2018–19 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase

The 2018–19 UEFA Women's Champions League knockout phase began on 12 September 2018 and ended on 18 May 2019 with the final at Groupama Arena in Budapest, Hungary, to decide the champions of the 2018–19 UEFA Women's Champions League.[1] A total of 32 teams competed in the knockout phase.[2]

Times are CET/CEST,[note 1] as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).

Qualified teams edit

The knockout phase involved 32 teams: 20 teams which received a bye, and the 12 teams which advanced from the qualifying round (ten group winners and two best runners-ups).[3]

Below are the 32 teams which participated in the knockout phase (with their 2018 UEFA club coefficients, which take into account their performance in European competitions from 2013–14 to 2017–18 plus 33% of their association coefficient from the same time span).[4]

Bye to round of 32
Team Coeff[4]
  Lyon (Title holders) 111.740
  VfL Wolfsburg 125.390
  Paris Saint-Germain 84.740
  Barcelona 80.170
  Rosengård 77.470
  Manchester City 57.470
  Bayern Munich 52.390
  Fortuna Hjørring 50.045
  Chelsea 47.470
  Brøndby 47.045
  Zürich 43.890
  Linköping 41.470
  Zvezda-2005 Perm 37.395
  Sparta Praha 32.550
  LSK Kvinner 31.920
  Atlético Madrid 25.170
  St. Pölten 23.415
  Fiorentina 19.385
  Ryazan-VDV 13.395
  Juventus 11.385
Advanced from qualifying round
Group Winners (or best runners-up) Coeff[4]
1   Ajax 13.250
2   Barcelona FA 5.940
3   Glasgow City 35.415
4   Slavia Praha 45.550
5   Spartak Subotica 19.285
6   Zhytlobud-1 Kharkiv 10.470
7   BIIK Kazygurt 28.920
8   SFK 2000 14.630
9   Gintra Universitetas 25.270
10   Avaldsnes 13.920
9   Honka (Best two runners-up) 3.135
1   Þór/KA (Best two runners-up) 9.930

Bracket edit

Round of 32 Round of 16 Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
(18 May – Budapest)
                  
  Ajax 2 2 4
  Sparta Praha 0 1 1
  Ajax 0 0 0
  Lyon 4 9 13
  Avaldsnes 0 0 0
  Lyon 2 5 7
  Lyon 2 4 6
  VfL Wolfsburg 1 2 3
  Þór/KA 0 0 0
  VfL Wolfsburg 1 2 3
  VfL Wolfsburg 4 6 10
  Atlético Madrid 0 0 0
  Atlético Madrid 1 2 3
  Manchester City 1 0 1
  Lyon 2 1 3
  Chelsea 1 1 2
  SFK 2000 0 0 0
  Chelsea 5 6 11
  Chelsea 1 6 7
  Fiorentina 0 0 0
  Fiorentina 2 2 4
  Fortuna Hjørring 0 0 0
  Chelsea 2 1 3
  Paris Saint-Germain 0 2 2
  Zhytlobud-1 Kharkiv 1 0 1
  Linköping 6 4 10
  Linköping 0 2 2
  Paris Saint-Germain 2 3 5
  St. Pölten 1 0 1
  Paris Saint-Germain 4 2 6
  Lyon 4
  Barcelona 1
  Ryazan-VDV 0 0 0
  Rosengård 1 2 3
  Rosengård 2 0 2
  Slavia Praha 3 0 3
  Gintra Universitetas 0 0 0
  Slavia Praha 3 4 7
  Slavia Praha 1 1 2
  Bayern Munich 1 5 6
  Honka 0 1 1
  Zürich 1 5 6
  Zürich 0 0 0
  Bayern Munich 2 3 5
  Spartak Subotica 0 0 0
  Bayern Munich 7 4 11
  Bayern Munich 0 0 0
  Barcelona 1 1 2
  BIIK Kazygurt 3 0 3
  Barcelona 1 3 4
  Barcelona 5 3 8
  Glasgow City 0 0 0
  Barcelona FA 0 1 1
  Glasgow City 2 0 2
  Barcelona 3 1 4
  LSK Kvinner 0 0 0
  LSK Kvinner 3 1 4
  Zvezda-2005 Perm 0 0 0
  LSK Kvinner 1 2 3
  Brøndby 1 0 1
  Juventus 2 0 2
  Brøndby 2 1 3

Format edit

Each tie in the knockout phase, apart from the final, was played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that scores more goals on aggregate over the two legs advanced to the next round. If the aggregate score was level, the away goals rule was applied, i.e. the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then extra time was played. The away goals rule was again applied after extra time, i.e. if there were goals scored during extra time and the aggregate score was still level, the visiting team advanced by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the tie was decided by penalty shoot-out. In the final, which was played as a single match, if the score was level at the end of normal time, extra time was played, followed by penalty shoot-out if the score remained tied.[2]

The mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows:

  • In the draw for the round of 32, the sixteen teams with the highest UEFA club coefficients were seeded (with the title holders being the automatic top seed), and the other sixteen teams were unseeded. The seeded teams were drawn against the unseeded teams, with the seeded teams hosting the second leg. Teams from the same association or the same qualifying round group could not be drawn against each other.
  • In the draw for the round of 16, the eight teams with the highest UEFA club coefficients were seeded (with the title holders being the automatic top seed should they qualify), and the other eight teams were unseeded. The seeded teams were drawn against the unseeded teams, with the order of legs decided by draw. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.
  • In the draws for the quarter-finals and semi-finals, there was no seeding, and teams from the same association could be drawn against each other. As the draws for the quarter-finals and semi-finals were held together before the quarter-finals were played, the identity of the quarter-final winners was not known at the time of the semi-final draw. A draw was also held to determine which semi-final winner was designated as the "home" team for the final (for administrative purposes as it is played at a neutral venue).

On 17 July 2014, the UEFA emergency panel ruled that Ukrainian and Russian clubs would not be drawn against each other "until further notice" due to the political unrest between the countries.[5]

Schedule edit

The schedule of the knockout phase is as follows (all draws are held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland).[1]

Knockout phase schedule
Round Draw First leg Second leg
Round of 32 17 August 2018 12–13 September 2018 26–27 September 2018
Round of 16 1 October 2018 17–18 October 2018 31 October – 1 November 2018
Quarter-finals 9 November 2018 20–21 March 2019 27–28 March 2019
Semi-finals 20–21 April 2019 27–28 April 2019
Final 18 May 2019 at Groupama Arena, Budapest

Round of 32 edit

The draw for the round of 32 was held on 17 August 2018, 14:00 CEST, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.[6]

Seeded Unseeded
Notes
  1. Q Advanced from qualifying round.

Overview edit

The first legs were played on 12 and 13 September, and the second legs on 26 and 27 September 2018.

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Honka   1–6   Zürich 0–1 1–5
Fiorentina   4–0   Fortuna Hjørring 2–0 2–0
Ajax   4–1   Sparta Praha 2–0 2–1
Avaldsnes   0–7   Lyon 0–2 0–5
Ryazan-VDV   0–3   Rosengård 0–1 0–2
Juventus   2–3   Brøndby 2–2 0–1
SFK 2000   0–11   Chelsea 0–5 0–6
Atlético Madrid   3–1   Manchester City 1–1 2–0
Þór/KA   0–3   VfL Wolfsburg 0–1 0–2
Gintra Universitetas   0–7   Slavia Praha 0–3 0–4
BIIK Kazygurt   3–4   Barcelona 3–1 0–3
Barcelona FA   1–2   Glasgow City 0–2 1–0
Spartak Subotica   0–11   Bayern Munich 0–7 0–4
St. Pölten   1–6   Paris Saint-Germain 1–4 0–2
Zhytlobud-1 Kharkiv   1–10   Linköping 1–6 0–4
LSK Kvinner   4–0   Zvezda-2005 Perm 3–0 1–0

Matches edit

Honka  0–1  Zürich
Report
  • Moser   60'
Attendance: 572
Referee: Barbara Poxhofer (Austria)
Zürich  5–1  Honka
Report
Attendance: 3,066
Referee: Eleni Antoniou (Greece)

Zürich won 6–1 on aggregate.


Fiorentina  2–0  Fortuna Hjørring
Report
Attendance: 1,715
Referee: Ivana Martinčić (Croatia)
Fortuna Hjørring  0–2  Fiorentina
Report
Attendance: 1,084
Referee: Désirée Grundbacher (Switzerland)

Fiorentina won 4–0 on aggregate.


Ajax  2–0  Sparta Praha
Report
Sparta Praha  1–2  Ajax
Report
Attendance: 558
Referee: Silvia Domingos (Portugal)

Ajax won 4–1 on aggregate.


Avaldsnes  0–2  Lyon
Report
Attendance: 2,319
Referee: Marta Frias Acedo (Spain)
Lyon  5–0  Avaldsnes
Report
Attendance: 1,214
Referee: Petra Pavlikova (Slovakia)

Lyon won 7–0 on aggregate.


Ryazan-VDV  0–1  Rosengård
Report
Attendance: 4,500
Referee: Hristiana Guteva (Bulgaria)
Rosengård  2–0  Ryazan-VDV
Report
Attendance: 711
Referee: Karolina Radzik-Johan (Poland)

Rosengård won 3–0 on aggregate.


Juventus  2–2  Brøndby
Report
Brøndby  1–0  Juventus
Report
Attendance: 8,531
Referee: Florence Guillemin (France)

Brøndby won 3–2 on aggregate.


SFK 2000  0–5  Chelsea
Report
Attendance: 2,200
Referee: Frida Nielsen (Denmark)
Chelsea  6–0  SFK 2000
Report
Attendance: 667
Referee: Simona Ghisletta (Switzerland)

Chelsea won 11–0 on aggregate.


Atlético Madrid  1–1  Manchester City
Report
Attendance: 1,671
Referee: Sara Persson (Sweden)
Manchester City  0–2  Atlético Madrid
Report
Attendance: 1,178
Referee: Lina Lehtovaara (Finland)

Atlético Madrid won 3–1 on aggregate.


Þór/KA  0–1  VfL Wolfsburg
Report
Attendance: 1,529
Referee: Eszter Urbán (Hungary)
VfL Wolfsburg  2–0  Þór/KA
Report
Attendance: 1,213
Referee: Amy Fearn (England)

VfL Wolfsburg won 3–0 on aggregate.


Gintra Universitetas  0–3  Slavia Praha
Report
Attendance: 1,500
Referee: Tanja Subotič (Slovenia)
Slavia Praha  4–0  Gintra Universitetas
Report
Attendance: 651
Referee: Paula Brady (Ireland)

Slavia Praha won 7–0 on aggregate.


BIIK Kazygurt  3–1  Barcelona
Report
Attendance: 2,800
Referee: Zuzana Valentová (Slovakia)
Barcelona  3–0  BIIK Kazygurt
Report
Attendance: 1,667
Referee: Justina Lavrenovaitė (Lithuania)

Barcelona won 4–3 on aggregate.


Barcelona FA  0–2  Glasgow City
Report
Attendance: 417
Referee: Viola Raudziņa (Latvia)
Glasgow City  0–1  Barcelona FA
Report
Attendance: 511
Referee: Ifeoma Kulmala (Finland)

Glasgow City won 2–1 on aggregate.


Spartak Subotica  0–7  Bayern Munich
Report
Attendance: 600
Referee: Tess Olofsson (Sweden)
Bayern Munich  4–0  Spartak Subotica
Report
Attendance: 662
Referee: Elvira Nurmustafina (Kazakhstan)

Bayern Munich won 11–0 on aggregate.


St. Pölten  1–4  Paris Saint-Germain
Report
Attendance: 2,412
Referee: Rebecca Welch (England)
Paris Saint-Germain  2–0  St. Pölten
Report
Attendance: 682
Referee: Ewa Augustyn (Poland)

Paris Saint-Germain won 6–1 on aggregate.


Zhytlobud-1 Kharkiv  1–6  Linköping
Report
Attendance: 6,000
Referee: Marta Huerta De Aza (Spain)
Linköping  4–0  Zhytlobud-1 Kharkiv
Report
Attendance: 518
Referee: Ivana Projkovska (Macedonia)

Linköping won 10–1 on aggregate.


LSK Kvinner  3–0  Zvezda-2005 Perm
Report
Attendance: 710
Referee: Maria Marotta (Italy)
Zvezda-2005 Perm  0–1  LSK Kvinner
Report
Attendance: 100
Referee: Angelika Söder (Germany)

LSK Kvinner won 4–0 on aggregate.

Round of 16 edit

The draw for the round of 16 was held on 1 October 2018, 13:00 CEST, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.[7]

Seeded Unseeded

Overview edit

The first legs were played on 17 and 18 October, and the second legs on 31 October and 1 November 2018.

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Zürich   0–5   Bayern Munich 0–2 0–3
VfL Wolfsburg   10–0   Atlético Madrid 4–0 6–0
Ajax   0–13   Lyon 0–4 0–9
Barcelona   8–0   Glasgow City 5–0 3–0
Linköping   2–5   Paris Saint-Germain 0–2 2–3
Chelsea   7–0   Fiorentina 1–0 6–0
Rosengård   2–3   Slavia Praha 2–3 0–0
LSK Kvinner   3–1   Brøndby 1–1 2–0

Matches edit

Zürich  0–2  Bayern Munich
Report
Attendance: 4,376
Referee: Sara Persson (Sweden)
Bayern Munich  3–0  Zürich
Report
Attendance: 652
Referee: Petra Pavlíková (Slovakia)

Bayern Munich won 5–0 on aggregate.


VfL Wolfsburg  4–0  Atlético Madrid
Report
Attendance: 1,523
Atlético Madrid  0–6  VfL Wolfsburg
Report
Attendance: 652
Referee: Anastasia Pustovoitova (Russia)

VfL Wolfsburg won 10–0 on aggregate.


Ajax  0–4  Lyon
Report
Lyon  9–0  Ajax
Report

Lyon won 13–0 on aggregate.


Barcelona  5–0  Glasgow City
Report
Attendance: 1,639
Referee: Ivana Martinčić (Croatia)
Glasgow City  0–3  Barcelona
Report
Attendance: 795
Referee: Désirée Grundbacher (Switzerland)

Barcelona won 8–0 on aggregate.


Linköping  0–2  Paris Saint-Germain
Report
Attendance: 1,639
Referee: Sandra Bastos (Portugal)
Paris Saint-Germain  3–2  Linköping
Report
Attendance: 899
Referee: Riem Hussein (Germany)

Paris Saint-Germain won 5–2 on aggregate.


Chelsea  1–0  Fiorentina
Report
Fiorentina  0–6  Chelsea
Report
Attendance: 3,015
Referee: Lina Lehtovaara (Finland)

Chelsea won 7–0 on aggregate.


Rosengård  2–3  Slavia Praha
Report
Attendance: 811
Referee: Amy Rayner (England)
Slavia Praha  0–0  Rosengård
Report
Attendance: 1,451
Referee: Cheryl Foster (Wales)

Slavia Praha won 3–2 on aggregate.


LSK Kvinner  1–1  Brøndby
Report
Attendance: 1,021
Referee: Eszter Urbán (Hungary)
Brøndby  0–2  LSK Kvinner
Report
Attendance: 2,975
Referee: Meliz Özçiğdem (Turkey)

LSK Kvinner won 3–1 on aggregate.

Quarter-finals edit

The draw for the quarter-finals was held on 9 November 2018, 13:00 CET, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.[8][9]

Overview edit

The first legs were played on 20 and 21 March, and the second legs on 27 March 2019.

During the Chelsea - PSG tie a number of arrests were made by the Metropolitan Police of travelling supporters of PSG who were arrested for possession of illegal drugs, weapons and vandalism. This was after disorder was reported at Waterloo and Wimbledon Train stations and a bus carrying PSG supporters being searched and barred entry to Kingsmeadow Stadium.[10][11]

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Slavia Praha   2–6   Bayern Munich 1–1 1–5
Barcelona   4–0   LSK Kvinner 3–0 1–0
Lyon   6–3   VfL Wolfsburg 2–1 4–2
Chelsea   3–2   Paris Saint-Germain 2–0 1–2

Matches edit

Slavia Praha  1–1  Bayern Munich
Report
Attendance: 6,822
Referee: Rebecca Welch (England)
Bayern Munich  5–1  Slavia Praha
Report
Attendance: 1,040

Bayern Munich won 6–2 on aggregate.


Barcelona  3–0  LSK Kvinner
Report
Attendance: 5,563
Referee: Riem Hussein (Germany)
LSK Kvinner  0–1  Barcelona
Report

Barcelona won 4–0 on aggregate.


Lyon  2–1  VfL Wolfsburg
Report
VfL Wolfsburg  2–4  Lyon
Report
Attendance: 4,445
Referee: Lina Lehtovaara (Finland)

Lyon won 6–3 on aggregate.


Chelsea  2–0  Paris Saint-Germain
Report
Attendance: 2,616
Referee: Ivana Martinčić (Croatia)
Paris Saint-Germain  2–1  Chelsea
Report
Attendance: 13,220
Referee: Sandra Bastos (Portugal)

Chelsea won 3–2 on aggregate.

Semi-finals edit

The draw for the semi-finals was held on 9 November 2018, 13:00 CET (after the quarter-final draw), at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.[8]

Overview edit

The first legs were played on 21 April, and the second legs on 28 April 2019.

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Lyon   3–2   Chelsea 2–1 1–1
Bayern Munich   0–2   Barcelona 0–1 0–1

Matches edit

Lyon  2–1  Chelsea
Report
Chelsea  1–1  Lyon
Report
Attendance: 4,670
Referee: Sara Persson (Sweden)

Lyon won 3–2 on aggregate.


Bayern Munich  0–1  Barcelona
Report
Attendance: 2,500
Referee: Jana Adámková (Czech Republic)
Barcelona  1–0  Bayern Munich
Report
Attendance: 12,764

Barcelona won 2–0 on aggregate.

Final edit

The final was played on 18 May 2019 at the Groupama Arena in Budapest. The "home" team for the final (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws.[8]

Lyon  4–1  Barcelona
Report

Notes edit

  1. ^ CET (UTC+1) for dates from 28 October 2018 up to 30 March 2019 (second legs of round of 16 and both legs of quarter-finals), and CEST (UTC+2) for all other dates.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "2018/19 UEFA Women's calendar" (PDF). UEFA.com. UEFA.
  2. ^ a b "Regulations of the UEFA Women's Champions League 2018/19 Season" (PDF). UEFA.com. 9 June 2018.
  3. ^ "Women's Champions League entries confirmed". UEFA.com. 8 June 2018.
  4. ^ a b c "UEFA WOMEN'S CHAMPIONS LEAGUE 2018/19 Club Coefficients" (PDF). UEFA.com.
  5. ^ "Emergency Panel decisions". UEFA. 17 July 2014.
  6. ^ "Women's Champions League round of 32 draw". UEFA.com.
  7. ^ "Women's Champions League round of 16 draw". UEFA.com.
  8. ^ a b c "Women's Champions League quarter-final and semi-final draw". UEFA.com.
  9. ^ "Lyon face Wolfsburg, Chelsea meet Paris in last eight". UEFA.com.
  10. ^ "Violent scenes overshadow Chelsea women's defeat of PSG". New Straits Times. 22 March 2019. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  11. ^ "PSG hooligans barred from Champions League clash at Chelsea Women's ground after police find knives and drugs on coach". Daily Telegraph. 21 March 2019. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
  12. ^ Evans, Simon (18 May 2019). "Hegerberg hat-trick fires Lyon to fourth straight Champions League". Budapest: Reuters. Retrieved 19 May 2019.

External links edit