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[[Category:Juventus FC matches|Uefa Cup Final 1995]]
[[Category:Juventus FC matches|Uefa Cup Final 1995]]
[[Category:Parma Calcio 1913 matches|Uefa Cup Final 1995]]
[[Category:Parma Calcio 1913 matches|Uefa Cup Final 1995]]
[[Category:UEFA Cup finals|1995]]
[[Category:UEFA Europa League finals|1995]]
[[Category:1994–95 in Italian football|Uefa Cup Final]]
[[Category:1994–95 in Italian football|Uefa Cup Final]]
[[Category:1994–95 UEFA Cup|Final]]
[[Category:1994–95 UEFA Cup|Final]]

Revision as of 02:19, 2 March 2024

1995 UEFA Cup final
Event1994–95 UEFA Cup
on aggregate
First leg
Date3 May 1995
VenueStadio Ennio Tardini, Parma
RefereeAntonio López Nieto (Spain)
Attendance22,062
Second leg
Date17 May 1995
VenueSan Siro, Milan
RefereeFrans Van Den Wijngaert (Belgium)
Attendance80,754
1994
1996

The 1995 UEFA Cup Final was played over two legs between two Italian teams Juventus and Parma. The first leg at Parma's Stadio Ennio Tardini ended in a 1–0 victory for the home team. The second leg at the San Siro in Milan finished in a 1–1 draw, and a win on aggregate for Parma. It was their first UEFA Cup final victory, with Juventus having won three in the past.

Background

This was the fifth time a continental final had been played by two teams from the same country and the third all-Italian final. The first also featured Juventus, who overcame Fiorentina by three goals to one over two legs in the 1990 UEFA Cup Final. It was Parma's first appearance in a UEFA Cup final, but represented the third consecutive year in which they had contested a European final, following European Cup Winners' Cup final appearances in 1993 (a win) and 1994 (a defeat). It was Juventus' fourth appearance in a UEFA Cup final; the previous finals were all two-legged affairs ending in victory for the Turin club, against Athletic Bilbao in 1977 on the away goals rule, Fiorentina in 1990 and Borussia Dortmund in 1993.

Parma's only previous experience in Europe against another Italian side was in the 1993 European Super Cup when they emerged victorious over A.C. Milan by two goals to one over two legs, having lost the first leg at home by a single goal. Juventus were meanwhile attempting to complete the third leg of a treble of titles: Serie A, Coppa Italia and the UEFA Cup.

While Parma played their home tie at their home ground, Stadio Ennio Tardini, Juventus chose to play their home leg away from Turin at the San Siro, home ground of Inter Milan and Milan, because they had difficulties with the landlord at their own stadium, Stadio delle Alpi, and had experienced poor attendances there, in contrast to the big crowds they attracted playing in other cities.[1] They had already played the semi-final of the competition in Milan (and would later play the 1996 UEFA Super Cup even further from home, in Palermo).[2]

The two sides would also meet the following month in the 1995 Coppa Italia Final, which Juventus won 3–0 on aggregate.[3]

Route to the final

Parma Juventus
Opponent Result Legs Round Opponent Result Legs
Netherlands Vitesse Arnhem 2–1 0–1 away; 2–0 home First round Bulgaria PFC CSKA Sofia 8–1 3–0 away; 5–1 home
Sweden AIK 3–0 1–0 away; 2–0 home Second round Portugal Marítimo 3–1 1–0 away; 2–1 home
Spain Athletic Bilbao 4–3 0–1 away; 4–2 home Third round Austria Admira-Wacker Wien 5–2 3–1 away; 2–1 home
Denmark Odense BK 1–0 1–0 home; 0–0 away Quarter-finals Germany Eintracht Frankfurt 4–1 1–1 away; 3–0 home
Germany Bayer Leverkusen 5–1 2–1 away; 3–0 home Semi-finals Germany Borussia Dortmund 4–3 2–2 home; 2–1 away

First leg

Summary

Parma, the home team, went into a fifth-minute lead through Dino Baggio, which they held and subsequently took to the return at Milan's San Siro.

Details

Parma Italy1–0Italy Juventus
D. Baggio 5' Report
Parma
Juventus
GK 1 Italy Luca Bucci
CB 5 Italy Luigi Apolloni Yellow card 16'
CB 6 Portugal Fernando Couto
CB 4 Italy Lorenzo Minotti (c)
RWB 2 Italy Antonio Benarrivo downward-facing red arrow 8'
LWB 3 Italy Alberto Di Chiara
CM 7 Italy Gabriele Pin Yellow card 42'
CM 8 Italy Dino Baggio
CM 9 Argentina Roberto Sensini Yellow card 60'
CF 10 Italy Gianfranco Zola Yellow card 54' downward-facing red arrow 89'
CF 11 Colombia Faustino Asprilla
Substitutes:
GK 12 Italy Giovanni Galli
DF 15 Italy Roberto Mussi upward-facing green arrow 8'
MF 13 Italy Massimo Susic
MF 16 Italy Stefano Fiore upward-facing green arrow 89'
FW 14 Italy Marco Branca
Manager:
Italy Nevio Scala
GK 1 Italy Michelangelo Rampulla
CB 4 Italy Luca Fusi downward-facing red arrow 72'
CB 2 Italy Massimo Carrera downward-facing red arrow 46'
CB 6 Italy Alessio Tacchinardi Yellow card 82'
LWB 3 Croatia Robert Jarni
RWB 7 Italy Angelo Di Livio
CM 8 France Didier Deschamps Yellow card 61'
CM 5 Portugal Paulo Sousa
AM 10 Italy Roberto Baggio (c)
CF 11 Italy Fabrizio Ravanelli
CF 9 Italy Gianluca Vialli
Substitutes:
GK 12 Italy Lorenzo Squizzi
DF 13 Italy Sergio Porrini
MF 14 Italy Giancarlo Marocchi upward-facing green arrow 46'
MF 15 Italy Simone Tognon
FW 16 Italy Alessandro Del Piero upward-facing green arrow 72'
Manager:
Italy Marcello Lippi

Assistant referees:
Victoriano Giráldez Carrasco (Spain)
Joaquín Olmos González (Spain)
Fourth official:
Juan Ansuátegui Roca (Spain)

Match rules

Second leg

Summary

Gianluca Vialli restored parity in the tie overall before Dino Baggio struck again to give Parma a 2–1 aggregate victory. Thus provincial Parma added the UEFA Cup to the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup they had won two years before.[4][5]

Details

Juventus Italy1–1Italy Parma
Vialli 35' Report D. Baggio 53'
Attendance: 80,754
Referee: Frans Van Den Wijngaert (Belgium)
Juventus
Parma
GK 1 Italy Angelo Peruzzi
RB 4 Italy Moreno Torricelli
CB 2 Italy Ciro Ferrara Yellow card 63'
CB 5 Italy Sergio Porrini
LB 3 Croatia Robert Jarni
CM 7 Italy Angelo Di Livio downward-facing red arrow 82'
CM 8 Italy Giancarlo Marocchi downward-facing red arrow 75'
CM 6 Portugal Paulo Sousa
AM 10 Italy Roberto Baggio (c)
CF 9 Italy Gianluca Vialli Yellow card 43'
CF 11 Italy Fabrizio Ravanelli Yellow card 16'
Substitutes:
GK 12 Italy Michelangelo Rampulla
DF 13 Italy Luca Fusi
DF 14 Italy Massimo Carrera upward-facing green arrow 82'
MF 15 Italy Simone Tognon
FW 16 Italy Alessandro Del Piero upward-facing green arrow 75'
Manager:
Italy Marcello Lippi
GK 1 Italy Luca Bucci
CB 6 Portugal Fernando Couto Yellow card 2'
CB 4 Italy Lorenzo Minotti (c) Yellow card 29'
CB 5 Italy Massimo Susic
RWB 2 Italy Antonio Benarrivo downward-facing red arrow 46'
LWB 3 Italy Alberto Di Chiara downward-facing red arrow 81'
CM 7 Italy Stefano Fiore
CM 8 Italy Dino Baggio
CM 9 Italy Massimo Crippa Yellow card 47'
CF 10 Italy Gianfranco Zola
CF 11 Colombia Faustino Asprilla Yellow card 72'
Substitutes:
GK 12 Italy Giovanni Galli
DF 13 Italy Marcello Castellini Yellow card 86' upward-facing green arrow 81'
DF 15 Italy Roberto Mussi upward-facing green arrow 46'
FW 14 Italy Marco Branca
FW 16 Sweden Tomas Brolin
Manager:
Italy Nevio Scala

Assistant referees:
Luc Matthys (Belgium)
Marc Van den Broeck (Belgium)
Fourth official:
Marnix Sandra (Belgium)

Match rules

See also

References

  1. ^ "Will a Spoonful of Sugar Make a Bad Boy Nice?". The New York Times. 5 April 1995. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  2. ^ Juventus: A History in Black and White Archived 2020-01-26 at the Wayback Machine, Adam Digby, 2015, 9781783016914
  3. ^ Di Maggio, Roberto (25 June 2005). "Coppa Italia 1994/95". RSSS.com. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  4. ^ Mocciaro, Gaetano (17 May 2018). "17 maggio 1995, il Parma vince la Coppa UEFA battendo in finale la Juve" [17 May 1995, Parma wins th UEFA Cup beating Juve in the final] (in Italian). Tutto Mercato Web. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  5. ^ Ruggiero, Michele (18 May 1995). "Il Parma si rifà in Europa" [Parma redeems itself in Europe]. l'Unità (in Italian). Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2002.