The 1971 Intercontinental Cup was an association football tie held over two legs in December 1971 between the runners-up of the 1970–71 European Cup, Panathinaikos, replacing European Cup winners Ajax which declined to participate, and Nacional, winners of the 1971 Copa Libertadores.[1]
Event | Intercontinental Cup | ||||||
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on aggregate | |||||||
First leg | |||||||
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Date | 15 December 1971 | ||||||
Venue | Karaiskakis Stadium, Piraeus | ||||||
Referee | Favilli Neto (Brazil) | ||||||
Attendance | 38,440 | ||||||
Second leg | |||||||
| |||||||
Date | 28 December 1971 | ||||||
Venue | Estadio Centenario, Montevideo | ||||||
Referee | William Mullan (Scotland) | ||||||
Attendance | 63,000 | ||||||
The first leg was held on 15 December 1971 at the Karaiskakis Stadium, home of Olympiacos, as Panathinaikos ground was deemed unsuitable. The match finished up as a 1–1 draw. The goals came from Totis Filakouris in the 48th minute and Luis Artime in the 50th minute. Julio Morales broke the leg of Yiannis Tomaras and was sent off. Estadio Centenario hosted the return leg 13 days later on 28 December 1971.[2] In the second leg, Nacional beat Panathinaikos 2–1, therefore the Uruguayan club won the series 3–2 on aggregate to achieve their first Intercontinental Cup trophy.[3] Argentine striker Luis Artime was the keyplayer of the series after scoring three goals on both matches.[4]
Qualified teams
editTeam | Qualification | Previous finals app. |
---|---|---|
Nacional | 1971 Copa Libertadores champion | None |
Panathinaikos | 1970–71 European Cup runner-up | None |
- Bold indicates winning years
Venues
editMatch details
editFirst leg
editPanathinaikos
|
Nacional
|
|
|
Second leg
editNacional
|
Panathinaikos
|
|
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See also
editReferences
edit- ^ La campaña de 1971 on Decano.com, 23 Jun 2013
- ^ Match report on FIFA (archived, 18 Oct 2007)
- ^ Match details and lineups on the RSSSF
- ^ Artime, figura en la Intercontinental 1971 by Osvaldo Ardizzone on El Gráfico (originally published in 1971)
- ^ "Panathinaikos v Nacional, 15 December 1971" (JSON). Union of European Football Associations. Retrieved 22 November 2020.