1975 European Cup Final

1975 European Cup Final

Match programme cover
Event 1974–75 European Cup
Date 28 May 1975
Venue Parc des Princes, Paris
Referee Michel Kitabdjian (France)
Attendance 48,374

The 1975 European Cup Final was a football match between Bayern Munich of Germany and Leeds United of England on 28 May 1975 at the Parc des Princes, Paris. It was the final match of the 1974–75 season of Europe's premier cup competition, the European Cup. Bayern Munich were appearing in their second final; they had won the previous season's competition, beating Spanish team Atlético Madrid 4–0 in a replay after the first match finished 1–1. Leeds were appearing in their first final.

As champions, Bayern Munich received a bye in the first round, while Leeds progressed through four rounds to reach the final. Bayern's matches were generally close affairs, they beat Soviet team Ararat Yerevan 2–1 on aggregate in the quarter-finals and won their semi-final tie against French team Saint-Étienne 2–0 on aggregate. Leeds matches ranged from close affairs to comfortable victories. They beat Hungarian team Újpest 5–1 on aggregate in the second round, while they beat Barcelona of Spain 3–2 on aggregate in the semi-final.

Bayern Munich went into the match as favourites, because they were the reigning champions. Watched by a crowd of 48,374, Leeds had the best of the opening exchanges of the match and had two appeals for a penalty kick turned down by the referee Michel Kitabdjian. Bayern suffered two injuries in the first half to defender Björn Andersson and striker Uli Hoeneß, following strong tackles by Leeds players. A Peter Lorimer goal was disallowed for Leeds in the 62nd minute, when Billy Bremner was adjudged to be offside. Franz Roth scored in the 71st minute for Bayern and Gerd Müller extended the lead ten minutes later, to secure a 2–0 victory for Bayern.

It was Bayern's second consecutive victory in the competition, although they failed to retain their Bundesliga title, finishing in 10th place. Riots by the Leeds fans during the match led to UEFA banning the club from European competition for four years, although this was reduced to two years on appeal.

Background

Bayern Munich were appearing in what would be their second of three consecutive European Cup finals, all of which they would win, and the team contained many great players such as Franz Beckenbauer, Gerd Müller and Uli Hoeneß who had featured heavily in Germany's 1974 World Cup victory the previous season, and as such were heavy favourites. In the 1974–75 Bundesliga season, Bayern had a serious slump after winning the previous three German championships. This was said to be caused by motivational deficits, especially as six of the Bayern players also won the 1972 European championship and the 1974 World Cup. To boot, at the start of the season Paul Breitner moved to Real Madrid.

Bayern became the domestically worst winner of the European Champions Cup up to then, finishing only 10th in the Bundesliga, with even points and a negative goal difference. Only Aston Villa would do domestically worse in the year of their European title win. In 1982, when they defeated Bayern 1–0 in the final, the team from Birmingham finished 11th in the First Division, also with even points, but a positive goal difference. For Bayern coach Dettmar Cramer, who took over from Udo Lattek early in the season, this was the first of three international club titles. He remained without domestic silverware. Franz Roth scored for the second time in a European final, after the Cup Winners' Cup final in 1967, putting Bayern ahead 1–0 in this final, and drew level with Sandro Mazzola from Italy's Internazionale, who achieved this in the champions' finals 1964 and 1967.

For Leeds United, only the second English club to reach the final after Manchester United in 1968 and the second team in history to reach the finals of all three European cup competitions after FC Barcelona, the game was the climax of the 'Glory Years' of the team built by former manager Don Revie. Amongst the stars of the team were the Scottish internationals Billy Bremner and Peter Lorimer. Leeds United, incidentally also had a poor season domestically. The experienced, but now ageing team had finished only 9th in the 1974–75 Football League. This would be the club's last appearance in a major cup final until the League Cup in 1996. Thus, only the winner of the final between Bayern and Leeds would be entitled to participate in the European Cup competition the following season.

Route to the final

For more details on this topic, see 1974–75 European Cup.
Germany Bayern Munich Round England Leeds United
Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg
Bye First round Switzerland Zürich 5–3 4–1 (H) 1–2 (A)
East Germany Magdeburg 5–3 3–2 (H) 2–1 (A) Second round Hungary Újpesti Dózsa 5–1 2–1 (A) 3–0 (H)
Soviet Union Ararat Yerevan 2–1 2–0 (H) 0–1 (A) Quarter-finals Belgium Anderlecht 4–0 3–0 (H) 1–0 (A)
France Saint-Étienne 2–0 0–0 (A) 2–0 (H) Semi-finals Spain Barcelona 3–2 2–1 (H) 1–1 (A)

Match

Summary

Leeds dominated most of the match and had a number of near misses. After three minutes Bayern's Swedish international defender Björn Andersson had to be replaced by the inexperienced Sepp Weiss after a hard tackle from Terry Yorath, described by Uli Hoeneß as the "most brutal foul I think I have ever seen".[1] He only played a handful more matches for Bayern. In the 23rd minute, Bayern captain Franz Beckenbauer was in his own penalty box on the ground and rested on his left arm which subsequently came into contact with the ball. The Leeds players appealed for a penalty, which the French referee Michel Kitabdjian denied. More controversial, however, was when the referee denied Leeds a penalty in the 34th minute after Beckenbauer tripped Allan Clarke, who was attacking the Bayern goal from the left wing and seemed ready to round Bayern goalkeeper Sepp Maier. The first half also saw German international Uli Hoeneß, later president of Bayern, suffer a serious knee injury in the 42nd minute after a tackle by the Scottish left-back Frank Gray, which would ultimately bring his career to a premature end in 1979 at the age of 27, when he started his career in club management. He was replaced by one time German international Klaus Wunder.

In the 62nd minute, Billy Bremner was denied from five metres by a reflex of Sepp Maier in the Bayern goal. Less than a minute later a goal by Peter Lorimer was disallowed, due to Bremner being in a tight passive offside position in front of the goal at the six-yard box.[1] Referee Michel Kitabdjian initially pointed to the centre circle (indicating a goal) and then Beckenbauer convinced him to consult with the linesman who had run back to the halfway line and had not raised his flag. Thereupon, the referee incorrectly indicated offside against Bremner. This decision caused riots to break out as 'people realised that they were really being cheated'.[2]

After a match interruption Roth finished off a counter-attack in the 71st minute with the 1–0 for Bayern after a short pass from Conny Torstensson. This completely derailed Leeds and 10 minutes later another counter led a second goal for Bayern through Gerd Müller after a cross from the right side by Jupp Kapellmann. This put the match completely beyond the reach of Leeds.

The violence saw Leeds banned from Europe for four years, although this was reduced to two years on appeal.[1][3][4] Ultimately, this ban was never applied due to a decline in the performance of the club in the late 1970s preventing European qualification until 1979–80.

However, due to the violence, which included 'skirmishes in the city and damage to private property' according to journalist Geoffrey Green, as well as damage to a £50,000 camera and a lost eye and a broken arm to German media workers, UEFA were apparently considering abandonment of the competition altogether.[5]

Details

Bayern Munich
Leeds United
GK 1 Germany Sepp Maier
DF 2 Sweden Björn Andersson  4'
DF 3 Germany Bernd Dürnberger
DF 4 Germany Hans-Georg Schwarzenbeck  20'
SW 5 Germany Franz Beckenbauer (c)
MF 6 Germany Franz Roth
FW 7 Sweden Conny Torstensson
MF 8 Germany Rainer Zobel
FW 9 Germany Gerd Müller
FW 10Germany Uli Hoeneß  42'
MF 11Germany Jupp Kapellmann
Substitutes:
FW 12Germany Klaus Wunder  42'
MF 13Germany Sepp Weiß  4'
FW 14Germany Karl-Heinz Rummenigge
DF 15Germany Günther Weiß
GK 16Germany Hugo Robl
Manager:
Germany Dettmar Cramer
GK 1 Scotland David Stewart
DF 2 England Paul Reaney  7'
DF 3 Scotland Frank Gray
MF 4 Scotland Billy Bremner (c)
DF 5 England Paul Madeley
DF 6 England Norman Hunter  83'
MF 7 Scotland Peter Lorimer
FW 8 England Allan Clarke
FW 9 Scotland Joe Jordan
MF 10Republic of Ireland Johnny Giles
MF 11Wales Terry Yorath  80'
Substitutes:
GK 12Wales Glan Letheren
DF 13England Trevor Cherry
DF 14England Peter Hampton
MF 15Scotland Eddie Gray  80'
FW 16England Duncan McKenzie
Manager:
England Jimmy Armfield

Aftermath

Despite Leeds now playing in the second tier of English football, the controversy surrounding the final is still manifested in the chant 'We are the Champions, Champions of Europe' – amid a feeling that the club was cheated of victory – by fans of the club often throughout the half time interval at away games . Bayern would remain one of Europe's top clubs and would go on to victory in the 1976 final, completing a hat-trick of wins – but would ultimately have to wait until 2001 for their fourth title. The appearance of an English club in the final for only the second time would ultimately precede a period of dominance by Football League clubs Liverpool (1977, 1978, 1981, 1984), Nottingham Forest (1979 and 1980) and Aston Villa (1982) of European football. However, the violence and the lengthy ban handed down to Leeds would foreshadow the tragic events in the European Cup final 10 years later.

Notes

External links

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