The 2008 UEFA Champions League Final (Russian:
Финал Лиги чемпионов УЕФА 2008) was a
football match that took place on Wednesday, 21 May 2008 at 19:45 BST (22:45
local time). The match was played at the Luzhniki Stadium, home ground of
Torpedo and Spartak Moscow, in Moscow, Russia, to determine the winner of
the 2007–08 UEFA Champions League. The final was contested by Manchester
United and Chelsea, making it an all-English club final for the first time
in European Cup or Champions League history. This was only the third time
that two clubs from the same country contested in the same Champions League
Final – the others being the 2000 and 2003 finals. The game was won by
Manchester United 6–5 on penalties, after a 1–1 draw following extra time.
In a series of coincidences, in the week during which Manchester United
qualified for this Final in Russia, Russian side Zenit St Petersburg won the
2008 UEFA Cup Final at the City of Manchester Stadium in Manchester,
England. This saw the Russian billionaire owner Roman Abramovich bring
Chelsea to the first European Cup final staged in Russia. The Moscow
location made this the easternmost final in the tournament's history. It was
also Chelsea's first European Cup final in their history. The significance
for United was that 2008 marked the 50th anniversary of the Munich air
disaster, and the 40th anniversary of United's first European Cup triumph in
1968.
The final was played on natural grass that was temporarily installed for
this match in replacement for the original artificial turf.[1]
In recent years, the Champions League final has been given an identity of
its own with a unique logo, a design concept, and an overall theme. The
objective is to help promote the final and enhance the prestige of one of
the world's biggest sporting events. The initial idea that inspired the
creation of a new identity for each final was to develop a design with a
distinctive flavour of the host city. On 31 October in Moscow, the Final's
new design was presented to public. The ceremony was held in the press
conference room at the Luzhniki Stadium and the design was unveiled in
presence of the ambassador for the final, former Russian goalkeeper Rinat
Dasayev.
Background
Manchester United went into the Champions League final as champions of
England for the 17th time and undefeated in the 2007–08 Champions League.
Chelsea came second in the league, finishing with two fewer points than
United, and had lost just one Champions League game, the quarter-final first
leg away to Fenerbahçe. In the Premier League games between the two sides in
the 2007–08 season, United won 2–0 at Old Trafford in Avram Grant's first
game in charge of Chelsea on 23 September 2007. Chelsea won 2–1 at Stamford
Bridge in the return game on 26 April 2008. Chelsea also won the last cup
game between the two – a 1–0 win in the 2007 FA Cup Final in May 2007,
although United got their own back in the Community Shield the following
August – winning 3–0 on penalties after a 1–1 draw in normal time.
Route to the final
Manchester United
Manchester United were drawn in Group F along with Roma, Sporting and
Dynamo Kyiv. United won their first five group games before securing a 1–1
draw away against Roma, in a game where both teams were already guaranteed
to progress from the group, United as group winners.
In the first knockout round, United were drawn against Olympique
Lyonnais, against whom they drew the away leg 1–1, thanks to a late
equaliser from Carlos Tévez. The Red Devils then won the second leg 1–0 –
Cristiano Ronaldo scoring the only goal – to ensure a 2–1 aggregate win and
a place in the quarter-finals, where they were again drawn against Roma.
The quarter-final matches represented the fifth and sixth times these two
clubs had met in Europe in just over 12 months. United went to Rome and
secured a very creditable 2–0 win, before securing the tie with a record
11th consecutive home Champions League win, winning 1–0.
The semi-final pitted United against FC Barcelona; the teams had not met
since the group stage of the 1998–99 tournament, the last time United won
it. The teams also had identical records going into the semi-final, each
having won eight and drawn two of their ten games, scoring 18 goals and
conceding just five. The first leg at the Nou Camp was a drab affair, with
United spending most of the game defending, whilst Barcelona tried to pass
the ball around them. United were awarded a penalty in the first minute, but
Cristiano Ronaldo sent the ball wide, hitting the stanchion behind the goal.
That was about as exciting as the first leg got for either team and it ended
0–0. The second leg at Old Trafford was a game of higher tempo, which United
won 1–0 thanks to a goal from Paul Scholes after 14 minutes. This result
increased Uniteds' consecutive home win record in the Champions League to 12
and ensured that United reached the final unbeaten.
En-route to the final 2008, United won nine and drew three of their 12
matches, dwarfing their record of four wins and six draws in the ten games
they took to reach the final in 1999 (in 1999 there was no first knockout
round and teams advanced from the group stage directly into the
quarter-finals). United scored 19 goals en-route to the final, Cristiano
Ronaldo scoring seven of them, more than any other player.
Chelsea
Chelsea were placed in Group B, along with Schalke 04, Rosenborg and
Valencia. Chelsea's first match in the group was against Rosenborg at
Stamford Bridge, Chelsea's home ground, where they were held to a 1–1 draw.
Two days later manager José Mourinho left Chelsea by mutual consent.
Mourinho's replacement was former Israeli national team coach Avram Grant.
Chelsea's second match was against Spanish club Valencia, whom they beat
2–1, leaving Chelsea with four points from their two matches. Chelsea's next
two matches were against Schalke 04 of Germany. The first match was played
at Stamford Bridge. Chelsea won the match 2–0. The return match against
Schalke 04 ended in a 0–0 draw. Chelsea's final two matches in their group
resulted in a 4–0 demolition of Rosenborg and a 0–0 draw with Valencia.
Chelsea progressed as group winners with 12 points out of six games.
Chelsea faced Olympiacos in the first knockout round. The first leg in
Athens ended in a 0–0 draw. The second leg saw Chelsea run out 3-0 winners
with goals from Michael Ballack, Frank Lampard and Salomon Kalou to send
Chelsea into the quarter-finals.
Chelsea were drawn against Fenerbahçe of Turkey in the quarter-finals.
The first leg was held at the Sukru Saracoglu Stadium, and ended in a 2–1
loss. Chelsea had opened the scoring when Deivid deflected the ball into his
own net, but Fenerbahçe equalised on 65 minutes, when Kazim-Richards scored.
Deivid won the match for Fenerbahçe with a strike from outside the penalty
area in the 81st minute. The second leg at Stamford Bridge was won 2-0 by
Chelsea, to claim a 3–2 aggregate victory over the Turkish side.
Chelsea faced fellow English opposition Liverpool in the semi-final. This
was the fourth year in succession that these teams had met in the Champions
League. The first leg at Anfield was drawn 1–1. The game looked to be
heading for a Liverpool win but an own goal by John Arne Riise in the 95th
minute gave Chelsea advantage. Chelsea won the second leg 3–2, with goals
from Drogba on 33 minutes, Lampard on 98 minutes and Drogba again on 105
minutes sending the Blues through to the first Champions League final in
their history.
Leading up to the match
The artificial pitch had also been re-laid with turf shipped from
Slovakia just days before the final. Thus, there were concerns over the
players' safety on the pitch.[2]
Manchester United chief executive David Gill had expressed disappointment
that the club had only been allocated with 21,000 tickets for their
supporters, when the club could potentially sell up to 100,000 tickets for
their fans.[3]
Hotels in Moscow were fully booked, and on the day, bars and pubs were
packed. One holiday company gave an alternative to hotels: a cruise ship.
Fans could sleep in the cabins, as well as travelling to and returning from
Moscow just for the final. A study by Sainsbury's Finance reveals that fans
will need spending money of around £624 each to cover hotels, taxis, food
and drink etc. The price of one pint of beer rose to £7.50. Sainsbury's
Finance estimated that Chelsea and Manchester United fans could take a
combined total of £40m spending money with them. The match is expected to
generate £200m spending, prize money and TV income, with the two teams
sharing £115m.[4] However, some
fans spent much less money, such as intrepid Man United supporter Martin
Sheehan, who made the trip, from England to Stockholm by plane, then to
Riga, Latvia, followed by a 15 hour bus journey. The total cost for his trip
was £85, and took five days.[5]
A flight to Moscow, which was meant to leave Gatwick Airport for
Domodedovo International Airport at 0555 BST to arrive just in time for the
match, was cancelled after 6 hours of delay. Supporters waited nearly 6
hours after being told the plane would leave at 1300 BST. A spokesperson for
the airport said it was a 'hydraulic fault' with the plane, and the plane
would not be able to arrive at 1945 BST. 224 Chelsea supporters were left
stranded, each of whom had paid near £1,000 for the day trip. By the time
they were told, it was too late to make alternative plans to travel to
Moscow.[6]
Match
Team news
Sir Alex Ferguson guaranteed a place in the starting line-up for Paul
Scholes, after the midfielder had missed the 1999 final through suspension.[7]
He stuck with his regular starting line-up that had served him well all
season, with his only real decision being whether to play Park Ji-Sung or
Owen Hargreaves in midfield. He decided to start Owen Hargreaves on the
right wing instead of his regular role as a defensive midfielder, and
deployed Cristiano Ronaldo on the left wing, pitting him against Michael
Essien.
Avram Grant decided to start with Florent Malouda on the left-wing
instead of Salomon Kalou. He also chose to deploy Michael Essien at
right-back ahead of Paulo Ferreira and Juliano Belletti, rather than in his
preferred midfield position. The rest of Chelsea's team was fairly
predictable, with their spine of John Terry, Frank Lampard and Didier Drogba
being the key players.
Match summary
First half
Cristiano Ronaldo opened the scoring after 26 minutes. An interchange of
passes between Paul Scholes and Wes Brown after a throw-in on the right
flank gave Brown time to pick out a cross for Ronaldo, who directed his
header past Petr Čech. Chelsea almost equalised in the 33rd minute when
Frank Lampard's cross was headed back into the six-yard box by Didier Drogba.
United's Rio Ferdinand, under pressure from Michael Ballack, was forced to
head the ball towards his own goal and Edwin van der Sar pulled off a superb
save to deny Chelsea a goal. United spent the rest of the first half
pressing for a second goal, and had two good opportunities to extend their
lead, but was denied by a double-save from Čech. Wayne Rooney delivered a
long ball into the path of the Ronaldo and the United goalscorer placed his
cross on the head of the diving Tévez only for Čech to deny him. Chelsea's
failure to clear the loose ball gave Michael Carrick the chance to extend
their lead but again Čech was equal to the task with another fine save.
Chelsea survived the pressure and equalised in the dying minutes of the
first half. The goal followed from a hopeful long range shot by Michael
Essien, being deflected first off Nemanja Vidić and then Rio Ferdinand. The
ball's change in direction caused Edwin van der Sar to lose his footing,
leaving Lampard, who had made the run from deep, with a simple finish.
Second half
In the second half, United were on the back foot for long periods.
Nevertheless, they managed to contain most of Chelsea's attacks. Chelsea had
a few opportunities to take the lead, with Essien breaking free of United's
defence in the 54th minute, only to blast his shot too high. Michael Ballack
also sent his long shot just off target. Chelsea's closest opportunity to
take the lead came in the 77th minute when a Didier Drogba shot struck the
post from 20 yards (18 m) out. Drogba went very close to convert Joe Cole's
low cross home for the winner four minutes from time, but blasted wide. Ryan
Giggs was then introduced in place of Scholes, making a record 759th
appearance for Manchester United.
Extra time
The game moved into extra time, and the thrilling pace was maintained
throughout. Both teams had chances to score a vital second goal, with a
Lampard left-footer hitting the underside of the crossbar and Ryan Giggs
having a shot headed off the line by Terry. Following a fracas involving
most of the 22 players and the match officials, Didier Drogba became only
the second player in history to be sent off in a European Cup Final – the
first being Arsenal's goalkeeper Jens Lehmann in 2006 – for a slap on Vidić.
Penalty shootout
Rio Ferdinand won the toss of the coin, and opted for United to go first
in the shootout. Carlos Tévez stepped up first and sent Čech the wrong way.
Ballack was next up, shooting powerfully past van der Sar. Carrick buried
his spot-kick, as did Juliano Belletti with his first touch of the game. The
first miss of the shootout came from Ronaldo, who stuttered in his run-up
but Čech dived to his right to save. Lampard then put Chelsea 3-2 ahead.
Owen Hargreaves levelled things up with a shot into the top corner. Ashley
Cole was the next up, and van der Sar got a strong hand to the ball but
couldn't keep the ball out. Nani then knew that he had to score to keep
United in it, and he did it just. Thus it was all up to John Terry to win
the Cup for Chelsea. However, Terry lost his footing when planting his
standing foot by the ball and, even though Edwin van der Sar was sent the
wrong way, Terry's mis-hit effort hit the outside of the right post and went
wide.
Anderson scored the first penalty in sudden death. Salomon Kalou then
sent van der Sar the wrong way to make it 5-5. Giggs was next up and he was
also successful. Van der Sar then pulled off the crucial save for United by
distracting Nicolas Anelka when he pointed to his left (Chelsea's penalties
were all attempted on van der Sar's left side of the goal), but correctly
dived to his right to deny Anelka, securing United European football's top
prize for the third time in their history.
Match details
| Manchester United
|
1 – 1 |
Chelsea |
| Ronaldo 26' |
|
Lampard 45' |
| |
Penalties |
|
Tévez goal
Carrick goal
Ronaldo miss
Hargreaves goal
Nani goal
Anderson goal
Giggs goal |
6 – 5 |
goal Ballack
goal Belletti
goal Lampard
goal A. Cole
miss Terry
goal Kalou
miss Anelka |
| |
|
|
Luzhniki Stadium,
Moscow
Attendance: 67,310
Referee: Ľuboš Micheľ (Slovakia)[8] |
| MANCHESTER UNITED: |
| |
|
| GK |
1 |
Edwin van der Sar |
| RB |
6 |
Wes Brown |
| CB |
5 |
Rio Ferdinand (c) |
| CB |
15 |
Nemanja Vidić |
| LB |
3 |
Patrice Evra |
| RM |
4 |
Owen Hargreaves |
| CM |
18 |
Paul Scholes |
| CM |
16 |
Michael Carrick |
| LM |
7 |
Cristiano Ronaldo |
| CF |
10 |
Wayne Rooney |
| CF |
32 |
Carlos Tévez |
|
| Substitutes: |
| GK |
29 |
Tomasz Kuszczak |
| DF |
22 |
John O'Shea |
| DF |
27 |
Mikaël Silvestre |
| MF |
8 |
Anderson |
| MF |
11 |
Ryan Giggs |
| MF |
17 |
Nani |
| MF |
24 |
Darren Fletcher |
| Manager: |
| Sir Alex Ferguson |
|
| CHELSEA: |
| |
|
| GK |
1 |
Petr Čech |
| RB |
5 |
Michael Essien |
| CB |
6 |
Ricardo Carvalho |
| CB |
26 |
John Terry (c) |
| LB |
3 |
Ashley Cole |
| DM |
4 |
Claude Makélélé |
| CM |
13 |
Michael Ballack |
| CM |
8 |
Frank Lampard |
| RW |
10 |
Joe Cole |
| LW |
15 |
Florent Malouda |
| CF |
11 |
Didier Drogba |
| Substitutes: |
| GK |
23 |
Carlo Cudicini |
| DF |
33 |
Alex |
| DF |
35 |
Juliano Belletti |
| MF |
12 |
Mikel John Obi |
| MF |
21 |
Salomon Kalou |
| FW |
7 |
Andriy Shevchenko |
| FW |
39 |
Nicolas Anelka |
| Manager: |
| Avram Grant |
|
UEFA Man of the Match:
Edwin van der Sar[9][10]
Fans' Man of the Match:
Cristiano Ronaldo[11]
Assistant referees:
Roman Slysko
Martin Balko
Fourth official:
Vladimir Hrinak |
Statistics
| Statistic |
Manchester United |
Chelsea |
| Goals scored |
1 |
1 |
| Total shots |
12 |
24 |
| Shots on target |
5 |
3 |
| Ball possession |
58% |
42% |
| Corner kicks |
5 |
8 |
| Fouls committed |
22 |
25 |
| Offsides |
1 |
2 |
| Yellow cards |
4 |
4 |
| Red cards |
0 |
1 |
Reactions
After the match
Emotions ran high after the match, with clear contrast between the wide
smiles of United's makeshift skipper Rio Ferdinand and the tearful face of
Chelsea counterpart John Terry. Chelsea coach Avram Grant, after receiving
both his own medal and red-carded striker Didier Drogba's medal, tossed his
own into the crowd.[12] Terry,
who had missed the penalty that would have won Chelsea their first ever UEFA
Champions League victory, was inconsolable, despite the efforts of Grant,
goalkeeper Petr Cech and match official Ľuboš Micheľ. Midfielders Michael
Ballack, who has previously lost many finals in his career, and Frank
Lampard just stood looking depressed, while winger Joe Cole managed to put
on a brave smile for cameras. As Chelsea went up to receive their medals,
UEFA chief Michel Platini patted his friend Claude Makelele's head and
shared a joke before presenting him with his medal.
United, on the other hand, had much to cheer about. Striker Carlos Tevez
and winger Nani turned their shirts around so that their name and kit number
were on their chests. Overcome with emotion, Cristiano Ronaldo lay face-down
on the grass crying. They made a guard of honour for Chelsea, lining up in
two opposite rows and applauding as the Chelsea team walked through. Munich
air disaster survivor Bobby Charlton, who had captained United to Champions
League victory in 1968 – in typical Charlton fashion – refused to let
Platini place his medal over his head, taking it by the hand instead, and
looked slightly annoyed with the new rule of a team official leading their
team out to collect medals. Cristiano Ronaldo posed for a photograph biting
his medal, while midfielders Anderson and Nani performed a samba dance. The
men in suits did not let their lack of match time dampen their joy either.
Regular captain Gary Neville and South Korean midfielder Park Ji-Sung, who
had been a favourite to start the game, both leapt onto their sodden
teammates. Match captain Rio Ferdinand and season captain Ryan Giggs (who,
in coming on as a substitute, broke Bobby Charlton's record for most
appearances for any United player) lifted the trophy together.
Later
United manager Sir Alex Ferguson later apologised to Park Ji-Sung for not
including him in the first team,[13]
while Cristiano Ronaldo quashed further speculation about his future despite
telling press after the game: "I'm not leaving."[14]
As a result of the loss, Chelsea quartet Didier Drogba (who was sent off
for slapping United defender Nemanja Vidic), Andriy Shevchenko, Alex and
Petr Cech were linked with moves away from Chelsea.[15][16]
The question over Avram Grant's future also remained unsure, with owner
Roman Abramovich (who witnessed the penalty shootout heartbreak), chief
executive Peter Kenyon, director Eugene Tenenbaum and chairman Bruce Buck
reportedly deciding over Grant's job within four days after the final.[17]
Ricardo Carvalho, Frank Lampard and Avram Grant all refused to point the
finger of blame on Terry, but assistant manager Henk Ten Cate showed
annoyance both with Drogba's sending-off (if Drogba had not been sent off,
he would have taken the fifth penalty) and Terry's miss.[18]
Decisive penalty misser Nicolas Anelka, already branded 'Le Sulk',[19]
revealed he did not actually want to take a penalty, citing lack of warm-up
time as an excuse.[20] John
Terry is undergoing psychological counselling to help him overcome his
distress at losing in the final and missing his penalty.[21]
Terry also denied spitting at Carlos Tévez in the incident which led to
Drogba slapping Vidić and being sent off.[22]
Rewards
In addition to the €3 million participation bonus, €5.7 million won from
the group stages and €7.7 million from the 3 rounds prior to the final,
Manchester United will also receive €7 million for winning the final and
becoming champions. Chelsea also received €3 million for participation and
€7.7 million for the first three knockout rounds, however received only €5.1
million from the group stages, due to having 2 more draws compared to
Manchester United. Chelsea also received €4 million for becoming the runners
up.
By becoming finalists, the two clubs will benefit greatly from reaching
the final. In addition to the €23.4 million and the €19.8 million earned
respectively by the champions and runner-up as prize money, the clubs will
receive money from the UEFA market pool share. The market pool share is
estimated to have a total value of €280 million, shared between the 32 clubs
who qualify for the group stage. The pool is split in proportion to each
national association's strength in the television market, with the English
Premier League receiving around €50 million from the pool. The money is then
split 40:30:20:10 to the four teams who qualified for the Champions League
from the 2007-2008 Premier League. This means Manchester United will receive
around €20 million and Chelsea around €15 million. The strong presence of
the English clubs in the final stages of the competition - three of the four
clubs in the semi-final were English - will undoubtedly increase the
league's pool share, with possibly more than €50 million being distributed
among the clubs.[23][24]
Manchester United will also receive up to £85 million in money from
increased sponsorship, television rights and squad value and merchandise
sales, as well as places in the following two competitions:
- A place in the 2008 UEFA Super Cup in August versus UEFA Cup
winners, Zenit Saint Petersburg, in which €2.8 million will be shared
among the two teams.
- A place as Europe's representatives in the 2008 FIFA Club World Cup
in Japan against clubs from other confederations.
- UEFA Champions League 2007-08
- 2008 UEFA Cup Final