UEFA Europa League 2011/12
|
|
Cup winners |
Spain Atlético Madrid (2nd title)
|
Beginning |
September 15, 2011
|
final |
May 9, 2012
|
Final stadium |
Arena Națională , Bucharest
|
Teams |
48 + 8 (in main competition) 161 + 33 (with qualifying rounds)
|
Games |
205
|
Gates |
585 (ø 2.85 per game)
|
spectator |
4,479,905 (ø 21,853 per game)
|
Top scorer
|
Falcao ( Atlético Madrid )
|
yellow cards
|
917 (ø 4.47 per game)
|
Yellow and red cards
|
27 (ø 0.13 per game)
|
Red cards
|
29 (ø 0.14 per game)
|
← UEFA Europa League 2010/11
|
↑ UEFA Champions League 2011/12
|
The National Stadium of Bucharest - the venue for the final
The 2011/12 UEFA Europa League was the 41st edition of the second most important competition for European football clubs , which was held under the name “UEFA Cup” until the 2008/09 season. 194 clubs from all 53 national associations of UEFA participated in the competition this season.
The season began with the first leg of the first qualifying round on June 30, 2011 and ended with the final on May 9, 2012 in the Arena Națională in Bucharest . There Atlético Madrid prevailed 3-0 in the purely Spanish final against Athletic Bilbao and won the title. As in the previous season, the top scorer of the competition was the Colombian Falcao , this time with Atlético Madrid with twelve goals.
With this win, Atlético Madrid qualified for the UEFA Super Cup 2012 .
Attendees
The participants qualified through the national championships and cup competitions of the UEFA member associations. Only the title holder from the previous year was automatically eligible to start, provided that he had not qualified for the higher-quality Champions League . This was the case this season, however, as defending champions FC Porto, as Portuguese champions 2010/11, were directly eligible for the Champions League. All other participants were determined through qualifying rounds, entered the competition as losers in the Champions League qualification or after the preliminary round as third-placed in the Champions League group stage.
mode
Initially, three qualifying rounds took place between the beginning of July and the beginning of August 2011. The fourth and final qualifying round was called the “ play-off round” for the purpose of better marketing . These games took place at the end of August 2011. When a team went into qualification depended on the club's position in the national championship and the positioning of the home association in the 2010 UEFA five-year ranking . In each qualifying round, the participants were divided into seeded and un seeded clubs based on their club coefficient (KK); purely national pairings were excluded.
In the subsequent group stage, 48 teams were divided into four pots using the club coefficient and then divided into twelve groups of four teams each using a lottery procedure. As in the UEFA Champions League, each group played a full series of home and away games, so the group stage comprised six match days.
The first and second in the group stage reached the final rounds, third and fourth placed teams were eliminated. These 24 teams were joined by the eight third-placed teams from the group stage of the UEFA Champions League. Thus 32 teams reached the knockout phase , in which the opponents were drawn separately for each round, who competed against each other in the two-legged game until the two finalists were determined. Two representatives of one nation were allowed to meet at the earliest in the round of 16. The final was decided in a single game on May 9, 2012 in the Arena Națională in Bucharest.
qualification
1st qualifying round
- Draw: on June 20, 2011 in Nyon
- First leg: on June 30, 2011
- Second legs: July 7, 2011
- Participation: 50 teams, including three fair play qualifiers :
2nd qualifying round
- Draw: on June 20, 2011 (like the first round) in Nyon
- First leg: on July 14, 2011
- Second legs: on July 21, 2011
- Participation: 80 teams, including the 25 winning teams from the first qualifying round
3rd qualifying round
- Draw: on July 15, 2011 in Nyon
- First leg: on July 28, 2011
- Second legs: on August 4, 2011
- Participation: 70 teams, including the 40 winning teams from the second qualifying round.
1 first leg on July 26, 2011, as Hapoel Tel Aviv also had home rights.
Play-offs
The fourth and final qualifying round is called the “play-off” for better marketing.
- Draw: on August 5, 2011 in Nyon
- First leg: on August 18, 2011
- Second legs: on August 25, 2011
- Participation: 76 teams, including the 35 winning teams from the third qualifying round and 15 losers from the third qualifying round of the 2011/12 UEFA Champions League .
Group stage
The draw took place on August 26, 2011 in Monaco . The 48 teams qualified for the group stage (including ten losers from the 2011/12 UEFA Champions League play-offs ) were divided into four pots of twelve teams each based on their club coefficient, and one team from each pot was divided into one of the twelve groups ( A to L) solved; Teams from the same association could not be drawn into the same group.
The group stage will be played on the following dates:
- 1st matchday: September 15, 2011
- 2nd matchday: 29 September 2011
- 3rd matchday: October 20, 2011
- 4th matchday: November 3, 2011
- 5th matchday: 30 November / 1. December 2011
- 6th matchday: 14./15. December 2011
Group A
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
PAOK Thessaloniki
|
0-0
|
Tottenham Hotspur
|
Toumba Stadium
|
Shamrock Rovers
|
0: 3
|
Rubin Kazan
|
Tallaght Stadium
|
September 29, 2011
|
Tottenham Hotspur
|
3: 1
|
Shamrock Rovers
|
White Hart Lane
|
Rubin Kazan
|
2: 2
|
PAOK Thessaloniki
|
Central Stadium
|
October 20, 2011
|
PAOK Thessaloniki
|
2: 1
|
Shamrock Rovers
|
Toumba Stadium
|
Tottenham Hotspur
|
1-0
|
Rubin Kazan
|
White Hart Lane
|
November 3, 2011
|
Shamrock Rovers
|
1: 3
|
PAOK Thessaloniki
|
Tallaght Stadium
|
Rubin Kazan
|
1-0
|
Tottenham Hotspur
|
Central Stadium
|
November 30, 2011
|
Tottenham Hotspur
|
1: 2
|
PAOK Thessaloniki
|
White Hart Lane
|
Rubin Kazan
|
4: 1
|
Shamrock Rovers
|
Central Stadium
|
December 15, 2011
|
Shamrock Rovers
|
0: 4
|
Tottenham Hotspur
|
Tallaght Stadium
|
PAOK Thessaloniki
|
1: 1
|
Rubin Kazan
|
Toumba Stadium
|
Group B
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
Hannover 96
|
0-0
|
Standard Liege
|
Hanover Arena
|
FC Copenhagen
|
1-0
|
Vorskla Poltava
|
Park
|
September 29, 2011
|
Standard Liege
|
3-0
|
FC Copenhagen
|
Maurice Dufrasne Stadium
|
Vorskla Poltava
|
1: 2
|
Hannover 96
|
Worskla Stadium
|
October 20, 2011
|
Hannover 96
|
2: 2
|
FC Copenhagen
|
Hanover Arena
|
Standard Liege
|
0-0
|
Vorskla Poltava
|
Maurice Dufrasne Stadium
|
November 3, 2011
|
FC Copenhagen
|
1: 2
|
Hannover 96
|
Park
|
Vorskla Poltava
|
1: 3
|
Standard Liege
|
Worskla Stadium
|
November 30, 2011
|
Standard Liege
|
2-0
|
Hannover 96
|
Maurice Dufrasne Stadium
|
Vorskla Poltava
|
1: 1
|
FC Copenhagen
|
Worskla Stadium
|
December 15, 2011
|
FC Copenhagen
|
0: 1
|
Standard Liege
|
Park
|
Hannover 96
|
3: 1
|
Vorskla Poltava
|
Hanover Arena
|
Group C
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
Hapoel Tel Aviv
|
0: 1
|
Rapid Bucharest
|
Bloomfield Stadium
|
PSV Eindhoven
|
1-0
|
Legia Warsaw
|
Philips Stadium
|
September 29, 2011
|
Legia Warsaw
|
3: 2
|
Hapoel Tel Aviv
|
Wojska Polskiego Stadium
|
Rapid Bucharest
|
1: 3
|
PSV Eindhoven
|
Arena Națională
|
October 20, 2011
|
Rapid Bucharest
|
0: 1
|
Legia Warsaw
|
Arena Națională
|
Hapoel Tel Aviv
|
0: 1
|
PSV Eindhoven
|
Bloomfield Stadium
|
November 3, 2011
|
Legia Warsaw
|
3: 1
|
Rapid Bucharest
|
Wojska Polskiego Stadium
|
PSV Eindhoven
|
3: 3
|
Hapoel Tel Aviv
|
Philips Stadium
|
November 30, 2011
|
Rapid Bucharest
|
1: 3
|
Hapoel Tel Aviv
|
Arena Națională
|
Legia Warsaw
|
0: 3
|
PSV Eindhoven
|
Wojska Polskiego Stadium
|
December 15, 2011
|
Hapoel Tel Aviv
|
2-0
|
Legia Warsaw
|
Bloomfield Stadium
|
PSV Eindhoven
|
2: 1
|
Rapid Bucharest
|
Philips Stadium
|
Group D
Pl.
|
society
|
Sp.
|
S.
|
U
|
N |
Gates
|
Diff.
|
Points
|
1.
|
Portugal Sporting Lisbon
|
6th
|
4th
|
0
|
2
|
008: 400
|
+4
|
12
|
2.
|
Italy Lazio Rome
|
6th
|
2
|
3
|
1
|
007: 500
|
+2
|
09
|
3.
|
Romania FC Vaslui
|
6th
|
1
|
3
|
2
|
005: 800
|
−3
|
06th
|
4th
|
Switzerland FC Zurich
|
6th
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
005: 800
|
−3
|
05
|
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
FC Zurich
|
0: 2
|
Sporting Lisbon
|
Letzigrund
|
Lazio Rome
|
2: 2
|
FC Vaslui
|
Olympic Stadium
|
September 29, 2011
|
FC Vaslui
|
2: 2
|
FC Zurich
|
Ceahlăul Stadium
|
Sporting Lisbon
|
2: 1
|
Lazio Rome
|
Estádio José Alvalade XXI
|
October 20, 2011
|
Sporting Lisbon
|
2-0
|
FC Vaslui
|
Estádio José Alvalade XXI
|
FC Zurich
|
1: 1
|
Lazio Rome
|
Letzigrund
|
November 3, 2011
|
FC Vaslui
|
1-0
|
Sporting Lisbon
|
Ceahlăul Stadium
|
Lazio Rome
|
1-0
|
FC Zurich
|
Olympic Stadium
|
December 1, 2011
|
Sporting Lisbon
|
2-0
|
FC Zurich
|
Estádio José Alvalade XXI
|
FC Vaslui
|
0-0
|
Lazio Rome
|
Ceahlăul Stadium
|
December 14, 2011
|
FC Zurich
|
2-0
|
FC Vaslui
|
Letzigrund
|
Lazio Rome
|
2-0
|
Sporting Lisbon
|
Olympic Stadium
|
Group E
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
Dynamo Kiev
|
1: 1
|
Stoke City
|
Valery Lobanovsky Stadium
|
Beşiktaş Istanbul
|
5: 1
|
Maccabi Tel Aviv
|
Inönü Stadium
|
September 29, 2011
|
Maccabi Tel Aviv
|
1: 1
|
Dynamo Kiev
|
Bloomfield Stadium
|
Stoke City
|
2: 1
|
Beşiktaş Istanbul
|
Britannia Stadium
|
October 20, 2011
|
Stoke City
|
3-0
|
Maccabi Tel Aviv
|
Britannia Stadium
|
Dynamo Kiev
|
1-0
|
Beşiktaş Istanbul
|
Valery Lobanovsky Stadium
|
November 3, 2011
|
Maccabi Tel Aviv
|
1: 2
|
Stoke City
|
Bloomfield Stadium
|
Beşiktaş Istanbul
|
1-0
|
Dynamo Kiev
|
Inönü Stadium
|
December 1, 2011
|
Stoke City
|
1: 1
|
Dynamo Kiev
|
Britannia Stadium
|
Maccabi Tel Aviv
|
2: 3
|
Beşiktaş Istanbul
|
Bloomfield Stadium
|
December 14, 2011
|
Dynamo Kiev
|
3: 3
|
Maccabi Tel Aviv
|
Valery Lobanovsky Stadium
|
Beşiktaş Istanbul
|
3: 1
|
Stoke City
|
Inönü Stadium
|
Group F.
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
ŠK Slovan Bratislava
|
1: 2
|
Athletic Bilbao
|
Štadión Pasienky
|
Paris Saint-Germain
|
3: 1
|
FC Salzburg
|
Prince Park
|
September 29, 2011
|
FC Salzburg
|
3-0
|
ŠK Slovan Bratislava
|
Red Bull Arena
|
Athletic Bilbao
|
2-0
|
Paris Saint-Germain
|
San Mamés
|
October 20, 2011
|
Athletic Bilbao
|
2: 2
|
FC Salzburg
|
San Mamés
|
ŠK Slovan Bratislava
|
0-0
|
Paris Saint-Germain
|
Štadión Pasienky
|
November 3, 2011
|
FC Salzburg
|
0: 1
|
Athletic Bilbao
|
Red Bull Arena
|
Paris Saint-Germain
|
1-0
|
ŠK Slovan Bratislava
|
Prince Park
|
December 1, 2011
|
Athletic Bilbao
|
2: 1
|
ŠK Slovan Bratislava
|
San Mamés
|
FC Salzburg
|
2-0
|
Paris Saint-Germain
|
Red Bull Arena
|
December 14, 2011
|
ŠK Slovan Bratislava
|
2: 3
|
FC Salzburg
|
Štadión Pasienky
|
Paris Saint-Germain
|
4: 2
|
Athletic Bilbao
|
Prince Park
|
Group G
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
AZ Alkmaar
|
4: 1
|
Malmö FF
|
AFAS stadium
|
FK Austria Vienna
|
1: 2
|
Metalist Kharkiv
|
Generali Arena
|
September 29, 2011
|
Metalist Kharkiv
|
1: 1
|
AZ Alkmaar
|
Metalist Stadium
|
Malmö FF
|
1: 2
|
FK Austria Vienna
|
Malmo New Stadium
|
October 20, 2011
|
Malmö FF
|
1: 4
|
Metalist Kharkiv
|
Malmo New Stadium
|
AZ Alkmaar
|
2: 2
|
FK Austria Vienna
|
AFAS stadium
|
November 3, 2011
|
Metalist Kharkiv
|
3: 1
|
Malmö FF
|
Metalist Stadium
|
FK Austria Vienna
|
2: 2
|
AZ Alkmaar
|
Generali Arena
|
November 30, 2011
|
Malmö FF
|
0-0
|
AZ Alkmaar
|
Malmo New Stadium
|
Metalist Kharkiv
|
4: 1
|
FK Austria Vienna
|
Metalist Stadium
|
December 15, 2011
|
AZ Alkmaar
|
1: 1
|
Metalist Kharkiv
|
AFAS stadium
|
FK Austria Vienna
|
2-0
|
Malmö FF
|
Generali Arena
|
Group H.
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
Club Bruges
|
2-0
|
NK Maribor
|
Jan Breydel Stadium
|
Birmingham City
|
1: 3
|
Sporting Braga
|
St. Andrew's Stadium
|
September 29, 2011
|
Sporting Braga
|
1: 2
|
Club Bruges
|
Estádio Municipal de Braga
|
NK Maribor
|
1: 2
|
Birmingham City
|
Stadium Ljudski vrt
|
October 20, 2011
|
NK Maribor
|
1: 1
|
Sporting Braga
|
Stadium Ljudski vrt
|
Club Bruges
|
1: 2
|
Birmingham City
|
Jan Breydel Stadium
|
November 3, 2011
|
Sporting Braga
|
5: 1
|
NK Maribor
|
Estádio Municipal de Braga
|
Birmingham City
|
2: 2
|
Club Bruges
|
St. Andrew's Stadium
|
November 30, 2011
|
NK Maribor
|
3: 4
|
Club Bruges
|
Stadium Ljudski vrt
|
Sporting Braga
|
1-0
|
Birmingham City
|
Estádio Municipal de Braga
|
December 15, 2011
|
Club Bruges
|
1: 1
|
Sporting Braga
|
Jan Breydel Stadium
|
Birmingham City
|
1-0
|
NK Maribor
|
St. Andrew's Stadium
|
Group I.
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
Udinese Calcio
|
2: 1
|
Rennes stadium
|
Friuli Stadium
|
Atlético Madrid
|
2-0
|
Celtic Glasgow
|
Estadio Vicente Calderón
|
September 29, 2011
|
Celtic Glasgow
|
1: 1
|
Udinese Calcio
|
Celtic Park
|
Rennes stadium
|
1: 1
|
Atlético Madrid
|
Stade de la Route de Lorient
|
October 20, 2011
|
Rennes stadium
|
1: 1
|
Celtic Glasgow
|
Stade de la Route de Lorient
|
Udinese Calcio
|
2-0
|
Atlético Madrid
|
Friuli Stadium
|
November 3, 2011
|
Celtic Glasgow
|
3: 1
|
Rennes stadium
|
Celtic Park
|
Atlético Madrid
|
4-0
|
Udinese Calcio
|
Estadio Vicente Calderón
|
November 30, 2011
|
Rennes stadium
|
0-0
|
Udinese Calcio
|
Stade de la Route de Lorient
|
Celtic Glasgow
|
0: 1
|
Atlético Madrid
|
Celtic Park
|
December 15, 2011
|
Udinese Calcio
|
1: 1
|
Celtic Glasgow
|
Friuli Stadium
|
Atlético Madrid
|
3: 1
|
Rennes stadium
|
Estadio Vicente Calderón
|
Group J
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
Maccabi Haifa
|
1-0
|
AEK Larnaka
|
Kiryat Eliezer Stadium
|
Steaua Bucharest
|
0-0
|
FC Schalke 04
|
Dr. Constantin Rădulescu Stadium
|
September 29, 2011
|
AEK Larnaka
|
1: 1
|
Steaua Bucharest
|
GSZ Stadium
|
FC Schalke 04
|
3: 1
|
Maccabi Haifa
|
Gelsenkirchen Stadium
|
October 20, 2011
|
Maccabi Haifa
|
5-0
|
Steaua Bucharest
|
Kiryat Eliezer Stadium
|
AEK Larnaka
|
0: 5
|
FC Schalke 04
|
GSP stadium
|
November 3, 2011
|
Steaua Bucharest
|
4: 2
|
Maccabi Haifa
|
Arena Națională
|
FC Schalke 04
|
0-0
|
AEK Larnaka
|
Gelsenkirchen Stadium
|
December 1, 2011
|
AEK Larnaka
|
2: 1
|
Maccabi Haifa
|
GSZ Stadium
|
FC Schalke 04
|
2: 1
|
Steaua Bucharest
|
Gelsenkirchen Stadium
|
December 14, 2011
|
Steaua Bucharest
|
3: 1
|
AEK Larnaka
|
Arena Națională
|
Maccabi Haifa
|
0: 3
|
FC Schalke 04
|
Kiryat Eliezer Stadium
|
Group K
Pl.
|
society
|
Sp.
|
S.
|
U
|
N |
Gates
|
Diff.
|
Points
|
1.
|
Netherlands FC Twente Enschede
|
6th
|
4th
|
1
|
1
|
014: 700
|
+7
|
13
|
2.
|
Poland Wisła Krakow
|
6th
|
3
|
0
|
3
|
008:130
|
−5
|
09
|
3.
|
England Fulham FC
|
6th
|
2
|
2
|
2
|
009: 600
|
+3
|
08th
|
4th
|
Denmark Odense BK
|
6th
|
1
|
1
|
4th
|
009:140
|
−5
|
04th
|
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
Wisła Krakow
|
1: 3
|
Odense BK
|
Henryk Reyman Stadium
|
Fulham FC
|
1: 1
|
FC Twente Enschede
|
Craven Cottage
|
September 29, 2011
|
FC Twente Enschede
|
4: 1
|
Wisła Krakow
|
De Grolsch Veste
|
Odense BK
|
0: 2
|
Fulham FC
|
TRE-FOR Park
|
October 20, 2011
|
Odense BK
|
1: 4
|
FC Twente Enschede
|
TRE-FOR Park
|
Wisła Krakow
|
1-0
|
Fulham FC
|
Henryk Reyman Stadium
|
November 3, 2011
|
FC Twente Enschede
|
3: 2
|
Odense BK
|
De Grolsch Veste
|
Fulham FC
|
4: 1
|
Wisła Krakow
|
Craven Cottage
|
December 1, 2011
|
Odense BK
|
1: 2
|
Wisła Krakow
|
TRE-FOR Park
|
FC Twente Enschede
|
1-0
|
Fulham FC
|
De Grolsch Veste
|
December 14, 2011
|
Wisła Krakow
|
2: 1
|
FC Twente Enschede
|
Henryk Reyman Stadium
|
Fulham FC
|
2: 2
|
Odense BK
|
Craven Cottage
|
Group L
|
|
|
|
September 15, 2011
|
SK Sturm Graz
|
1: 2
|
Moscow locomotive
|
UPC arena
|
RSC Anderlecht
|
4: 1
|
AEK Athens
|
Constant Vanden Stock Stadium
|
September 29, 2011
|
Moscow locomotive
|
0: 2
|
RSC Anderlecht
|
locomotive
|
AEK Athens
|
1: 2
|
SK Sturm Graz
|
Athens Olympic Stadium
|
October 20, 2011
|
Moscow locomotive
|
3: 1
|
AEK Athens
|
locomotive
|
SK Sturm Graz
|
0: 2
|
RSC Anderlecht
|
UPC arena
|
November 3, 2011
|
AEK Athens
|
1: 3
|
Moscow locomotive
|
Spyridon Louis Olympic Stadium
|
RSC Anderlecht
|
3-0
|
SK Sturm Graz
|
Constant Vanden Stock Stadium
|
December 1, 2011
|
Moscow locomotive
|
3: 1
|
SK Sturm Graz
|
locomotive
|
AEK Athens
|
1: 2
|
RSC Anderlecht
|
Spyridon Louis Olympic Stadium
|
December 14, 2011
|
SK Sturm Graz
|
1: 3
|
AEK Athens
|
UPC arena
|
RSC Anderlecht
|
5: 3
|
Moscow locomotive
|
Constant Vanden Stock Stadium
|
Knockout phase
Round of 16
In addition to the 24 teams that qualified through the group stage, the 8 third-placed teams in the Champions League were added. These were Manchester City , Manchester United , Olympiacos , Valencia CF , Porto FC , Ajax Amsterdam , Trabzonspor and Viktoria Pilsen . For the draw for the sixteenth-finals, which took place on December 16, 2011, the group winners and the four best group thirds from the Champions League were set; the other teams were drawn to them. Encounters between teams in the same group or the same national association were excluded. The first legs took place on February 14 and 16, 2012, the second legs on February 22 and 23, 2012.
Round of 16
The draw for the round of 16 pairings also took place on December 16, 2011, and the game was played on March 8 and 15, 2012.
Quarter finals
The draw for the quarter-final pairings took place on March 16, 2012, the games were played on March 29 and April 5, 2012.
Semifinals
The draw for the semi-final pairings also took place on March 16, 2012, while the games were played on April 19 and 26, 2012.
This year's semi-final was the second “Iberian semi-final” in a row. While three Portuguese and one Spanish teams faced each other in the preseason , this time it was the other way around.
final
Atlético Madrid
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Athletic Bilbao
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Lineup
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Thibaut Courtois - Juanfran , Diego Godín , Miranda , Filipe Luís - Mario Suárez , Gabi - Diego (90th Koke ), Adrián (88th Eduardo Salvio ), Arda Turan (90th + 3 ' Álvaro Domínguez ) - Falcao Coach: Diego Simeone ( Argentina )
(C) Argentina |
Gorka Iraizoz - Jon Aurtenetxe (46th Iñigo Pérez ), Fernando Amorebieta , Javi Martínez , Andoni Iraola - Óscar de Marcos , Ander Iturraspe (46th Ibai Gómez ), Ander Herrera (63rd Gaizka Toquero ) - Iker Muniain , Fernando Llorente , Markel Susaeta Coach: Marcelo Bielsa ( Argentina )
(C) Argentina |
1-0 Falcao (7th) 2-0 Falcao (34th) 3-0 Diego (85th)
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Falcao (26.)
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Herrera (22nd), Amorebieta (64th), Pérez (75th), Susaeta (90th + 1 ')
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Player of the Match: Falcao
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By winning the final, Atlético Madrid set a new record for European competitions: For the first time, they won 12 games in a row. Previously, Atlético Madrid and FC Barcelona (in the 2002/03 UEFA Champions League ) held the record with 11 straight wins.
Best goal scorers
UEFA Europa League top scorer, Falcao (Atlético Madrid)
Below are the top scorers of the Europa League season (without qualification). The sorting was carried out in the same way as the UEFA goalscorer list according to the number of goals and, if the number of hits was the same, based on the game minutes.
Players used Atlético Madrid
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Atlético Madrid
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Web links
Individual evidence
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↑ a b Framework calendar ( memento from January 31, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) of the DFL
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↑ a b c d e FC Red Bull Salzburg is listed as FC Salzburg by UEFA.
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↑ The actual winner of the third-round qualification, Olympiakos Volos, was subsequently banned from all UEFA competitions for three years due to allegations of manipulation. As a substitute team has been determined by the UEFA FC Differdange .
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↑ Thanks to a flash decision by UEFA, Trabzonspor advanced to the group stage of the Champions League. The second leg was canceled, Athletic Bilbao was qualified for the group stage of the Europa League http://de.uefa.com/uefa/footballfirst/matchorganisation/disciplinary/news/newsid=1666976.html#fenerbahce+wird+uefa+champions+ league + replaced
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↑ Both games were rated 3-0 for Celtic Glasgow because of the use of ineligible players on the part of FC Sion .
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↑ kassiesa.home.xs4all.nl ( Memento from June 1, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
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↑ Europa League game moved from Bucharest to Cluj ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.schalke04.de
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↑ Larnaka receives Schalke in the GSP-Stadion ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.schalke04.de
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↑ Atlético Madrid set a record
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↑ List of goalscorers on uefa.com
European Football Championships 2012