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2009 UEFA Cup final

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2009 UEFA Cup Final
Event2008–09 UEFA Cup
After extra time
Date20 May 2009
VenueŞükrü Saracoğlu Stadium, Istanbul
Man of the MatchDarijo Srna (Shakhtar Donetsk)
RefereeLuis Medina Cantalejo (Spain)[1]
Attendance37,357[2]
WeatherPartly cloudy night
18 °C (64 °F)
63% humidity[3]
2008
(Europa League) 2010

The 2009 UEFA Cup Final was the final match of the 2008–09 UEFA Cup, the 38th season of the UEFA Cup, UEFA's second-tier club football tournament. It was also the last final to be held under the UEFA Cup name, as the competition was rebranded as the UEFA Europa League from the 2009–10 season. The final was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Werder Bremen, with Shakhtar winning the match 2–1 after extra time. All three goalscorers in the game were Brazilians; lone striker Luiz Adriano opened the scoring for Shakhtar midway through the first half, before Naldo equalised from a free kick ten minutes later. The second half was goalless and the match went to extra time; after only seven minutes, Jádson scored for Shakhtar to secure the club's first major European trophy.[4]

The match was played at the Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium – home ground of Fenerbahçe – in Istanbul, Turkey, on 20 May 2009.[5] It was the second European football final to be held in Turkey, after the 2005 UEFA Champions League Final, which was held in another Istanbul venue, the Atatürk Olympic Stadium. It was also the first European football final to be held outside the geographical Europe, as Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium lies across the Bosphorus from the city centre, and hence, in geographical Asia.

Former Fenerbahçe player Can Bartu was appointed as ambassador of the final.

Background

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The 2009 UEFA Cup final marked the first meeting between Shakhtar Donetsk and Werder Bremen, although Shakhtar had previously played nine matches against German sides (won 4, lost 3), while Werder had played just four matches against Ukrainian teams (won 2, lost 1). Both teams were playing in their first UEFA Cup final, and Shakhtar were playing in their first final in any of the three major UEFA competitions; Werder Bremen beat Monaco 2–0 in the 1992 European Cup Winners' Cup Final.[6]

Venue

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The 2009 UEFA Cup final also marked the first time that the Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium had hosted a major European final, as well as being the first time that the UEFA Cup final had been held in Turkey;[7] the 2005 UEFA Champions League Final was held at the Atatürk Olympic Stadium across the Bosporus from the Şükrü Saracoğlu.[8]

Route to the final

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Shakhtar Donetsk Round Werder Bremen
Champions League
Opponent Result Legs Qualifying phase Opponent Result Legs
Croatia Dinamo Zagreb 5–1 2–0 home; 3–1 away Third qualifying round
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Spain Barcelona 6 4 1 1 18 8 +10 13
Portugal Sporting CP 6 4 0 2 8 8 0 12
Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk 6 3 0 3 11 7 +4 9
Switzerland Basel 6 0 1 5 2 16 −14 1
Group stage
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Greece Panathinaikos 6 3 1 2 8 7 +1 10
Italy Inter Milan 6 2 2 2 8 7 +1 8
Germany Werder Bremen 6 1 4 1 7 9 −2 7
Cyprus Anorthosis Famagusta 6 1 3 2 8 8 0 6
UEFA Cup
Opponent Result Legs Final phase Opponent Result Legs
England Tottenham Hotspur 3–1 2–0 home; 1–1 away Round of 32 Italy Milan 3–3 (a) 1–1 home; 2–2 away
Russia CSKA Moscow 2–1 0–1 away; 2–0 home Round of 16 France Saint-Étienne 3–2 1–0 home; 2–2 away
France Marseille 4–1 2–0 home; 2–1 away Quarter-finals Italy Udinese 6–4 3–1 home; 3–3 away
Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv 3–2 1–1 away; 2–1 home Semi-finals Germany Hamburg 3–3 (a) 0–1 home; 3–2 away

Shakhtar Donetsk

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As champions of the 2007–08 Vyshcha Liha, Shakhtar were awarded a spot in the third qualifying round of the 2008–09 UEFA Champions League. Here they were drawn against Croatian league winners Dinamo Zagreb. Shakhtar easily progressed over the two-legged tie with two victories and an aggregate score of 5–1. Shakhtar thus qualified for the Champions League group stage for the third season in a row.

Shakhtar were drawn in Group C with Barcelona, Sporting CP, and Basel. The group stage campaign started brightly for the Ukrainians, with a 2–1 over Basel in the Swiss city. In the second game, Shakhtar hosted Barcelona and the two sides were set to share the points at 1–1 until Lionel Messi scored in the fourth minute of stoppage time in the second half and the Catalan giants won 2–1. Two successive 1–0 defeats to Sporting CP, home and away, saw Shakhtar's hopes of progressing to the knockout rounds of the Champions League dashed. Shakhtar, however, were well positioned to claim third place, above Basel, and secure passage to the UEFA Cup knockout rounds if they took points from their last two games in the group stage. Shakhtar dismantled Basel 5–0 in Donetsk and famously defeated a youthful Barcelona side 3–2 at the Camp Nou, (Barcelona had already secured first place in the group before the final match was played and were resting players ahead of an El Clásico league game against Real Madrid), thus Shakhtar finished the group stage with nine points in third place, eight points clear of Basel and just three points behind second placed Sporting CP.

In the Round of 32 in the UEFA Cup, Shakhtar were paired with English side Tottenham Hotspur. With the first leg at the RSK Olimpiyskyi Stadium, Shakhtar were frustrated by their inability to turn their dominance over Tottenham into goals, until substitute Yevhen Seleznyov scored on his first touch, with a header in the 79th minute. Jádson doubled Shakhtar's lead just two minutes later, after playing a one-two with Willian. Taking with them a 2–0 aggregate lead to London, Shakhtar were favoured to progress to the Round of 16, but a goal from Tottenham's Giovani dos Santos in the 55th minute gave the English side a glimmer of hope. Fernandinho answered with a goal, however, in the 86th minute for Shakhtar, which put Shakhtar into the next round with a 3–1 aggregate victory.

The Round of 16 saw old Soviet League rivals CSKA Moscow and Shakhtar matched against each other, with the first leg in Moscow. Vágner Love scored a penalty and CSKA won the first leg 1–0. In the return leg in Donetsk, Fernandinho converted a penalty in the 54th minute and evened the aggregate scoreline to 1–1. In the 70th minute, 2004–05 UEFA Cup winners CSKA were left stunned when goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev, under pressure from Oleksandr Kucher, could only clear a looping cross from Fernandinho just a few meters ahead of him, where Luiz Adriano was perfectly positioned to hit it first time and score. Shakhtar won the match 2–0, and on aggregate 2–1, progressing to the quarter-finals of the UEFA Cup for the first time in their history.

Shakhtar were drawn against French club Marseille in the quarter-finals. Goals from Tomáš Hübschman and Jádson gave Shakhtar a 2–0 win in the RSK Olimpiyskyi Stadium. In the return leg in Marseille, Shakhtar got an important away goal in the 30th minute through a close-range Fernandinho strike, where he blasted it past the Marseille goalkeeper from a very tight angle, after Ilsinho had played him through. Although Hatem Ben Arfa levelled the score at 1–1 in the 43rd minute, Marseille never looked liked getting the three goals that was required of them in order to progress, and in the 90th minute, adding to Marseille's wounds, Luiz Adriano scored to make it 2–1 and thus 4–1 on aggregate. Shakhtar had progressed to a European cup competition semi-final for the first time in their history with this victory.

In the semi-finals, Shakhtar could have been drawn against German clubs Hamburg or Werder Bremen, but instead a German–Ukrainian final was guaranteed when Hamburg and Werder Bremen were paired with each other, while Shakhtar were drawn with fellow Ukrainian club Dynamo Kyiv. Dynamo and Shakhtar have been fierce rivals since the Ukrainian Premier League's formation in 1991 as they have often battled each other for 1st place in the league. The draw of Dynamo-Shakhtar was met with great excitement by the Ukrainian public, who eagerly anticipated the showdown. Both stadiums were easily sold out for this fixture. Dynamo hosted the first leg in Kyiv, and it got off to a bad start for Shakhtar when Dmytro Chyhrynskyi scored an own goal to give Dynamo the lead 1–0. The match was tense and thus not many clear cut chances to score were made, but Dynamo were clearly on top and a Shakhtar equaliser was looking unlikely until the 68th minute when substitute Willian crossed and Fernandinho bundled it into the goal to level the score at 1–1. Dynamo's Olexandr Aliyev had a chance to give the Kyiv side the lead again in the 78th minute, but Shakhtar goalkeeper Andriy Pyatov saved well and the game ended 1–1. Shakhtar took their crucial away goal to Donetsk and things were looking very rosy when Jadson scored in the 17th minute in the return leg to put the aggregate scoreline at 2–1. In the 37th minute, Dynamo correctly had a goal ruled offsides. Shortly after the start of the second half, Ismaël Bangoura equalised after a defensive mix-up allowed for Bangoura to have a clear shot on goal, which he finished well. With the aggregate at 2–2 and heading for extra time and potentially a penalty shootout, a moment of brilliance in the 89th minute from Ilsinho sent Shakhtar to Istanbul. After collecting a long pass on the right-wing, Ilsinho cut in towards goal, shifted his way past three Dynamo defenders and coolly placed the ball where the Dynamo keeper had no chance. The match finished 2–1 and Shakhtar won 3–2 on aggregate and thus became the first ever Ukrainian side to reach a UEFA Cup Final.

Werder Bremen

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Werder finished the 2007–08 Bundesliga in second place and received a spot in the 2008–09 UEFA Champions League group stage as a result. They were matched up against Inter Milan, Panathinaikos, and Anorthosis Famagusta in Group B. The Champions League campaign got off to a poor start for Werder when the first tie of the round against heavy underdog Cypriot side Anorthosis ended in a 0–0 draw in Bremen. Werder rebounded in the second match with a 1–1 draw in Milan against Internazionale, thanks to a Claudio Pizarro equaliser in the 62nd minute. An entertaining 2–2 draw in Athens against Panathinaikos followed, before disaster struck in the return leg in Bremen, where Panathinaikos defeated their German hosts by a score of 3–0. Werder looked as though they were heading for a fourth-place finish in the group when in the next game in Nicosia, Anorthosis were leading 2–0 after 72 minutes, but a trip on Aaron Hunt in the penalty area allowed for Diego to score a penalty kick to make the score 2–1. Hugo Almeida rescued a point for Werder in the 87th minute, when he scored after a cross from Mesut Özil was helped on by Duško Tošić. Needing a win at home against the group favourites Internazionale and an Anorthosis loss to Panathinaikos in order to secure third place and thus progression to the UEFA Cup knockout rounds, Werder were staring elimination from European cup competition in the face. Werder dominated the match against the Italians and were rewarded for their determination to score in the 63rd minute when Pizarro scored on the rebound from a spilled shot by Özil. After Werder established their lead, further good news made its way to the Weserstadion, where news of a Panathinaikos goal against Anorthosis lifted spirits. Markus Rosenberg extended Werder's lead in the 81st minute, and although Internazionale pulled a goal back through an 88th minute Zlatan Ibrahimović strike, Werder came out deserved winners 2–1. Panathinaikos held on to their 1–0 lead against Anorthosis and after both games had finished, Werder secured third place and a spot in the UEFA Cup knockout rounds.

Just when Werder thought things would ease for them once they parachuted into the UEFA Cup, Werder were told that they faced another trip to the San Siro, except this time it would be against Milan, the favourites to win the UEFA Cup. In the home leg in Bremen, Milan went ahead in the 36th minute thanks to a Filippo Inzaghi goal. The Germans did not give up however, and after creating a host of chances, Diego finally finished one off in the 84th minute to level the score at 1–1. Heading to the San Siro with the aggregate scoreline all even, Milan jumped ahead in the first half with two goals from Andrea Pirlo and Alexandre Pato respectively. The task was daunting, but Werder were up to it, and in the 68th minute Pizarro scored a header from a Diego free-kick. Werder got the decisive goal ten minutes later after yet another Pizarro headed goal, this time from a cross from Sebastian Boenisch. The match finished 2–2 and Werder won the round with an aggregate score of 3–3, through the away goals rule.

In the Round of 16, Werder were paired with French side Saint-Étienne. Naldo put Werder ahead in the 20th minute, but Werder were left frustrated in the Weserstadion as they could not convert their dominance into more goals. In the return leg at the Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, Werder got off to the best of starts, with Sebastian Prödl scoring in the fourth minute and Pizarro adding a second goal in the 27th minute. Saint-Étienne then needed three goals to win the tie. A goal in the 64th minute by Yohan Benalouane rejuvenated the match, but by the time the French got their second goal in the 90th minute, the fixture was all but over.

Werder were once again facing an Italian side; this time in the quarter-finals, and with their new Italian opponents being Udinese. It looked as though the job was done for the Bremen club when they had a 3–0 lead over Udinese after just 69 minutes at the Weserstadion, through two goals from Diego and a solitary strike from Almeida. But in the 87th minute, Fabio Quagliarella breathed new life into Udinese's hopes, when he got a goal back from close range. One of the most entertaining matches of the entire tournament followed in the return leg at the Stadio Friuli. Gökhan Inler opened the scoring for the hosts with a fantastic 30-metre goal that left Werder keeper Tim Wiese with no chance of saving. Diego equalised in the 28th minute, before Quagliarella restored the Udinese lead just two minutes later by lobbing the ball over Wiese. Quagliarella scored his second and Udinese's third only eight minutes later and the aggregate was even at 4–4 and the match heading to extra time if the score stayed at 3–1. The match restarted in the second half with the same frantic pace it had in the first half, and after Quagliarella barely missed an opportunity to score a hat-trick, Diego headed in from an Almeida shot which bounced off the bar to bring the score to 3–2. Udinese now needed two more goals to go through. Felipe and Kwadwo Asamoah had the best scoring opportunities for Udinese, but it wasn't meant to be, and after Udinese keeper Samir Handanović saved a Diego penalty kick, on the resulting corner, Pizarro turned in Per Mertesacker's header in the 73rd minute to wrap up the tie at 3–3 and 6–4 on aggregate.

In the semi-finals, Werder were drawn against their local rivals Hamburg. Werder defeated Hamburg in a penalty shootout in a German Cup semi-final just a week before the first leg of the UEFA Cup semi-final. With animosity running high between the two clubs and their respective supporters, this promised to be a fascinating clash for German football fans. The first leg was once again hosted by Werder, but this time Werder got off to a poor start, with Hamburg having the better chances to score in the opening, before they finally converted one of their chances in the 28th minute with Piotr Trochowski heading in. The Hamburg goal woke up Werder, but Pizarro, Almeida, and substitute Rosenborg all squandered their chances to equalise. Taking a 1–0 lead with them to the HSH Nordbank Arena, Hamburg were confident of progressing to the Istanbul final, while it looked as though Werder would fail in the semi-finals of the UEFA Cup for the fourth time. It looked all over in the second leg when Ivica Olić finished well in the 13th minute. But sixteen minutes later Diego and Pizarro played a one-two, and Diego put it past Hamburg 'keeper Frank Rost to level the score at 1–1 and pull the aggregate to 1–2. Shortly afterwards, Diego's shot from 25 metres rattled the crossbar. In the 41st minute, Diego received a yellow card for shoving fellow Brazilian Alex Silva, which ruled him out of the final. After a host of chances for both sides, in the 66th minute, Pizarro got the ball in the middle of the pitch, made a short run, and his curling shot from about 30 metres made its way past Rost to give Werder the lead 2–1. Things got even better for Werder in the 83rd minute when Frank Baumann headed in to make it 3–2 on aggregate; Hamburg then needed two goals in the last seven minutes plus stoppage time to progress. Olić responded in the 87th minute with another goal to even the aggregate score at 3–3, however Werder would still go through on the away goals rule. As Hamburg searched for a goal, the game fizzled out and Werder had won their ticket to Istanbul.

Match

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Details

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Shakhtar Donetsk Ukraine2–1 (a.e.t.)Germany Werder Bremen
Luiz Adriano 25'
Jádson 97'
Report Naldo 35'
Shakhtar Donetsk[3]
Werder Bremen[3]
GK 30 Ukraine Andriy Pyatov
RB 33 Croatia Darijo Srna (c) Yellow card 57'
CB 5 Ukraine Oleksandr Kucher
CB 27 Ukraine Dmytro Chyhrynskyi
LB 26 Romania Răzvan Raț
CM 18 Poland Mariusz Lewandowski Yellow card 77'
CM 7 Brazil Fernandinho
RW 11 Brazil Ilsinho Yellow card 87' downward-facing red arrow 100'
AM 8 Brazil Jádson downward-facing red arrow 112'
LW 22 Brazil Willian
CF 17 Brazil Luiz Adriano downward-facing red arrow 90'
Substitutes:
GK 12 Ukraine Rustam Khudzhamov
DF 32 Ukraine Mykola Ischenko
DF 36 Ukraine Oleksandr Chyzhov
MF 4 Serbia Igor Duljaj upward-facing green arrow 112'
MF 19 Ukraine Oleksiy Gai upward-facing green arrow 100'
FW 21 Ukraine Oleksandr Hladkyy upward-facing green arrow 90'
FW 99 Bolivia Marcelo Moreno
Manager:
Romania Mircea Lucescu
GK 1 Germany Tim Wiese
RB 8 Germany Clemens Fritz Yellow card 82' downward-facing red arrow 95'
CB 15 Austria Sebastian Prödl
CB 4 Brazil Naldo
LB 2 Germany Sebastian Boenisch Yellow card 120+2'
CM 22 Germany Torsten Frings Yellow card 45+1'
CM 6 Germany Frank Baumann (c)
RW 25 Germany Peter Niemeyer downward-facing red arrow 103'
LW 11 Germany Mesut Özil
SS 9 Sweden Markus Rosenberg downward-facing red arrow 78'
CF 24 Peru Claudio Pizarro
Substitutes:
GK 33 Germany Christian Vander
DF 3 Finland Petri Pasanen upward-facing green arrow 95'
DF 5 Serbia Duško Tošić
MF 7 Croatia Jurica Vranješ
MF 16 Greece Alexandros Tziolis Yellow card 115' upward-facing green arrow 103'
FW 14 Germany Aaron Hunt upward-facing green arrow 78'
FW 34 Austria Martin Harnik
Manager:
Germany Thomas Schaaf

Man of the Match:
Darijo Srna (Shakhtar Donetsk)[9][10]

Assistant referees:
Jesús Calvo Guadamuro (Spain)[1]
Roberto Díaz Pérez del Palomar (Spain)[1]
Fourth official:
Alfonso Pérez Burrull (Spain)[1]

Match rules

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

Statistics

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Luis Medina Cantalejo to referee UEFA Cup final". UEFA. 18 May 2009. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
  2. ^ a b "Full Time Report Final – Shakhtar Donetsk v Werder Bremen" (PDF). UEFA. 20 May 2009. Archived (PDF) from the original on 14 November 2022. Retrieved 20 May 2009.
  3. ^ a b c "Line-ups" (PDF). UEFA. 20 May 2009. Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 October 2012. Retrieved 20 May 2009.
  4. ^ "Shakhtar Donetsk claim Uefa Cup final glory over Werder Bremen". The Guardian. 21 May 2009. Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved 11 August 2009.
  5. ^ Chaplin, Mark (4 October 2006). "Moscow chosen for 2008 final". UEFA. Archived from the original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved 28 August 2007.
  6. ^ "Shakhtar and Bremen in Istanbul showdown". UEFA. 20 May 2009. Archived from the original on 8 July 2012. Retrieved 11 April 2011.
  7. ^ "Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium". UEFA. 20 March 2009. Archived from the original on 15 April 2009. Retrieved 25 May 2009.
  8. ^ Szreter, Adam (25 May 2005). "Liverpool triumph in Turkey". UEFA. Archived from the original on 25 May 2009. Retrieved 25 May 2009.
  9. ^ "Shakhtar Donetsk 2–1 Werder Bremen – Live Blog – UEFA Cup Final – 20 May 2009". Archived from the original on 8 September 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  10. ^ "UEFA.com: Darijo Srna". Archived from the original on 8 November 2014. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  11. ^ a b c "Full Time Report" (PDF). UEFA. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
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