1968–69 European Cup Winners' Cup
The season 1968-69 of the European Cup Winners' Cup football club tournament was won by Slovan Bratislava in a final victory against FC Barcelona, the first time a side from the Eastern Bloc won the title. A number of withdrawals by Eastern European clubs from the first round as a result of the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia led to several walkovers and byes that lasted into the second round.
Contents
First round
Team #1 | Agg. | Team #2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dunfermline Athletic ![]() |
12 - 1 | ![]() |
10 - 1 |
2 – 0 |
Olympiakos (Pireus) ![]() |
4 - 0 | ![]() |
2 - 0 |
2 - 0 ( in Thessaloniki ) |
Dinamo Bucharest ![]() |
w/o | ![]() |
- | - |
Club Brugge KV ![]() |
3 - 3(a) | ![]() |
3 - 1 | 0 – 2 |
KS Partizani (Tirane) ![]() |
2 - 3 | ![]() |
1 - 0 | 1 - 3 |
Cardiff City ![]() |
3 - 4 | ![]() |
2 - 2 | 1 – 2 |
Slovan Bratislava ![]() |
3 - 2 | ![]() |
3 - 0 | 0 – 2 |
ADO Den Haag ![]() |
6 - 1 | ![]() |
4 - 1 | 2 - 0 |
Girondins Bordeaux ![]() |
2 - 4 | ![]() |
2 - 1 | 0 – 3 |
Randers (Freja) ![]() |
3 - 1 | ![]() |
1 - 0 | 2 – 1 |
US Rumelange ![]() |
2 - 2(a) | ![]() |
2 - 1 ( in Esch) | 0 – 1 |
FC Lugano ![]() |
0 - 4 | 23x15px FC Barcelona | 0 - 1 | 0 – 3 |
Altay ![]() |
4 - 5 | ![]() |
3 - 1 | 1 – 4 |
Crusaders ![]() |
3 - 6 | ![]() |
2 - 2 | 1 – 4 |
The following clubs withdrew following UEFA's decision to separate western and Eastern countries due to troubles in Czechoslovakia – FC Spartak (Sofia), 1. FC Union Berlin, Górnik Zabrze, Dinamo Moscow, Raba Vasas ETO
Source:[1]
First Leg
18 September 1968
|
Dunfermline Athletic ![]() |
10 – 1 | ![]() |
---|---|---|
Robertson ![]() Barry ![]() Gardner ![]() Renton ![]() Edwards ![]() W Callaghan ![]() T Callaghan ![]() |
Stylianou ![]() |
East End Park
Referee: K Stevaag (Norway) |
Second leg
2 October 1968
|
APOEL FC ![]() |
0 – 2 | ![]() |
---|---|---|
Gardner ![]() W Callaghan ![]() |
Cyprus
Attendance: 6,000 |
Dunfermline Athletic won 12–1 on aggregate.
Torino won 3–2 on aggregate.
Second round
Team #1 | Agg. | Team #2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dunfermline Athletic ![]() |
4 - 3 | ![]() |
4 - 0 | 0 – 3 |
Dinamo Bucharest ![]() |
1 - 5 | ![]() |
1 - 1 | 0 - 4 |
Torino ![]() |
Bye | - | - | |
FC Porto ![]() |
1 - 4 | ![]() |
1 - 0 | 0 – 4 |
ADO Den Haag ![]() |
0 - 4 | ![]() |
0 - 1 | 0 – 3 |
Randers ![]() |
8 - 0 | ![]() |
6 - 0 | 2 - 0 |
FC Barcelona 23x15px | Bye | - | - | |
SFK Lyn ![]() |
4 - 3 | ![]() |
2 - 0 | 2 – 3 |
Source:[1]
First leg
Second leg
27 November 1968
20:30 |
West Bromwich Albion | 4 – 0 | Dinamo Bucureşti |
---|---|---|
Lovett ![]() Brown ![]() Astle ![]() |
West Bromwich Albion won 5–1 on aggregate.
Quarter-finals
Team #1 | Agg. | Team #2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dunfermline Athletic ![]() |
1 - 0 | ![]() |
0 - 0 | 1 – 0 |
Torino ![]() |
1 - 3 | ![]() |
0 - 1 | 1 – 2 |
1.FC Cologne ![]() |
5 - 1 | ![]() |
2 - 1 | 3 – 0 |
FC Barcelona 23x15px | 5 - 4 | ![]() |
3–2 | 2 – 2 (in Barcelona) |
Source:[1]
First leg
Second leg
Dunfermline Athletic won 1–0 on aggregate.
Slovan Bratislava won 3–1 on aggregate.
Semi-finals
Team #1 | Agg. | Team #2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dunfermline Athletic ![]() |
1 - 2 | ![]() |
1 - 1 | 0 - 1 |
1.FC Cologne ![]() |
3 - 6 | 23x15px Barcelona | 2 - 2 | 1 - 4 |
Source:[1]
First leg
Second leg
Slovan Bratislava won 2–1 on aggregate.
19 April 1969
22:15 |
Barcelona 23x15px | 4 – 1 | ![]() |
---|---|---|
Martí Filosia ![]() Fusté ![]() |
Report | Rühl ![]() |
Barcelona won 6–3 on aggregate.
Final
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21 May 1969
20:00 |
Slovan Bratislava ![]() |
3 – 2 | 23x15px Barcelona |
---|---|---|
Cvetler ![]() Hrivnák ![]() Ján Čapkovič ![]() |
Report | Zaldúa ![]() Rexach ![]() |
See also
References
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