1980 European Cup Final

1980 European Cup Final

Match programme cover
Event 1979–80 European Cup
Date 28 May 1980
Venue Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, Madrid
Referee António Garrido (Portugal)
Attendance 51,000

The 1980 European Cup Final was a football match held at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, Madrid (the venue was decided in Zurich by UEFA on 5 October 1979 [1]), on 28 May 1980, that saw Nottingham Forest of England defeat Hamburg of Germany 1–0. In the 21st minute, John Robertson squeezed a shot past Hamburg keeper Rudolf Kargus for the only goal of the game, to give Nottingham Forest back-to-back European Cup titles. The victory also meant that Forest became the first club that had won the European Cup more times than their domestic first division.

Route to the final

Nottingham Forest Round Hamburg
Opponent Result Legs Opponent Result Legs
Sweden Öster 3–1 2–0 home; 1–1 away First round Iceland Valur 5–1 2–1 home; 3–0 away
Romania Argeş Piteşti 4–1 2–0 home; 2–1 away Second round Soviet Union Dinamo Tbilisi 6–3 3–1 home; 3–2 away
East Germany Dynamo Berlin 3–2 0–1 home; 3–1 away Quarter-finals Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Hajduk Split 3–3 1–0 home; 2–3 away
Netherlands Ajax 2–1 2–0 home; 0–1 away Semi-finals Spain Real Madrid 5–3 5–1 home; 0–2 away

Match details

Nottingham Forest
Hamburger SV
GK 1 England Peter Shilton
DF 2 England Viv Anderson
DF 3 Scotland Frank Gray  78'
MF 4 Scotland John McGovern (c)
DF 5 England Larry Lloyd
DF 6 Scotland Kenny Burns  21'
MF 7 Northern Ireland Martin O'Neill
MF 8 England Ian Bowyer
FW 9 England Garry Birtles
MF 10England Gary Mills  67'
MF 11Scotland John Robertson
Substitutes:
MF 12Scotland John O'Hare  67'
MF 15England Bryn Gunn  78'
GK England Jimmy Montgomery
DF England David Needham
Manager:
England Brian Clough
GK 1 Germany Rudolf Kargus
DF 2 Germany Manfred Kaltz
DF 3 Germany Peter Nogly (c)  72'
DF 4 Germany Ditmar Jakobs
DF 5 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Ivan Buljan
MF 6 Germany Holger Hieronymus  46'
MF 7 England Kevin Keegan
MF 8 Germany Caspar Memering
FW 9Germany Jürgen Milewski
MF 10 Germany Felix Magath
FW 11Germany Willi Reimann
Substitutes:
MF 14Germany Horst Hrubesch  46'
Manager:
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Branko Zebec

See also

References

External links

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