifying phase and play-off round, for an average of 2.36 goals per match.[23]

Top goalscorers

Rank Player Team Goals Minutes played
1 David Lafata Sparta Prague 8 262
2 Miroslav Radović Legia Warsaw 5 358
3 Markus Rosenberg Malmö FF 4 540
4 Stefan Kießling Bayer Leverkusen 3 163
Levi Hanssen HB 3 270
Demba Ba Beşiktaş 3 298
Danko Lazović Partizan 3 305
Cillian Sheridan APOEL 3 329
Tomás De Vincenti APOEL 3 330
Petar Škuletić Partizan 3 343
Ibrahima Sidibe Debrecen 3 353
Michał Żyro Legia Warsaw 3 354
Agim Ibraimi Maribor 3 519
Callum McGregor Celtic 3 540

Source: UEFA.com[24]

Top assists

Rank Player Team Assists Minutes played
1 Michał Kucharczyk Legia Warsaw 3 234
Josef Hušbauer Sparta Prague 3 249
Marat Khairullin Aktobe 3 296
Domagoj Antolić Dinamo Zagreb 3 311
Tomás De Vincenti APOEL 3 330
Darko Brašanac Partizan 3 353
Michał Żyro Legia Warsaw 3 354
Anderson Mineiro Aktobe 3 360
Alexandru Chipciu Steaua București 3 445
Adrian Popa Steaua București 3 448

Source: UEFA.com[25]

Notes

  1. ^ a b On 17 July 2014, the UEFA Emergency Panel decided that Israeli clubs must play their home legs outside of the country "until further notice" due to the 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict.[11]
  2. ^ The New Saints played their home match at Belle Vue, Rhyl, instead of their regular stadium Park Hall, Oswestry.
  3. ^ a b The match was played at Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh as Celtic's home stadium, Celtic Park, Glasgow, was used for the 2014 Commonwealth Games.
  4. ^ St Patrick's Athletic played their home match at Tallaght Stadium, instead of their regular stadium Richmond Park.
  5. ^ The Celtic v Legia Warsaw second leg, which originally finished as a 2–0 win for Legia Warsaw (6–1 on aggregate), was forfeited because of a clerical error by Legia Warsaw regarding Bartosz Bereszyński, who had been suspended for three UEFA club competition matches as a result of a red card on matchday 6 of the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League group stage against Apollon Limassol. Normally, he would have been suspended for the two legs against St. Patrick's Athletic and the first leg of the Celtic; however, Legia Warsaw failed to register Bereszyński for the St. Patrick's Athletic matches, meaning he would have had to sit out both legs of this match and the first leg of the next UEFA match. Bereszyński entered the second leg in the 86th minute as an illegal substitute because his suspension had not been legally served; Celtic were therefore awarded the second leg 3–0. Therefore, the tie finished 4–4 on aggregate, with Celtic winning on away goals.
  6. ^ The match was delayed for 15 minutes before the start of the second half due to fan violence.[15]
  7. ^ The match was played at Olympic Stadium, Kyiv instead of Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk's home stadium, Dnipro-Arena, Dnipropetrovsk, due to the pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine.[16]
  8. ^ Match played their at Vasil Levski National Stadium, Sofia, instead of Ludogorets' regular stadium Ludogorets Arena, Razgrad.

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Regulations of the UEFA Champions League 2014/15 Season" (PDF). UEFA. 1 May 2014.
  2. ^ "Competition format". UEFA. Archived from the original on 2015-04-23.
  3. ^ "Draws for 2014/15 UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League". UEFA.org. 16 June 2014. Archived from the original on 26 November 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  4. ^ "Draws for the third qualifying round of UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League". UEFA.org. 11 July 2014. Archived from the original on 26 November 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  5. ^ "Champions League, Europa League play-off draws". UEFA.org. 31 July 2014. Archived from the original on 26 November 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  6. ^ "Club coefficients 2013/14". UEFA. Archived from the original on October 4, 2013.
  7. ^ "2014/15 UEFA Champions League participants". UEFA. Archived from the original on April 24, 2014.
  8. ^ a b "Seedings confirmed for live qualifying draws". UEFA. 23 June 2014.
  9. ^ a b "Draws — First & second qualifying rounds". UEFA. 23 June 2014. Archived from the original on June 23, 2014.
  10. ^ "Maccabi Tel Aviv's Champions League qualifier changed due to rocket fire". The Jerusalem Post. 10 July 2014.
  11. ^ a b "Emergency Panel decisions". UEFA.org. 17 July 2014.
  12. ^ "Seeding pots for live draw". UEFA. 17 July 2014.
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