1970–71 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup

1970–71 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
Tournament details
Teams64
Final positions
Champions Leeds United (2nd title)
Runners-up Juventus
Tournament statistics
Matches played126
Goals scored382 (3.03 per match)
Top scorer(s) Pietro Anastasi (10 goals)

The 1970–71 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup was the 13th and final season of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, a European football competition for teams not qualified for the European Cup or the European Cup Winners' Cup. Back in 1969, UEFA determined this would be the final year of the Fairs Cup before taking over the organizational duties and evolving the competition into the UEFA Cup, which is now known as the UEFA Europa League.[1]

The final was played over two legs at Stadio Comunale, Turin, Italy, and at Elland Road, Leeds, England. It was won by Leeds United of England, who defeated the Italian team Juventus on the away goals rule after a 3–3 aggregate draw to claim their second Inter-Cities Fairs Cup title. It was the first time the competition final had been won on the away goals rule.

This was to be the final European title for Leeds United, which would cap off its most successful era later in the decade with two further finals in UEFA-organized tournaments. It was also the second Fairs Cup final lost by Juventus, who still had not won a European title. Notably, the first leg of the final was replayed from scratch two days later after the initially scheduled game, which was abandoned after 51 minutes of play with a score of 0–0 due to heavy rain and a waterlogged pitch.

As no team had ever managed to permanently win the Inter-Cities Fairs trophy that was to be discontinued, its destination was decided in a special play-off between the first and last competition winners: Barcelona and Leeds United, respectively.[1]

Country team allocation

A total of 64 teams from 29 countries were entered in the 1970–71 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. For the first time, a team from Finland entered the competition, with the allocation scheme being redrawn as follows

  • England have five teams qualify due to the use of the title holder berth.
  • 5 countries have four teams qualify.
  • 3 countries have three teams qualify.
  • 10 associations have two teams qualify.
  • 10 associations have one team qualify.

Scotland and Yugoslavia gained a fourth berth, which Portugal lost. These places came mainly from the loss of a second Fairs Cup berth by East Germany, Norway and Northern Ireland.

Countries in the 1970–71 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
Five teams
England
Four teams
Scotland
Italy
Spain
West Germany
Yugoslavia
Three teams
Portugal Belgium France
Two teams
Hungary Czechoslovakia Poland
Bulgaria Netherlands Romania
Austria Greece Switzerland
Denmark
One team
East Germany Turkey
Sweden Northern Ireland
Norway Finland
Republic of Ireland Luxembourg
Malta Iceland
Did not compete
Wales[Note WAL]
Albania
Soviet Union
Cyprus
  • ^
    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.
  • Teams

    The labels in the 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
    • Sum: Position at the halfway mark or the summer break in a calendar-based league
    Qualified teams for 1970–71 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
    Arsenal (TH) Leeds United (2nd) Liverpool (5th) Coventry City (6th)
    Newcastle United (7th)[Note ENG] Rangers (2nd) Hibernian (3rd) Dundee United (5th)
    Kilmarnock (7th)[Note ONE] Inter Milan (2nd) Juventus (3rd) Fiorentina (4th)
    Lazio (8th)[Note ICFC] Athletic Bilbao (2nd) Sevilla (3rd) Barcelona (4th)
    Valencia (5th) Bayern Munich (2th) Hertha BSC (3rd) Köln (4th)
    Hamburg (6th)[Note ICFC] Partizan (2nd) Željezničar (4th) Dinamo Zagreb (6th)[Note ONE]
    Hajduk Split (7th)[Note ICFC] Vitória de Setúbal (3rd) Barreirense (4th) Vitória de Guimaraes (5th)
    La Gantoise (3rd) Anderlecht (4th) Beveren (5th) Marseille (2nd)
    Sedan (3rd) Angoulême (4th) Ferencváros (2nd) Pécsi Dózsa (7th)[Note ONE]
    Spartak Trnava (2nd) Sparta Prague (3rd) Ruch Chorzów (2nd) Katowice (7th)[Note ICFC]
    Slavia Sofia (3rd) Botev Plovdiv (4th) FC Twente (4th) Sparta Rotterdam (5th)
    Universitatea Craiova (4th) Dinamo București (5th) Wiener SC (2nd) Sturm Graz (3rd)
    AEK Athens (2nd) PAOK (5th)[Note ONE] Lausanne-Sport (2nd) Grasshoppers (4th)
    AB (Sum-2nd)[Note DEN] B 1901 (Sum-3rd) Dynamo Dresden (3rd) Eskişehirspor (2nd)
    Malmö (Sum-1st) Coleraine (2nd) Sarpsborg (Sum-1st) Ilves-Kissat (Sum-1st)
    Cork Hibernians (LC) Rumelange (2nd) Sliema Wanderers (2nd) ÍA (Sum-1st)

    Notes

    1. ^
      England: Derby County originally qualified for the Fairs Cup by finishing 4th in the 1969–70 Football League. However, a disciplinary commission found the team guilty of administrative and financial irregularities. As a result, Derby County was not allowed to compete in the Fairs Cup. Newcastle United, the next best team not qualified for international competition, took its place.
    2. ^
      Scotland, Yugoslavia, Hungary and Greece: The following teams qualified for the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup due to the 'one city, one team' rule that prevented other teams from competing:
    3. ^
      West Germany, Italy, Yugoslavia and Poland: The following teams competed in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup instead of other teams that would've had the first right to compete via their league position, and were not in breach of the 'one city, one team' rule. 'Fair trade' eligibility for the unqualified teams is unknown in some cases:
    4. ^
      Denmark: Newly promoted Brönshöj led the standings at the June break, but the team was not approved to compete by the Danish federation. It was replaced by AB, who was second at the time and couldn't qualify initially because the team was also based in Copenhagen.

    Schedule

    The schedule of the competition was as follows. Matches were primarily scheduled for Wednesdays, though some matches took place on Tuesdays, and exceptionally on Thursdays. After the first leg of the final had to be postponed to a Friday, the return leg played in the following weekend was moved one day backwards to a Thursday. The first leg of the 1st round match-up between Sevilla FC and Eskisehirspor was played on a Saturday.

    Schedule for 1970–71 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
    Round First leg Second leg
    First round 2–23 September 1970 8–30 September 1970
    Second round 14–28 October 1970 28 October – 4 November 1970
    Third round 25 November – 9 December 1970 9–23 December 1970
    Quarter-finals 27 January / 9–10 March 1971 17 February / 23–24 March 1971
    Semi-finals 14 April 1971 28 April 1971
    Final 26 May 1971 3 June 1971

    First round

    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    Ilves-Kissat 4–5 Sturm Graz 4–2 0–3
    Lazio 2–4 Arsenal 2–2 0–2
    Cork Hibernians 1–6 Valencia 0–3[2] 1–3
    Wiener Sportclub 0–5 K.S.K. Beveren 0–2 0–3
    B1901 3–8 Hertha BSC 2–4 1–4
    Spartak Trnava 2–2(p) Olympique de Marseille 2–0 0–2 (a.e.t.)
    Ruch Chorzów 1–3 Fiorentina 1–1 0–2
    1. FC Köln 5–2 RC Paris-Sedan 5–1 0–1
    Internazionale 1–3 Newcastle United 1–1 0–2
    Universitatea Craiova 2–4 Pécsi Dózsa 2–1 0–3
    GKS Katowice 2–4 Barcelona 0–1 2–3
    Juventus 11–0 US Rumelange 7–0 4–0
    Barreirense 3–6 Dinamo Zagreb 2–0 1–6
    La Gantoise 1–8 Hamburger SV 0–1 1–7
    Sevilla 2–3 Eskişehirspor 1–0 1–3
    AEK Athens 0–4 Twente 0–1 0–3
    Hibernian 9–2 Malmö FF 6–0 3–2
    Vitória Guimarães 4–3 Angoulême 3–0 1–3
    Liverpool 2–1 Ferencváros 1–0 1–1
    Dinamo București 5–1 PAOK 5–0 0–1
    Bayern Munich 2–1 Rangers 1–0 1–1
    Botev Plovdiv 1–6 Coventry City 1–4 0–2
    Sparta Rotterdam 15–0 ÍA 6–0 9–0
    Coleraine 4–3 Kilmarnock 1–1 3–2
    Sarpsborg 0–6 Leeds United 0–1 0–5
    Partizan 0–6 Dynamo Dresden 0–0 0–6
    Sparta Prague 3–1 Athletic Bilbao 2–0 1–1
    Dundee United 3–2 Grasshopper 3–2 0–0
    AB 10–2 Sliema Wanderers 7–0 3–2
    Željezničar Sarajevo 7–9 Anderlecht 3–4 4–5
    Lausanne Sports 1–4 Vitória Setúbal 0–2 1–2
    Hajduk Split 3–1 Slavia Sofia 3–0 0–1

    First leg

    AEK Athens 0–1 Twente
    Report van de Kerkhof 12'
    Attendance: 26,124
    Referee: Josip Strmečki (Yugoslavia)

    La Gantoise 0–1 Hamburger SV
    Report Nogly 25'
    Attendance: 10,900
    Referee: Alistair McKenzie Scotland

    Željezničar Sarajevo 3–4 Anderlecht
    Osim 4'
    Edin Sprečo 58'
    Mujkić 59'
    Report Puis 34', 82'
    Mulder 60'
    Van Binst 89'
    Attendance: 4,600
    Referee: Günter Männig (East Germany)

    Sevilla 1–0 Eskişehirspor
    Matute 61' Report
    Attendance: 20,600
    Referee: Jacques Colling (Luxembourg)

    Liverpool 1–0 Ferencváros
    Graham 17' Report
    Attendance: 37,531
    Referee: Roland Marendaz (Switzerland)

    Sarpsborg 0–1 Leeds United
    Report Lorimer 77'
    Attendance: 8,769
    Referee: Preben Christopherson (Denmark)

    Coleraine 1–1 Kilmarnock
    Mullan 60' Report Mathie 56'
    Attendance: 7,000

    1. FC Köln 5–1 RC Paris-Sedan
    Parits 26'
    Thielen 35'
    Rupp 47', 70'
    Lex 82'
    Report Pierron 69'
    Attendance: 10,400
    Referee: Leonardus van der Kroft (Netherlands)


    Dundee United 3–2 Grasshopper
    I. Reid 65'
    Markland 81'
    A. Reid 90'
    Report Ove Grahn 35'
    Meier 50'
    Attendance: 8,400
    Referee: Curt Nystrand (Sweden)

    Spartak Trnava 2–0 Olympique de Marseille
    Dobiaš 31' (pen.)
    Masrna 48'
    Report
    Attendance: 7,000
    Referee: Aurel Bentu (Romania)

    AB 7–0 Sliema Wanderers
    Mick Sultana 9' (o.g.)
    F. Hansen 32', 89'
    Carlsen 48', 72'
    Nielsen 53'
    Petersen 86'
    Report
    Attendance: 1,960
    Referee: Sven Jonsson (Sweden)

    GKS Katowice 0–1 Barcelona
    Report Rexach 83'
    Attendance: 85,000
    Referee: Karl Riegg (West Germany)

    Lazio 2–2 Arsenal
    Chinaglia 85', 89' (pen.) Report Radford 52', 56'
    Attendance: 31,000
    Referee: Gerhard Schulenburg (West Germany)

    Cork Hibernians 0–3 Valencia
    Report Claramunt 13', 22'
    Barrachina 75'
    Attendance: 10,500

    Partizan 0–0 Dynamo Dresden
    Report
    Attendance: 9,600

    Wiener Sportclub 0–2 K.S.K. Beveren
    Report Rogiers 58'
    Janssens 74'
    Attendance: 1,200
    Referee: Gusztáv Bircsak (Hungary)

    Bayern Munich 1–0 Rangers
    Beckenbauer 21' Report
    Attendance: 23,000
    Referee: Arie Van Gemert (Netherlands)

    Sparta Prague 2–0 Athletic Bilbao
    Migas 19' (pen.)
    Gögh 61'
    Report
    Attendance: 16,400
    Referee: Georgios Yanopoulos (Greece)

    Barreirense 2–0 Dinamo Zagreb
    Serafim 30'
    Câmpora 89'
    Report
    Attendance: 4,700
    Referee: Georges Uhlen (France)

    B1901 2–4 Hertha BSC
    Olsen 25'
    H. E. Hansen 78'
    Report Brungs 19', 28'
    Gayer 68'
    Steffenhagen 70'
    Attendance: 8,000
    Referee: Kjell Wahlen (Norway)

    Ilves-Kissat 4–2 Sturm Graz
    Lundberg 3'
    Nuoranen 40', 47'
    Kalevi Nupponen 53'
    Report Rinne 2' (o.g.)
    Kaiser 54'
    Attendance: 300
    Referee: Marian Kuston (Poland)

    Vitória Guimarães 3–0 Angoulême
    B. da Velha 46', 82'
    Peres 55'
    Report
    Attendance: 5,500
    Referee: Ettore Carminati (Italy)

    Hibernian 6–0 Malmö FF
    Blair 31'
    Joe McBride 33', 57', 59'
    A. Duncan 62', 75'
    Report
    Attendance: 11,165
    Referee: Pablo Sánchez Ibáñez (Spain)

    Ruch Chorzów 1–1 Fiorentina
    E. Faber 46' Report Vitali 53'
    Attendance: 85,000
    Referee: Josef Bucek (Austria)

    Botev Plovdiv 1–4 Coventry City
    Radkov 75' Report O'Rourke 39', 67', 89'
    Neil Martin 43'
    Attendance: 10,400
    Referee: Joseph Cassar Naudi (Malta)

    Universitatea Craiova 2-1 Pécsi Dózsa
    Ţarălungă 68'
    Strâmbeanu 80'
    Report Máté 67'
    Attendance: 15,000
    Referee: Efstathios Papavasiliou (Greece)

    Juventus 7–0 US Rumelange
    Pawlowski 9' (o.g.)
    Bettega 15', 74'
    Anastasi 19', 27', 43', 70'
    Report
    Attendance: 10,700
    Referee: Karl Göppel (Switzerland)

    Dinamo București 5–0 PAOK
    Dumitrache 8', 49', 73'
    Popescu 64', 83'
    Report
    Attendance: 20,000
    Referee: Sándor Petri (Hungary)

    Hajduk Split 3-0 Slavia Sofia
    Jerković 22'
    Pavlica 39'
    Jovanić 89'
    Report
    Attendance: 6,600
    Referee: László Vízhányó (Hungary)

    Sparta Rotterdam 6-0 ÍA
    Venneker 2'
    Kowalik 11'
    Koudijzer 44'
    Heijerman 48', 57' (pen.)
    Walbeek 87'
    Report
    Attendance: 8,000
    Referee: David W. Smith (England)

    Internazionale 1–1 Newcastle United
    Cella 84' Report Davies 44'
    Attendance: 14,460
    Referee: Heinz Siebert (West Germany)

    Second leg

    Twente 3–0 AEK Athens
    Report
    Attendance: 16,000
    Referee: Ken Burns (England)

    Twente won 4–0 on aggregate.


    Eskişehirspor 3–1 Sevilla
    Fethi 80', 82', 90+' Acosta 79'
    Attendance: 10,700
    Referee: Gerhard Kunze (West Germany)

    Eskişehirspor won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Barcelona 3–2GKS Katowice
    Pujol 50'
    Martí Filosia 59'
    Rexach 82'
    Rother 9'
    Nowok 41' (pen.)
    Attendance: 60,000
    Referee: René Vigliani (France)

    Barcelona won 4–2 on aggregate.


    Arsenal 2–0 Lazio
    Radford 11'
    Armstrong 73'

    Arsenal won 4–2 on aggregate.


    Fiorentina 2–0 Ruch Chorzów
    Chiarugi 42'
    Mariani 47'
    Referee: Petar Kostovski (Yugoslavia)

    Fiorentina won 3–1 on aggregate.


    Leeds United 5–0 Sarpsborg
    Charlton 22', 61'
    Bremner 71', 88'
    Lorimer 90'
    Attendance: 19,283
    Referee: Mario Gomez Alves (Portugal)

    Leeds won 6–0 on aggregate.


    Sparta Rotterdam won 15–0 on aggregate.


    Newcastle United won 3–1 on aggregate.


    Pécsi Dózsa 3–0 Universitatea Craiova
    Report
    Stadion PVSK, Pécs
    Attendance: 18,000
    Referee: Walter Fercher (Austria)

    Pécsi won 4–2 on aggregate.


    Valencia 3–1 Cork Hibernians
    Jara 12'
    Sergio 19', 47'
    Wigginton 40'
    Attendance: 12,000
    Referee: David W. Smith (England)

    Valencia won 6–1 on aggregate.


    Athletic Bilbao 1–1 Sparta Prague
    Uriarte 65' (pen.) Chovanec 53'
    Attendance: 29,300
    Referee: Clive Thomas (Wales)

    Sparta Prague won 3–1 on aggregate.


    Grasshopper 0–0 Dundee United
    Report
    Attendance: 4,500
    Referee: Franz Geluck (Belgium)

    Dundee United won 3–2 on aggregate.


    US Rumelange 0–4 Juventus
    Novellini 30', 44', 87'
    Landini 37'

    Juventus won 11–0 on aggregate.


    PAOK 1–0 Dinamo București
    Report
    Attendance: 12,400

    Dinamo București won 5–1 on aggregate.


    Coventry City 2–0 Botev Plovdiv
    Joicey 30'
    Blockley 35'

    Coventry City won 6–1 on aggregate.


    Vitória Setúbal 2–1 Lausanne-Sport
    José Maria 21', 45' Dufour 40'
    Attendance: 8,300
    Referee: Antonio Sánchez Ríos (Spain)

    Vitória Setúbal won 4–1 on aggregate.


    Angoulême 3–1 Vitória Guimarães
    Castellan 25', 39'
    Gallice 67'
    Ademir Silva 51'
    Stade Camille-Lebon, Angoulême)
    Attendance: 6,300

    Vitória Guimarães won 4–3 on aggregate.


    Dinamo Zagreb 6–1 Barreirense
    Novak 50', 55', 70', 84'
    Lalić 72', 75'
    Campora 38'
    Attendance: 9,300
    Referee: Helmut Bader (East Germany)

    Dinamo Zagreb won 6–3 on aggregate.

    Second round

    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    SK Sturm Graz 1–2 Arsenal 1–0 0–2
    Valencia CF 1–2 K.S.K. Beveren 0–1 1–1
    Hertha BSC 2–3 FC Spartak Trnava 1–0 1–3
    Fiorentina 1–3 1. FC Köln 1–2 0–1
    Newcastle United 2–2(p) Pécsi Dózsa 2–0 0–2 (a.e.t.)
    Barcelona 2–4 Juventus 1–2 1–2
    NK Dinamo Zagreb 4–1 Hamburger SV 4–0 0–1
    Eskişehirspor 4–8 Twente 3–2 1–6
    Hibernian 3–2 Vitória Guimarães 2–0 1–2
    Liverpool 4–1 FC Dinamo București 3–0 1–1
    Bayern Munich 7–3 Coventry City 6–1 1–2
    Sparta Rotterdam 4–1 Coleraine 2–0 2–1
    Leeds United 2–2a Dynamo Dresden 1–0 1–2
    Sparta Prague 3–2 Dundee United FC 3–1 0–1
    AB 1–7 Anderlecht 1–3 0–4
    Vitória Setúbal 3–2 Hajduk Split 2–0 1–2

    First leg

    Hibernian 2–0 Vitória Guimarães
    Duncan 45'
    Stanton 90'
    Attendance: 11,400
    Referee: Theodorus Boosten (Netherlands)

    Fiorentina 1–2 1. FC Köln
    Mariani 20' Flohe 25', 46'
    Attendance: 10,000
    Referee: Anton Bucheli (Switzerland)

    Barcelona 1–2 Juventus
    Marcial 74' Haller 12'
    Bettega 55'
    Attendance: 65,000
    Referee: Jack Taylor (England)

    Sparta Rotterdam 2-0[4] Coleraine F.C.
    Jan Klijnjan 19', 44' Report
    Attendance: 7,000

    Liverpool 3–0 Dinamo București
    Report
    Attendance: 36,525
    Referee: Roger Machin (France)

    Leeds United 1–0 Dynamo Dresden
    Lorimer 57' (pen.)
    Attendance: 21,292
    Referee: Alfred Delcourt (Belgium)

    Sparta Prague 3–1 Dundee United
    Vrána 19'
    Jurkanin 71', 89'
    Traynor 25'
    Attendance: 17,600

    Vitória Setúbal 2–0 Hajduk Split
    José Maria 59'
    Boljat 82' (o.g)
    Attendance: 6,900
    Referee: Alfred Ott (West Germany)

    Valencia 0–1 K.S.K. Beveren
    De Raeymaeker 77'
    Attendance: 45,000
    Referee: Robert Wurtz (France)

    Second leg

    Vitória Guimarães 2–1 Hibernian
    Gonçalves 20'
    Ademir Silva 43'
    Graham 75'

    Hibernian won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Dynamo Dresden 2–1 Leeds United
    Hemp 15'
    Kreische 63'
    Jones 30'
    Attendance: 35,000
    Referee: Ferdinand Marschall (Austria)

    2–2 on aggregate; Leeds United won on away goals.


    1. FC Köln 1–0 Fiorentina
    Biskup 33' (pen.)
    Attendance: 14,000

    1. FC Köln won 3–1 on aggregate.


    Juventus 2–1 Barcelona
    Bettega 5'
    Capello 23'
    Pujol 83'
    Attendance: 40,000
    Referee: Günter Männig (East Germany)

    Juventus won 4–2 on aggregate.


    Dinamo București 1–1 Liverpool
    Report

    Liverpool won 4–1 on aggregate.


    K.S.K. Beveren 1–1 Valencia
    De Raeymaeker 60' Forment 84'
    Attendance: 20,000
    Referee: Curt Nystrand (Sweden)

    The referee called the end of the game three minutes before the regulation time and had to abandon the pitch escorted out by Beveren's players because of the pressure and the protests by the visiting team as a result of his decision. K.S.K. Beveren won 2–1 on aggregate.


    Dundee United 1–0 Sparta Prague
    Gordon 31' Report
    Attendance: 9,000
    Referee: Kjell Wahlen (Norway

    Sparta Prague won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Coleraine F.C. 1-2[6] Sparta Rotterdam
    Brian Jennings 28' Report Jan Klijnjan 15'
    Jørgen Kristensen 26'
    Attendance: 5,000
    Referee: Kaj Sørensen

    Sparta Rotterdam won 4–1 on aggregate.


    Twente won 8–4 on aggregate.


    Hajduk Split 2–1 Vitória Setúbal
    Nadoveza 63'
    Buljan 72'
    José Maria 23'
    Attendance: 11,800
    Referee: Jan Łazowski (Poland)

    Vitória Setúbal won 3–2 on aggregate.

    Third round

    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    Arsenal 4–0 K.S.K. Beveren 4–0 0–0
    FC Spartak Trnava 0–4 1. FC Köln 0–1 0–3
    Pécsi Dózsa 0–3 Juventus 0–1 0–2
    NK Dinamo Zagreb 2–3 Twente 2–2 0–1
    Hibernian 0–3 Liverpool 0–1 0–2
    Bayern Munich 5–2 Sparta Rotterdam 2–1 3–1
    Leeds United 9–2 Sparta Prague 6–0 3–2
    Anderlecht 3–4 Vitória Setúbal 2–1 1–3 (a.e.t.)

    First leg

    FC Bayern Munich 2–1[8] Sparta Rotterdam
    Edgar Schneider 56'
    Gerd Müller 88'
    Report Nol Heijerman 16'
    Attendance: 10,300
    Referee: José Rosa Nunes (Portugal)

    Spartak Trnava 0–1 1. FC Köln
    Report Dobiaš 8' (o.g)
    Attendance: 13,000
    Referee: Nikola Mladenović (Yugoslavia)

    Leeds United 6–0 Sparta Prague
    Clarke 19'
    Chovanec 24' (o.g.)
    Bremner 26'
    Gray 28', 36'
    Charlton 54'
    Report
    Attendance: 25,843
    Referee: Keon Brouwer (Netherlands)

    Arsenal 4–0 Beveren
    Clarke 10'
    Kennedy 29, 77'
    Sammels 54'
    Report
    Attendance: 33,444
    Referee: Pius Kamber (Netherlands)

    Pécsi Dózsa 0–1 Juventus
    Report Causio 31'
    PVSK Stadium, Pécs
    Attendance: 22,000

    GNK Dinamo Zagreb 2–2[9] FC Twente
    Josip Gucmirtl 17', 36' Report Theo Pahlplatz 37'
    Rene van de Kerkhof 89'
    Attendance: 15,000
    Referee: Joseph Bucek (Austria)

    Hibernian 0–1 Liverpool
    Report Toshack 75'
    Attendance: 30,296

    Anderlecht 2–1 Vitória Setúbal
    Ejderstedt 9'
    Mulder 66'
    Wágner Canotilho 32'
    Attendance: 16,200
    Referee: John Paterson (Scotland)

    Second leg

    Bayern Munich won 5–2 on aggregate.


    Juventus 2–0 Pécsi Dózsa
    Anastasi 85', 87'

    Juventus won 3–0 on aggregate.


    Sparta Prague 2–3 Leeds United
    Barton 65'
    Urban 80'
    Gray 12'
    Clarke 32'
    Belfitt 35'
    Attendance: 30,000
    Referee: Aurelio Angonese (Italy)

    Leeds won 9–2 on aggregate.


    FC Twente 1–0[11] GNK Dinamo Zagreb
    Jan Jeuring 21' Report
    Attendance: 24,500
    Referee: Danny Lyden (England)

    Twente won 3–2 on aggregate.


    Vitória Setúbal 3–1 (a.e.t.) Anderlecht
    Guerreiro 24', 120'
    Baptista 70'
    Desanghere 52'
    Attendance: 14,300
    Referee: Robert Frauciel (France)

    Vitória Setúbal won 4–3 on aggregate.

    Quarter-finals

    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    Arsenal 2–2a 1. FC Köln 2–1 0–1
    Juventus 4–2 Twente 2–0 2–2 (a.e.t.)
    Liverpool 4–1 Bayern Munich 3–0 1–1
    Leeds United 3–2 Vitória Setúbal 2–1 1–1

    First leg

    Juventus 2–0 Twente
    Haller 8'
    Novellini 80'
    Report

    Arsenal 2–1 1. FC Köln
    McLintock 24'
    Storey 69'
    Report Thielen 44'
    Attendance: 40,007

    Leeds United 2–1 Vitória Setúbal
    Lorimer 19'
    Giles 75' (pen.)
    Report Baptista 2'
    Attendance: 27,143
    Referee: Günther Männig (East Germany)

    Liverpool 3–0 Bayern Munich
    A. Evans 30', 50', 73' Report
    Attendance: 45,616
    Referee: Franz Geluck (Belgium)

    Second leg

    Twente 2–2 (a.e.t.) Juventus
    Pahlplatz 11'
    Drost 49'
    Report Anastasi 96', 98'
    Attendance: 22,800

    Juventus won 4–2 on aggregate.


    Vitória Setúbal 1–1 Leeds United
    Baptista 84' Report Lorimer 17'
    Attendance: 30,000
    Referee: Roland Marendaz (Switzerland)

    Leeds won 3–2 on aggregate.


    1. FC Köln1–0 Arsenal
    Biskup 4' (pen.) Report
    Attendance: 46,200
    Referee: Constantin Petrea (Romania)

    2–2 on aggregate; 1. FC Köln won on away goals.


    Bayern Munich1–1 Liverpool
    Schneider 77' Report Ross 74'
    Attendance: 22,000
    Referee: Robert Wurtz (France)

    Liverpool won 4–1 on aggregate.

    Semi-finals

    Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
    1. FC Köln 1–3 Juventus 1–1 0–2
    Liverpool 0–1 Leeds United 0–1 0–0

    First leg

    1. FC Köln 1–1 Juventus
    Thielen 87' Report Bettega 37'
    Attendance: 50,500
    Referee: Anton Bucheli (Switzerland)

    Liverpool 0–1 Leeds United
    Report Bremner 67'
    Attendance: 52,577
    Referee: Jef Dorpmans (Netherlands)

    Second leg

    Juventus 2–0 1. FC Köln
    Capello 2'
    Anastasi 84'
    Report
    Attendance: 64,738
    Referee: Roger Machin (France)

    Juventus won 3–1 on aggregate.


    Leeds United 0–0 Liverpool
    Report
    Attendance: 40,462

    Leeds won 1–0 on aggregate.

    Final

    First leg

    Juventus 0–0 Leeds United

    Game abandoned in the 51st minute due to heavy rain and waterlogged pitch.

    Replay

    Juventus 2–2 Leeds United
    Bettega 27'
    Capello 55'
    Report Madeley 48'
    Bates 77'

    Second leg

    Leeds United 1–1 Juventus
    Clarke 12' Report Anastasi 20'
    Attendance: 42,483

    3–3 on aggregate; Leeds United won on away goals.

    References

    1. ^ a b "Origins of the UEFA Cup" (PDF). UEFA direct. No. 85. Nyon: Union des Associations Européennes de Football. May 2009. pp. 10–11.
    2. ^ "Inter-Cities Fairs Cup – Cork Hibernians v Valencia (Spain) (match programme)" (PDF). www.corkpastandpresent.ie. 16 September 1970. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
    3. ^ "ÍA vs. Sparta". worldfootball. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
    4. ^ "Sparta vs. Coleraine". worldfootball. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
    5. ^ "Eskişehirspor vs. Twente". FC Twente. Retrieved 16 September 2023.
    6. ^ "Coleraine vs. Sparta". worldfootball. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
    7. ^ "Twente vs. Eskişehirspor". FC Twente. Retrieved 16 September 2023.
    8. ^ "Bayern Munich vs. Sparta". worldfootball. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
    9. ^ "Dinamo Zagreb vs. Twente". FC Twente. Retrieved 16 September 2023.
    10. ^ "Sparta vs. Bayern Munich". worldfootball. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
    11. ^ "Twente vs. Dinamo Zagreb". FC Twente. Retrieved 16 September 2023.