The 2004–05 UEFA Cup was the 34th edition of the UEFA Cup. The format of the competition had changed from previous seasons, replacing that from the previous one after the abolition of the Cup Winners' Cup in 1999; an extra qualifying round was introduced, as was a group phase after the first round. The group stage operated in a single round-robin format consisting of eight groups of five teams, each team plays two games at home and two away and the top three finishers of each group progress to the knock-out round, joining the eight third-placed teams from the UEFA Champions League group stage.

2004–05 UEFA Cup
Estádio José Alvalade in Lisbon hosted the final.
Tournament details
Dates13 July 2004 – 18 May 2005
Teams145
Final positions
ChampionsRussia CSKA Moscow (1st title)
Runners-upPortugal Sporting CP
Tournament statistics
Matches played220
Goals scored573 (2.6 per match)
Attendance3,701,901 (16,827 per match)
Top scorer(s)Alan Shearer (Newcastle United)
11 goals

The tournament was won by CSKA Moscow, coming from behind in the final against Sporting CP, in whose home stadium the match was played. It was the first win by a Russian side in any European competition. The match was refereed by Graham Poll.

Valencia were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Steaua București in the Round of 32 after dropping out of the UEFA Champions League Group Stage.

Association team allocation

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A total of 145 teams from 51 of 52 UEFA member associations participated in the 2004–05 UEFA Cup (the exception being Kazakhstan which had no clubs meeting licensing requirements). The association ranking based on the UEFA country coefficients was used to determine the number of participating teams for each association:[1]

  • Associations 1–6 and 16–21 each had three teams qualify.
  • Associations 7–8 each had four teams qualify.
  • Associations 9–15 and 22–52 (except Liechtenstein, Kazakhstan, Andorra and San Marino) each had two teams qualify.
  • Liechtenstein (as they organized only a domestic cup and no domestic league), Andorra and San Marino had only one team that qualified.

Moreover, the following teams also qualified for the competition:

Association ranking

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For the 2004–05 UEFA Cup, the associations were allocated places according to their 2003 UEFA country coefficients, which took into account their performance in European competitions from 1998–99 to 2002–03.[2]

Apart from the allocation based on the country coefficients, associations could have additional teams participating in the UEFA Cup, as noted below:

  • (UCL) – Additional teams transferred from the UEFA Champions League
  • (IC) – Additional teams transferred from the UEFA Intertoto Cup
  • (FP) – Additional berth via Fair Play ranking
Association ranking for 2004–05 UEFA Cup
Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
1   Spain 75.539 3 +1 (IC)
+1 (UCL)
2   Italy 62.311
3   England 58.340
4   Germany 51.132 +1 (IC)
5   France 43.468 +1 (IC)
6   Greece 36.782 +3 (UCL)
7   Portugal 35.583 4 +1 (UCL)
8   Netherlands 33.498 +1 (UCL)
9   Scotland 30.375 2 +1 (UCL)
10   Turkey 28.991 +2 (UCL)
11   Belgium 28.500 +1 (UCL)
12   Czech Republic 27.950 +1 (UCL)
13   Switzerland 26.250 +1 (UCL)
14   Ukraine 24.583 +1 (FP)
+2 (UCL)
15   Israel 23.999 +1 (UCL)
16   Austria 23.375 3 +1 (UCL)
17   Poland 21.625 +1 (UCL)
18   Russia 21.041 +1 (UCL)
Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
19   Serbia and Montenegro 19.831 3 +1 (UCL)
20   Norway 19.575
21   Bulgaria 18.665
22   Croatia 18.625 2
23   Sweden 17.591 +1 (FP)
+1 (UCL)
24   Denmark 17.375
25   Slovakia 13.665
26   Romania 12.957 +1 (UCL)
27   Hungary 12.790 +1 (UCL)
28   Cyprus 10.165
29   Slovenia 9.332 +1 (UCL)
30   Finland 7.208
31   Latvia 6.665
32   Moldova 5.832
33   Georgia 5.666
34   Bosnia and Herzegovina 4.333
35   Lithuania 3.998
36   Iceland 3.498
Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
37   Macedonia 3.497 2
38   Belarus 3.416
39   Republic of Ireland 3.331 +1 (UCL)
40   Malta 2.998
41   Armenia 2.165 +1 (FP)
42   Wales 2.165
43   Liechtenstein 2.000 1
44   Albania 1.831 2
45   Estonia 1.665
46   Northern Ireland 1.498
47   Luxembourg 1.332
48   Faroe Islands 1.165
49   Azerbaijan 1.165
50   Kazakhstan 0.500 0 [Note KAZ]
51   Andorra 0.000 1
52   San Marino 0.000

Distribution

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The following was the access list for this season.[3]

Access list for 2004–05 UEFA Cup
Round Teams entering in this round Teams advancing from the previous round Teams transferred from Champions League or Intertoto Cup
First qualifying round
(50 teams)
  • 2 domestic league champions from Andorra and San Marino
  • 21 domestic cup winners from associations 29–52 (except Kazakhstan, Andorra and San Marino)
  • 24 domestic league runners-up from associations 25–52 (except Liechtenstein, Kazakhstan, Andorra and San Marino)
  • 3 teams which qualified via Fair Play ranking
Second qualifying round
(64 teams)
  • 17 domestic cup winners from associations 12–28
  • 9 domestic league runners-up from associations 16–24
  • 13 domestic league third-placed teams from associations 9–21
  • 25 winners from first qualifying round
First round
(80 teams)
  • 11 domestic cup winners from associations 1–11
  • 2 domestic league third-placed teams from associations 7–8
  • 5 domestic league fourth-placed teams from associations 4–8
  • 8 domestic league fifth-placed teams from associations 1–8 (league cup winners for France)
  • 3 domestic league sixth-placed teams from associations 1–3 (league cup winners for England)
  • 32 winners from second qualifying round
  • 16 losers from Champions League third qualifying round
  • 3 winners from UEFA Intertoto Cup finals
Group stage
(40 teams)
  • 40 winners from first round
Knockout stage
(32 teams)
  • 8 group winners from group stage
  • 8 group runners-up from group stage
  • 8 group third-placed teams from group stage
  • 8 group third-placed teams from Champions League group stage

Due to the UEFA Cup title holder (Valencia) qualifying for the Champions League via their domestic league, the following changes to the access list were made:

  • The cup winners of association 11 (Belgium) entered the UEFA Cup first round instead of the second qualifying round.
  • The cup winners of association 25 and 26 (Slovakia and Romania) entered the UEFA Cup second qualifying round instead of the first qualifying round.

Due to the failure of any club from Kazakhstan to obtain a UEFA licence, the following changes to the access list were made:

  • The cup winners of association 27 and 28 (Hungary and Cyprus) entered the UEFA Cup second qualifying round instead of the first qualifying round.

Teams

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The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:[4]

  • TH: Title holders
  • CW: Cup winners
  • CR: Cup runners-up
  • LC: League Cup winners
  • Nth: League position
  • PO: End-of-season European competition play-offs (winners or position)
  • IC: Intertoto Cup
  • FP: Fair play
  • CL: Relegated from the Champions League
    • GS: Third-placed teams from the group stage
    • Q3: Losers from the third qualifying round
Round of 32
  ValenciaTH (CL GS)   Olympiacos (CL GS)   Fenerbahçe (CL GS)   Shakhtar Donetsk (CL GS)
  Panathinaikos (CL GS)   Ajax (CL GS)   Dynamo Kyiv (CL GS)   CSKA Moscow (CL GS)
First round
  Zaragoza (CW)   Auxerre (4th)   Heerenveen (4th)   Maccabi Haifa (CL Q3)
  Athletic Bilbao (5th)   Sochaux (LC)   AZ (5th)   GAK (CL Q3)
  Sevilla (6th)   Châteauroux (CR)   Heart of Midlothian (3rd)   Wisła Kraków (CL Q3)
  Lazio (CW)   AEK Athens (4th)   Beşiktaş (3rd)   Red Star Belgrade (CL Q3)
  Parma (5th)   Egaleo (5th)   Standard Liège (3rd)   Djurgårdens IF (CL Q3)
  Udinese (7th)   Panionios (6th)   PAOK (CL Q3)   Dinamo București (CL Q3)
  Newcastle United (5th)   Sporting CP (3rd)   Benfica (CL Q3)   Ferencváros (CL Q3)
  Middlesbrough (LC)   Nacional (4th)   Rangers (CL Q3)   HIT Gorica (CL Q3)
  Millwall (CR)   Braga (5th)   Trabzonspor (CL Q3)   Shelbourne (CL Q3)
  VfB Stuttgart (4th)   Marítimo (6th)   Club Brugge (CL Q3)   Villarreal (IC)
  VfL Bochum (5th)   Utrecht (CW)   Baník Ostrava (CL Q3)   Schalke 04 (IC)
  Alemannia Aachen (CR)   Feyenoord (3rd)   Basel (CL Q3)   Lille (IC)
Second qualifying round
  Dunfermline Athletic (4th)   Maccabi Petah Tikva (3rd)   Partizan (2nd)   Rijeka (3rd)
  Gençlerbirliği (CR)   Austria Wien (2nd)   Železnik (3rd)   IF Elfsborg (CW)
  Beveren (CR)   Superfund (3rd)   Budućnost Banatski Dvor (CR)   Hammarby IF (2nd)
  Sigma Olomouc (3rd)   Rapid Wien (4th)   Bodø/Glimt (2nd)   Brøndby (2nd)
  Slavia Prague (4th)   Lech Poznań (CW)   Stabæk (3rd)   AaB (CR)
  Wil (CW)   Legia Warsaw (2nd)   Odd Grenland (4th)   Artmedia Bratislava (CW)
  Servette (3rd)   Amica Wronki (3rd)   Litex Lovech (CW)   Steaua București (2nd)
  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk (3rd)   Terek Grozny (CW)   Levski Sofia (2nd)   Újpest (2nd)
  Metalurh Donetsk (4th)   Zenit Saint Petersburg (2nd)   CSKA Sofia (3rd)   AEK Larnaca (CW)
  Bnei Sakhnin (CW)   Rubin Kazan (3rd)   Dinamo Zagreb (CW)
First qualifying round
  Dukla Banská Bystrica (2nd)   Tbilisi (4th)[Note GEO]   Birkirkara (2nd)   Portadown (2nd)
  Oțelul Galați (CR)   Modriča (CW)   Marsaxlokk (CR)   F91 Dudelange (CW)
  Honvéd (CR)   Željezničar (2nd)   Banants (2nd)   Etzella Ettelbruck (3rd)
  Omonia (2nd)   Žalgiris (CW)   Shirak (3rd)   B36 (CW)
  Maribor (CW)   Ekranas (2nd)   Total Network Solutions (2nd)   B68 (3rd)
  Primorje (6th)[Note SVN]   ÍA (CW)   Haverfordwest County (3rd)   Shamkir (2nd)
  Haka (2nd)   FH (2nd)   Vaduz (CW)   Qarabağ (3rd)
  Allianssi (CR)   Sloga Jugomagnat (CW)   Partizani (CW)   Pennarossa (1st)
  Ventspils (CW)   Sileks (2nd)   Dinamo Tirana (2nd)   FC Santa Coloma (1st)
  Liepājas Metalurgs (2nd)   Shakhtyor Soligorsk (CW)   Levadia Tallinn (CW)   Östers IF (FP)
  Nistru Otaci (2nd)   BATE Borisov (2nd)   TVMK (2nd)   Illichivets Mariupol (FP)
  Tiraspol (4th)[Note MDA]   Longford Town (CW)   Glentoran (CW)   Mika (FP)
  Dinamo Tbilisi (CW)   Bohemians (2nd)
Notes
  1. ^
    Slovenia (SVN): league runners-up Olimpija Ljubljana failed to obtain UEFA license, as did another two club by table position. UEFA Cup spot was then given to 6th-placed Primorje.[5]
  2. ^
    Moldova (MDA): Moldovan Cup winners Zimbru Chișinău failed to obtain UEFA license and were replaced by league 4th-placed club FC Tiraspol.[6]
  3. ^
    Georgia (GEO): league runners-up Sioni Bolnisi were banned by UEFA due to crowd violence in the domestic season's final match and were replaced by 4th-placed FC Tbilisi.[7]
  4. ^
    Kazakhstan (KAZ): 2003 Kazakhstan Premier League runners-up Tobol and 2003 Cup winners Kairat failed to obtain UEFA licences, along with all other Kazakhstani clubs, therefore Kazakhstan was not represented in Europe in 2004–05 season.[8]

Round and draw dates

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The schedule of the competition was as follows.[9]

Schedule for 2004–05 UEFA Cup
Phase Round Draw date First leg Second leg
Qualifying First qualifying round 25 June 2004 15 July 2004 29 July 2004
Second qualifying round 30 July 2004 12 August 2004 26 August 2004
First round 27 August 2004 16 September 2004 30 September 2004
Group stage Matchday 1 5 October 2004 21 October 2004
Matchday 2 4 November 2004
Matchday 3 25 November 2004
Matchday 4 1–2 December 2004
Matchday 5 15–16 December 2004
Knockout stage Round of 32 17 December 2004 16–17 February 2005 24 February 2005
Round of 16 10 March 2005 16–17 March 2005
Quarter-finals 18 March 2005 7 April 2005 14 April 2005
Semi-finals 28 April 2005 5 May 2005
Final 18 May 2005 at Estádio José Alvalade, Lisbon

Qualifying rounds

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First qualifying round

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The first legs were played on 13 and 15 July, and the second legs on 27 and 29 July 2004.[10]

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Southern–Mediterranean region
Sileks  1–2  Maribor0–11–1
Marsaxlokk  0–3[a]  Primorje0–10–2
Pennarossa  1–9[a]  Željezničar1–50–4
Oțelul Galați  8–1[a]  Dinamo Tirana4–04–1
FC Santa Coloma  0–4  Modriča0–10–3
Omonia  8–1  Sloga Jugomagnat4–04–1
Partizani  5–4  Birkirkara4–21–2
Central–East region
Illichivets Mariupol  4–0  Banants2–02–0
Tbilisi  5–1[a]  Shamkir1–04–1
BATE Borisov  2–4  Dinamo Tbilisi2–30–1
Shirak  1–4  Tiraspol1–20–2
Nistru Otaci  3–2  Shakhtyor Soligorsk1–12–1
Mika  1–2  Honvéd0–11–1
Dukla Banská Bystrica  4–0  Qarabağ3–01–0
Northern region
Levadia Tallinn  3–1  Bohemians0–03–1
Haverfordwest County  1–4  FH0–11–3
Östers IF  4–1  Total Network Solutions2–02–1
Portadown  2–4  Žalgiris2–20–2
B68  0–11  Ventspils0–30–8
Haka  5–2[a]  Etzella Ettelbruck2–13–1
Ekranas  3–1  F91 Dudelange1–02–1
Vaduz  4–2  Longford Town1–03–2
B36  2–11  Liepājas Metalurgs1–31–8
Glentoran  4–3  Allianssi2–22–1
ÍA  6–3  TVMK4–22–1
Notes:
  1. ^ a b c d e Order of legs reversed after original draw.

Second qualifying round

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The first legs were played on 10 and 12 August, and the second legs on 26 August 2004.

Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Southern–Mediterranean region
Gençlerbirliği  2–2 (a)  Rijeka1–01–2
Levski Sofia  8–0  Modriča5–03–0
Bnei Sakhnin  6–1  Partizani3–03–1
Železnik  4–5  Steaua București2–42–1
Budućnost Banatski Dvor  2–2 (a)  Maribor1–21–0
Željezničar  1–9  Litex Lovech1–20–7
Dinamo Zagreb  4–2  Primorje4–00–2
Omonia  2–4  CSKA Sofia1–11–3 (a.e.t.)
Oțelul Galați  0–1  Partizan0–00–1
AEK Larnaca  3–4  Maccabi Petah Tikva3–00–4
Central–East region
Terek Grozny  2–0  Lech Poznań1–01–0
Slavia Prague  3–3 (a)  Dinamo Tbilisi3–10–2
Rapid Wien  3–2  Rubin Kazan0–23–0
Illichivets Mariupol  0–3  Austria Wien0–00–3
Dukla Banská Bystrica  4–2  Wil3–11–1
Nistru Otaci  1–6  Sigma Olomouc1–20–4
Artmedia Bratislava  1–4  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk0–31–1
Superfund  3–3 (a)  Zenit Saint Petersburg3–10–2
Újpest  5–1  Servette3–12–0
Metalurh Donetsk  5–1  Tiraspol3–02–1
Tbilisi  0–7  Legia Warsaw0–10–6
Amica Wronki  1–1 (5–4 p)  Honvéd1–00–1 (a.e.t.)
Northern region
Glentoran  1–3  IF Elfsborg0–11–2
Beveren  5–2  Vaduz3–12–1
Odd Grenland  4–3  Ekranas3–11–2
Ventspils  1–1 (a)  Brøndby0–01–1
Hammarby IF  4–1  ÍA2–02–1
Stabæk  6–2  Haka3–13–1
Bodø/Glimt  3–3 (8–7 p)  Levadia Tallinn2–11–2 (a.e.t.)
FH  4–3  Dunfermline Athletic2–22–1
Žalgiris  1–3  AaB1–30–0
Östers IF  3–3 (a)  Liepājas Metalurgs2–21–1

First round

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Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
GAK  5–1  Litex Lovech5–00–1
Metalurh Donetsk  0–6  Lazio0–30–3
Bodø/Glimt  1–2  Beşiktaş1–10–1
Shelbourne  2–4  Lille2–20–2
Heart of Midlothian  5–3  Braga3–12–2
Austria Wien  4–1  Legia Warsaw1–03–1
Dukla Banská Bystrica  0–5  Benfica0–30–2
Partizan  3–1  Dinamo București3–10–0
Parma  3–2  Maribor3–20–0
Zaragoza  4–2  Sigma Olomouc1–03–2
Sporting CP  2–0  Rapid Wien2–00–0
Newcastle United  7–1  Bnei Sakhnin2–05–1
Steaua București  4–3  CSKA Sofia2–12–2
Wisła Kraków  5–5 (a)  Dinamo Tbilisi4–31–2
Utrecht  4–3  Djurgårdens IF4–00–3
Millwall  2–4  Ferencváros1–11–3
Schalke 04  9–1  Liepājas Metalurgs5–14–0
Maccabi Haifa  1–2  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk1–00–2
Terek Grozny  1–3  Basel1–10–2
Odd Grenland  1–5  Feyenoord0–11–4
AaB  1–3  Auxerre1–10–2
Sevilla  4–1  Nacional2–02–1
HIT Gorica  1–2  AEK Athens1–10–1
Standard Liège  1–1 (a)  VfL Bochum0–01–1
Zenit Saint Petersburg  6–1  Red Star Belgrade4–02–1
Trabzonspor  3–4  Athletic Bilbao3–20–2
Újpest  1–7  VfB Stuttgart1–30–4
Panionios  3–2  Udinese3–10–1
Maccabi Petah Tikva  0–5  HeerenveenCanc.[a]0–5
Levski Sofia  1–2  Beveren1–10–1
Dinamo Zagreb  2–0  IF Elfsborg2–00–0
FH  1–5  Alemannia Aachen1–50–0
Middlesbrough  4–1  Baník Ostrava3–01–1
Club Brugge  6–1  Châteauroux4–02–1
PAOK  3–5  AZ2–31–2
Ventspils  1–2  Amica Wronki1–10–1
Sochaux  9–0  Stabæk4–05–0
Egaleo  2–1  Gençlerbirliği1–01–1
Marítimo  1–1 (2–4 p)  Rangers1–00–1 (a.e.t.)
Hammarby IF  1–5  Villarreal1–20–3
Notes:
  1. ^ Due to a general strike in Israel, the first leg was cancelled by UEFA.[11]

Group stage

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Teams that have qualified for the group stage of the 2004–05 UEFA Cup
  Red: Group A;   Yellow: Group B;   Green: Group C;   Black: Group D;
  Purple: Group E;   Pink: Group F;   Blue: Group G;   Orange: Group H.

Based on paragraph 4.06 in the UEFA regulations for the current season, tiebreakers, if necessary, are applied in the following order:[1]

  1. Cumulative goal difference in group matches.
  2. Total goals scored in group matches.
  3. Away goals scored in group matches.
  4. Higher number of UEFA coefficient points accumulated by the club in question, as well as its association, over the previous five seasons (see paragraph 6.03 of the UEFA regulations).

Group A

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification FEY SCH BSL FER HOM
1   Feyenoord 4 2 1 1 6 3 +3 7 Advance to knockout stage 2–1 3–0
2   Schalke 04 4 2 1 1 5 3 +2 7 1–1 2–0
3   Basel 4 2 1 1 5 4 +1 7 1–0 1–2
4   Ferencváros 4 1 1 2 3 5 −2 4 1–1 1–2
5   Heart of Midlothian 4 1 0 3 2 6 −4 3 0–1 0–1
Source: RSSSF

Group B

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification ATH STE PAR BJK STD
1   Athletic Bilbao 4 3 0 1 11 4 +7 9 Advance to knockout stage 1–0 2–0
2   Steaua București 4 2 0 2 4 3 +1 6 2–1 2–0
3   Parma 4 2 0 2 5 6 −1 6 1–0 3–2
4   Beşiktaş 4 1 1 2 7 7 0 4 3–1 1–1
5   Standard Liège 4 1 1 2 4 11 −7 4 1–7 2–1
Source: RSSSF

Group C

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification DNI ZAR AUS BRU UTR
1   Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 4 3 0 1 7 5 +2 9 Advance to knockout stage 1–0 3–2
2   Zaragoza 4 2 1 1 5 3 +2 7 2–1 2–0
3   Austria Wien 4 2 1 1 4 3 +1 7 1–0 1–1
4   Club Brugge 4 1 2 1 5 5 0 5 1–1 1–0
5   Utrecht 4 0 0 4 2 7 −5 0 1–2 1–2
Source: RSSSF

Group D

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification NEW SOC SCP PAN DTB
1   Newcastle United 4 3 1 0 8 1 +7 10 Advance to knockout stage 1–1 2–0
2   Sochaux 4 3 0 1 4 4 0 9 0–4 1–0
3   Sporting CP 4 2 1 1 9 3 +6 7 0–1 4–1
4   Panionios 4 1 0 3 6 8 −2 3 0–1 5–2
5   Dinamo Tbilisi 4 0 0 4 2 13 −11 0 0–2 0–4
Source: RSSSF

Group E

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification MID VIL PTZ LAZ EGA
1   Middlesbrough 4 3 0 1 6 2 +4 9 Advance to knockout stage 3–0 2–0
2   Villarreal 4 2 2 0 8 2 +6 8 2–0 4–0
3   Partizan 4 1 2 1 7 6 +1 5 1–1 4–0
4   Lazio 4 0 3 1 5 7 −2 3 1–1 2–2
5   Egaleo 4 0 1 3 2 11 −9 1 0–1 2–2
Source: RSSSF

Group F

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification AZ AUX GAK RAN AMC
1   AZ 4 3 0 1 6 3 +3 9 Advance to knockout stage 2–0 1–0
2   Auxerre 4 2 1 1 7 3 +4 7 0–0 5–1
3   GAK 4 2 1 1 5 4 +1 7 2–0 3–1
4   Rangers 4 2 0 2 8 3 +5 6 0–2 3–0
5   Amica Wronki 4 0 0 4 3 16 −13 0 1–3 0–5
Source: RSSSF

Group G

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification STU BEN HVN DZ BEV
1   VfB Stuttgart 4 3 0 1 10 3 +7 9 Advance to knockout stage 3–0 2–1
2   Benfica 4 3 0 1 9 5 +4 9 4–2 2–0
3   Heerenveen 4 2 1 1 6 6 0 7 1–0 1–0
4   Dinamo Zagreb 4 1 1 2 9 7 +2 4 2–2 6–1
5   Beveren 4 0 0 4 2 15 −13 0 1–5 0–3
Source: RSSSF

Group H

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification LIL SEV AAC ZEN AEK
1   Lille 4 3 0 1 5 3 +2 9 Advance to knockout stage 1–0 2–1
2   Sevilla 4 2 1 1 6 4 +2 7 2–0 3–2
3   Alemannia Aachen 4 2 1 1 5 4 +1 7 1–0 2–2
4   Zenit Saint Petersburg 4 1 2 1 9 6 +3 5 1–1 5–1
5   AEK Athens 4 0 0 4 4 12 −8 0 1–2 0–2
Source: RSSSF

Knockout stage

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Bracket

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Round of 32Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
  Olympiacos112
  Sochaux000   Olympiacos101
  Heerenveen112  Newcastle United347
  Newcastle United224   Newcastle United112
  GAK213  Sporting CP044
  Middlesbrough224   Middlesbrough202
  Sporting CP224  Sporting CP314
  Feyenoord112   Sporting CP (a.e.t.; a)224
  Valencia202 (3)  AZ134
  Steaua București (p)022 (4)   Steaua București000
  Dynamo Kyiv000  Villarreal022
  Villarreal022   Villarreal112
  Shakhtar Donetsk112  AZ213
  Schalke 04101   Shakhtar Donetsk112
  Alemannia Aachen011  AZ325 18 May – Lisbon
  AZ022   Sporting CP1
  Austria Wien022  CSKA Moscow3
  Athletic Bilbao011   Austria Wien (a)123
  Fenerbahçe011  Zaragoza123
  Zaragoza123   Austria Wien101
  Panathinaikos101  Parma (a)101
  Sevilla022   Sevilla000
  Parma (a.e.t.)022  Parma011
  VfB Stuttgart000   Parma000
  Partizan213  CSKA Moscow033
  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk202   Partizan101
  CSKA Moscow213  CSKA Moscow123
  Benfica011   CSKA Moscow404
  Basel000  Auxerre022
  Lille022   Lille000
  Ajax112  Auxerre101
  Auxerre033

Round of 32

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Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Olympiacos  2–0  Sochaux1–01–0
Heerenveen  2–4  Newcastle United1–21–2
GAK  3–4  Middlesbrough2–21–2
Sporting CP  4–2  Feyenoord2–12–1
Valencia  2–2 (3–4 p)  Steaua București2–00–2 (a.e.t.)
Dynamo Kyiv  0–2  Villarreal0–00–2
Shakhtar Donetsk  2–1  Schalke 041–11–0
Alemannia Aachen  1–2  AZ0–01–2
Austria Wien  2–1  Athletic Bilbao0–02–1
Fenerbahçe  1–3  Zaragoza0–11–2
Panathinaikos  1–2  Sevilla1–00–2
Parma  2–0  VfB Stuttgart0–02–0 (a.e.t.)
Partizan  3–2  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk2–21–0
CSKA Moscow  3–1  Benfica2–01–1
Basel  0–2  Lille0–00–2
Ajax  2–3  Auxerre1–01–3

Round of 16

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Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Olympiacos  1–7  Newcastle United1–30–4
Middlesbrough  2–4  Sporting CP2–30–1
Steaua București  0–2  Villarreal0–00–2
Shakhtar Donetsk  2–5  AZ1–31–2
Austria Wien  3–3 (a)  Zaragoza1–12–2
Sevilla  0–1  Parma0–00–1
Partizan  1–3  CSKA Moscow1–10–2
Lille  0–1  Auxerre0–10–0

Quarter-finals

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Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Newcastle United  2–4  Sporting CP1–01–4
Villarreal  2–3  AZ1–21–1
Austria Wien  1–1 (a)  Parma1–10–0
CSKA Moscow  4–2  Auxerre4–00–2

Semi-finals

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Team 1Agg. Tooltip Aggregate scoreTeam 21st leg2nd leg
Sporting CP  4–4 (a)  AZ2–12–3 (a.e.t.)
Parma  0–3  CSKA Moscow0–00–3

Final

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The final was played on 18 May 2005 at the Estádio José Alvalade in Lisbon, Portugal.

Sporting CP  1–3  CSKA Moscow
  • Rogério   29'
Report

Top goalscorers

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Rank Name Team Goals Minutes played
1   Alan Shearer   Newcastle United 11 766
2   Liédson   Sporting CP 8 1277
3   Roland Kollmann   GAK 7 551
  Cacau   VfB Stuttgart 7 750
5   Bonaventure Kalou   Auxerre 6 1038
6   Aleksandr Kerzhakov   Zenit Saint Petersburg 5 450
  Patrick Kluivert   Newcastle United 5 452
  Santiago Ezquerro   Athletic Bilbao 5 525
  Erik Meijer   Alemannia Aachen 5 682
  Júlio Baptista   Sevilla 5 700

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Regulations of UEFA CUP 2004-05" (PDF). UEFA. Archived from the original on 5 April 2005.
  2. ^ Kassies, Bert. "UEFA Country Ranking 2003". UEFA European Cup Football. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
  3. ^ Kassies, Bert. "Year 2004/2005". UEFA European Cup Football. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
  4. ^ "Qualification for European Cup Football 2004/2005". Archived from the original on 20 December 2011. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
  5. ^ "Slovenia 2003/04". www.rsssf.org.
  6. ^ "UEFA Cup ban for Georgian club Sioni". ESPN FC. 1 June 2004. Archived from the original on 10 August 2014.
  7. ^ "Club Licensing: 10 Years on..." (PDF). UEFA. 2015.
  8. ^ "UEFA did not admit Kazakhstan clubs". Archived from the original on 10 August 2004. Retrieved 10 August 2004.
  9. ^ "UEFA European Football Calendar 2004/2005". Bert Kassies. Retrieved 31 January 2025.
  10. ^ "Dates released for 2004/05". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 27 May 2004. Archived from the original on 28 August 2004. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  11. ^ "עמיר פרץ: "ליבי עם אוהדי פ"ת. מקווה שהקבוצה תנצח"". ynet.co.il. Archived from the original on 12 November 2017. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
  12. ^ "4. UEFA Cup Finals" (PDF). UEFA Europa League Statistics Handbook 2012/13. Nyon: Union of European Football Associations. 28 May 2013. p. 72. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 June 2013. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
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