2002 UEFA Super Cup

2002 UEFA Super Cup
Event UEFA Super Cup
Date 30 August 2002
Venue Stade Louis II, Monaco
Man of the Match Roberto Carlos
(Real Madrid)[1]
Referee Hugh Dallas (Scotland)[2]
Attendance 18,284[3]

The 2002 UEFA Super Cup was played on 30 August 2002 between Real Madrid of Spain and Feyenoord of the Netherlands. Real Madrid qualified by beating Bayer Leverkusen in the 2002 UEFA Champions League Final. Feyenoord had made it to the Super Cup after beating Borussia Dortmund in the 2002 UEFA Cup Final. Real Madrid won the match 31, securing their first Super Cup win.

Venue

The Stade Louis II in Monaco has been the venue for the UEFA Super Cup every year since 1998. Built in 1985, the stadium is also the home of AS Monaco, who play in the French league system.

Sponsorship

Teams

Team Qualification Previous participation (bold indicates winners)
Spain Real Madrid 2001–02 UEFA Champions League winners 1998, 2000
Netherlands Feyenoord 2001–02 UEFA Cup winners None

Match

Details

30 August 2002
20:45 CEST
Real Madrid Spain 3–1 Netherlands Feyenoord
Paauwe  15' (o.g.)
Roberto Carlos  21'
Guti  60'
Report
[4]
Van Hooijdonk  56'
Stade Louis II, Monaco
Attendance: 18,284[3]
Referee: Hugh Dallas (Scotland)[2]
Real Madrid
Feyenoord
GK 1 Spain Iker Casillas
RB 2 Spain Míchel Salgado
CB 6 Spain Iván Helguera
CB 4 Spain Fernando Hierro (c)
LB 3 Brazil Roberto Carlos
RM 10Portugal Luís Figo
CM 24France Claude Makélélé
CM 19Argentina Esteban Cambiasso  88'
LM 5 France Zinedine Zidane  86'
SS 14Spain Guti  71'
CF 7 Spain Raúl
Substitutes:
GK 13Spain César
DF 15Spain Raúl Bravo
DF 22Spain Francisco Pavón  88'
MF 8 England Steve McManaman
MF 16Brazil Flavio Conceição
MF 21Argentina Santiago Solari  86'
FW 18Spain Javier Portillo  71'
Manager:
Spain Vicente del Bosque
GK 1 Netherlands Edwin Zoetebier
RB 2 Ghana Christian Gyan  72'
CB 17Netherlands Patrick Paauwe
CB 8 Netherlands Kees van Wonderen
LB 3 Poland Tomasz Rząsa
RM 23Australia Brett Emerton
CM 6 Netherlands Paul Bosvelt (c)
CM 14Japan Shinji Ono
LM 10Netherlands Anthony Lurling
SS 7 Ivory Coast Bonaventure Kalou
CF 9 Netherlands Pierre van Hooijdonk
Substitutes:
GK 31Netherlands Carlo l'Ami
DF 5 Netherlands Ramon van Haaren
DF 20Netherlands Ferry de Haan
DF 27Netherlands Civard Sprockel
MF 18Brazil Leonardo dos Santos
FW 19Belgium Thomas Buffel  72'
Manager:
Netherlands Bert van Marwijk

Man of the Match:
Brazil Roberto Carlos (Real Madrid)[1]

Assistant referees:
Scotland Wilson Irvine (Scotland)[2]
Scotland David Doig (Scotland)[2]
Fourth official:
Scotland Stuart Dougal (Scotland)[2]

Match rules

  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary
  • Penalty shootout if scores still level
  • Seven named substitutes
  • Maximum of three substitutions

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Madrid dazzle in Monaco". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 30 August 2002. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Lineups". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 30 August 2002. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  3. 1 2 "Match Press Kit (2009)" (PDF). Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). Retrieved 1 June 2012. See page 18
  4. Tactical lineups. Voetbal International. Retrieved 1 June 2012
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