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49th season of Europe's secondary club football tournament organised by UEFA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 2019–20 UEFA Europa League was the 49th season of Europe's secondary club football tournament organised by UEFA, and the 11th season since it was renamed from the UEFA Cup to the UEFA Europa League.
Tournament details | |
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Dates | Qualifying: 27 June – 29 August 2019 Competition proper: 19 September 2019 – 21 August 2020 |
Teams | Competition proper: 48+8 Total: 158+55 (from 55 associations) |
Final positions | |
Champions | Sevilla (6th title) |
Runners-up | Inter Milan |
Tournament statistics | |
Matches played | 197 |
Goals scored | 548 (2.78 per match) |
Attendance | 4,069,102 (20,655 per match) |
Top scorer(s) | Bruno Fernandes (Sporting CP/ Manchester United) 8 goals |
Best player(s) | Romelu Lukaku (Inter Milan)[1] |
← 2018–19 2020–21 → |
Sevilla defeated Inter Milan in the final, played at the RheinEnergieStadion in Cologne, Germany, 3–2 for a record sixth title in the competition.[2] As winners, Sevilla earned the right to play against Bayern Munich, the winners of the 2019–20 UEFA Champions League, in the 2020 UEFA Super Cup. Since they had already qualified for the 2020–21 UEFA Champions League group stage through their league performance, the berth originally reserved for the Europa League title holders was given to the third-placed team of the 2019–20 Ligue 1 (Rennes), the 5th-ranked association according to next season's access list.
Due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the tournament was suspended in mid-March 2020 and resumed in August. The quarter-finals onwards were played as a single match knockout ties at neutral venues in Germany (RheinEnergieStadion, MSV-Arena, Merkur Spiel-Arena, Arena AufSchalke) behind closed doors from 10 to 21 August.[3] The video assistant referee (VAR) system was used in the competition from the knockout stage onwards.[4]
As the title holders of the Europa League, Chelsea qualified for the 2019–20 UEFA Champions League, although they had already qualified before the final through their league performance. They were unable to defend their title as they advanced to the Champions League knockout stage, and were eliminated by the ultimate winners Bayern Munich in the round of 16.
A total of 213 teams from all 55 UEFA member associations participated in the 2019–20 UEFA Europa League. The association ranking based on the UEFA country coefficients was used to determine the number of participating teams for each association:[5]
For the 2019–20 UEFA Europa League, the associations were allocated places according to their 2018 UEFA country coefficients, which took into account their performance in European competitions from 2013–14 to 2017–18.[7]
Apart from the allocation based on the country coefficients, associations could have additional teams participating in the Champions League, as noted below:
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The following is the access list for this season.[8]
Teams entering in this round | Teams advancing from previous round | Teams transferred from Champions League | ||
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Preliminary round (14 teams) |
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First qualifying round (94 teams) |
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Second qualifying round | Champions Path (18 teams) |
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Main Path (74 teams) |
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Third qualifying round | Champions Path (20 teams) |
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Main Path (52 teams) |
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Play-off round | Champions Path (16 teams) |
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Main Path (26 teams) |
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Group stage (48 teams) |
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Knockout phase (32 teams) |
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Changes were made to the default access list, if any of the teams that qualified for the Europa League via their domestic competitions also qualified for the Champions League as the Champions League or Europa League title holders, or if there were fewer teams transferred from the Champions League due to changes in the Champions League access list. In any case where a spot in the Europa League was vacated, cup winners of the highest-ranked associations in earlier rounds were promoted accordingly.
A Europa League place was vacated when a team qualified for both the Champions League and the Europa League, or qualified for the Europa League by more than one method. When a place was vacated, it was redistributed within the national association by the following rules:
The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:[8]
Champions Path | Main Path | ||
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PAOK (UCL Q3) | Celtic (UCL Q3) | ||
Copenhagen (UCL Q3) | Maribor (UCL Q3) | ||
Qarabağ (UCL Q3) | Ferencváros (UCL Q3) |
Champions Path | Main Path | ||
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Maccabi Tel Aviv (UCL Q2) | Nõmme Kalju (UCL Q2) | Spartak Moscow (5th) | Feyenoord (3rd) |
AIK (UCL Q2) | Sutjeska Nikšić (UCL Q2) | Braga (4th) | AEK Athens (3rd) |
BATE Borisov (UCL Q2) | Saburtalo Tbilisi (UCL Q2) | Mariupol (4th) | Rijeka (CW) |
HJK (UCL Q2) | Valletta (UCL Q2) | Antwerp (PW)[Note BEL] | Midtjylland (CW) |
Dundalk (UCL Q2) | The New Saints (UCL Q2) | Trabzonspor (4th) | Bnei Yehuda (CW) |
Sarajevo (UCL Q1)[Note UCL Q1] | Austria Wien (4th) | Viktoria Plzeň (UCL Q2) | |
Thun (4th) | PSV Eindhoven (UCL Q2) | ||
Sparta Prague (3rd) |
Champions Path | Main Path | ||
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Piast Gliwice (UCL Q1) | Sūduva (UCL Q1) | Espanyol (7th) | AZ (4th) |
Ludogorets Razgrad (UCL Q1) | Ararat-Armenia (UCL Q1) | Wolverhampton Wanderers (7th) | FC Utrecht (PW) |
Astana (UCL Q1) | F91 Dudelange (UCL Q1) | Torino (7th)[Note ITA] | Atromitos (4th) |
Slovan Bratislava (UCL Q1) | Linfield (UCL Q1) | Eintracht Frankfurt (7th) | Aris (5th) |
Sheriff Tiraspol (UCL Q1) | HB Tórshavn (UCL Q1) | Strasbourg (LC) | Osijek (3rd) |
Partizani (UCL Q1) | Feronikeli (UCL Q1) | Arsenal Tula (6th) | Esbjerg (3rd) |
Valur (UCL Q1) | FC Santa Coloma (UCL PR F) | Vitória de Guimarães (5th) | AEL Limassol (CW) |
Shkëndija (UCL Q1) | Lincoln Red Imps (UCL PR SF) | Zorya Luhansk (5th) | Viitorul Constanța (CW) |
Riga (UCL Q1) | Tre Penne (UCL PR SF) | Gent (5th)[Note BEL] | Lechia Gdańsk (CW) |
Yeni Malatyaspor (5th) | BK Häcken (CW) | ||
Sturm Graz (PW) | Gabala (CW) | ||
Luzern (5th) | Lokomotiv Plovdiv (CW) | ||
Jablonec (4th) | Partizan (CW) | ||
Mladá Boleslav (PW) |
Club Brugge (UCL GS) | Shakhtar Donetsk (UCL GS) | Red Bull Salzburg (UCL GS) | Benfica (UCL GS) |
Olympiacos (UCL GS) | Bayer Leverkusen (UCL GS) | Inter Milan (UCL GS) | Ajax (UCL GS) |
Getafe (5th) | VfL Wolfsburg (6th) | Beşiktaş (3rd) | Krasnodar (UCL PO) |
Sevilla (6th) | Rennes (CW) | Wolfsberger AC (3rd) | LASK (UCL PO) |
Arsenal (5th) | Saint-Étienne (4th) | Lugano (3rd) | Porto (UCL Q3) |
Manchester United (6th) | CSKA Moscow (4th) | Young Boys (UCL PO) | Dynamo Kyiv (UCL Q3) |
Lazio (CW) | Sporting CP (CW) | APOEL (UCL PO) | İstanbul Başakşehir (UCL Q3) |
Roma (6th)[Note ITA] | Oleksandriya (3rd) | CFR Cluj (UCL PO) | Basel (UCL Q3) |
Borussia Mönchengladbach (5th) | Standard Liège (3rd)[Note BEL] | Rosenborg (UCL PO) |
One team not playing a national top division took part in the competition; Vaduz (representing Liechtenstein) played in 2019–20 Swiss Challenge League, which is Switzerland's 2nd tier.
The schedule of the competition was as follows (all draws were held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, unless stated otherwise).[21] Matches could also be played on Tuesdays or Wednesdays instead of the regular Thursdays due to scheduling conflicts.
The competition was suspended on 17 March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe.[22] A working group was set up by UEFA to decide the calendar of the remainder of the season.[23] On 17 June 2020, UEFA announced the revised schedule for the quarter-finals, semi-finals and final of the competition, to be played in single-leg matches.[3]
Phase | Round | Draw date | First leg | Second leg |
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Qualifying | Preliminary round | 11 June 2019 | 27 June 2019 | 4 July 2019 |
First qualifying round | 18 June 2019 | 11 July 2019 | 18 July 2019 | |
Second qualifying round | 19 June 2019 | 25 July 2019 | 1 August 2019 | |
Third qualifying round | 22 July 2019 | 8 August 2019 | 15 August 2019 | |
Play-off | Play-off round | 5 August 2019 | 22 August 2019 | 29 August 2019 |
Group stage | Matchday 1 | 30 August 2019 (Monaco) |
19 September 2019 | |
Matchday 2 | 3 October 2019 | |||
Matchday 3 | 24 October 2019 | |||
Matchday 4 | 7 November 2019 | |||
Matchday 5 | 28 November 2019 | |||
Matchday 6 | 12 December 2019 | |||
Knockout phase | Round of 32 | 16 December 2019 | 20 February 2020 | 27 February 2020 |
Round of 16 | 28 February 2020 | 12 March 2020 | 5–6 August 2020 | |
Quarter-finals | 10 July 2020 | 10–11 August 2020 | ||
Semi-finals | 16–17 August 2020 | |||
Final | 21 August 2020 at RheinEnergieStadion, Cologne |
The original schedule of the competition, as planned before the pandemic, was as follows.
Phase | Round | Draw date | First leg | Second leg |
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Qualifying | Preliminary round | 11 June 2019 | 27 June 2019 | 4 July 2019 |
First qualifying round | 18 June 2019 | 11 July 2019 | 18 July 2019 | |
Second qualifying round | 19 June 2019 | 25 July 2019 | 1 August 2019 | |
Third qualifying round | 22 July 2019 | 8 August 2019 | 15 August 2019 | |
Play-off | Play-off round | 5 August 2019 | 22 August 2019 | 29 August 2019 |
Group stage | Matchday 1 | 30 August 2019 (Monaco) |
19 September 2019 | |
Matchday 2 | 3 October 2019 | |||
Matchday 3 | 24 October 2019 | |||
Matchday 4 | 7 November 2019 | |||
Matchday 5 | 28 November 2019 | |||
Matchday 6 | 12 December 2019 | |||
Knockout phase | Round of 32 | 16 December 2019 | 20 February 2020 | 27 February 2020 |
Round of 16 | 28 February 2020 | 12 March 2020 | 19 March 2020 | |
Quarter-finals | 20 March 2020 | 9 April 2020 | 16 April 2020 | |
Semi-finals | 30 April 2020 | 7 May 2020 | ||
Final | 27 May 2020 at Stadion Energa Gdańsk, Gdańsk |
Due to the varying rates of transmission of COVID-19 across European countries during the time of the Round of 16 first leg ties, different matches were affected in different ways. Because of this severity of the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy at the time, the games involving Inter Milan and A.S. Roma were postponed,[24] whereas games hosted in Greece, Germany, and Austria went ahead but behind closed doors.[25] Games hosted in Turkey and Scotland went ahead as normal. On 15 March, UEFA announced that none of the Round of 16 second leg ties would go ahead in the following week, postponing them indefinitely,[26] with a taskforce convened to reschedule the rest of the season.[23] On 23 March, it was announced that the Stadion Energa Gdańsk in Gdańsk, Poland would no longer host the competition Final, originally scheduled for 27 May, but would host the 2021 Final instead.[27]
On 17 June it was announced that the Europa League would return on 5 August and conclude on 21 August,[3] with a last-eight tournament to be held across four venues in Germany.[28] The remainder of the competition would be played in a mini-tournament style with remaining fixture to be played as single legged ties except for the Round of 16 fixtures where the first leg had already been played.[29] All remaining ties of the competition were played behind closed doors due to the remaining presence of the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe.[25]
Cologne | Duisburg |
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RheinEnergieStadion (final venue) |
MSV-Arena |
Capacity: 49,698 | Capacity: 31,514 |
Düsseldorf | Gelsenkirchen |
Merkur Spiel-Arena | Arena AufSchalke |
Capacity: 54,600 | Capacity: 62,271 |
In the qualifying rounds and the play-off round, teams were divided into seeded and unseeded teams based on their 2019 UEFA club coefficients,[30] and then drawn into two-legged home-and-away ties. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other.
In the preliminary round, teams were divided into seeded and unseeded teams based on their 2019 UEFA club coefficients,[30] and then drawn into two-legged home-and-away ties. Teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other. The draw for the preliminary round was held on 11 June 2019.[31] The first legs were played on 27 June, and the second legs on 2 and 4 July 2019.
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Progrès Niederkorn | 2–2 (a) | Cardiff Metropolitan University | 1–0 | 1–2 |
La Fiorita | 1–3 | Engordany | 0–1 | 1–2 |
Sant Julià | 3–6 | Europa | 3–2 | 0–4 |
Ballymena United | 2–0 | NSÍ Runavík | 2–0 | 0–0 |
Prishtina | 1–3 | St Joseph's | 1–1 | 0–2 |
KÍ Klaksvík | 9–1[A] | Tre Fiori | 5–1 | 4–0 |
Barry Town United | 0–4 | Cliftonville | 0–0 | 0–4 |
Notes
The draw for the first qualifying round was held on 18 June 2019.[32] The first legs were played on 9, 10 and 11 July, and the second legs on 16, 17 and 18 July 2019.
Notes
The second qualifying round was split into two separate sections: Champions Path (for league champions) and League Path (for cup winners and league non-champions). The draw for the second qualifying round was held on 19 June 2019.[33] The first legs were played on 23, 24 and 25 July, and the second legs on 30, 31 July and 1 August 2019.
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Sarajevo | Bye | n/a | n/a | n/a |
Tre Penne | 0–10 | Sūduva | 0–5 | 0–5 |
Piast Gliwice | 4–4 (a) | Riga | 3–2 | 1–2 |
Partizani | 1–2 | Sheriff Tiraspol | 0–1 | 1–1 |
Ararat-Armenia | 4–1 | Lincoln Red Imps | 2–0 | 2–1 |
Valur | 1–5 | Ludogorets Razgrad | 1–1 | 0–4 |
Slovan Bratislava | 4–1 | Feronikeli | 2–1 | 2–0 |
FC Santa Coloma | 1–4 | Astana | 0–0 | 1–4 |
HB Tórshavn | 2–3 | Linfield | 2–2 | 0–1 |
Shkëndija | 2–3 | F91 Dudelange | 1–2 | 1–1 |
Notes
The third qualifying round was split into two separate sections: Champions Path (for league champions) and League Path (for cup winners and league non-champions). The draw for the third qualifying round was held on 22 July 2019.[34] The first legs were played on 6, 7 and 8 August, and the second legs on 13, 14 and 15 August 2019.
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Sutjeska Nikšić | 3–5 | Linfield | 1–2 | 2–3 |
Maccabi Tel Aviv | 2–4 | Sūduva | 1–2 | 1–2 |
Ararat-Armenia | 3–2 | Saburtalo Tbilisi | 1–2 | 2–0 |
Riga | 3–3 (a) | HJK | 1–1 | 2–2 |
Ludogorets Razgrad | 9–0 | The New Saints | 5–0 | 4–0 |
Sarajevo | 1–2 | BATE Borisov | 1–2 | 0–0 |
F91 Dudelange | 4–1 | Nõmme Kalju | 3–1 | 1–0 |
Astana | 9–1 | Valletta | 5–1 | 4–0 |
Sheriff Tiraspol | 2–3 | AIK | 1–2 | 1–1 |
Slovan Bratislava | 4–1 | Dundalk | 1–0 | 3–1 |
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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IFK Norrköping | 2–4 | Hapoel Be'er Sheva | 1–1 | 1–3 |
Torino | 6–1 | Shakhtyor Soligorsk | 5–0 | 1–1 |
Antwerp | 2–2 (a) | Viktoria Plzeň | 1–0 | 1–2 (a.e.t.) |
Austria Wien | 2–5 | Apollon Limassol | 1–2 | 1–3 |
Feyenoord | 5–1 | Dinamo Tbilisi | 4–0 | 1–1 |
Brøndby | 3–7 | Braga | 2–4 | 1–3 |
Molde | 4–3 | Aris | 3–0 | 1–3 (a.e.t.) |
Lokomotiv Plovdiv | 0–2 | Strasbourg | 0–1 | 0–1 |
Thun | 3–5 | Spartak Moscow | 2–3 | 1–2 |
FCSB | 1–0 | Mladá Boleslav | 0–0 | 1–0 |
Pyunik | 0–8 | Wolverhampton Wanderers | 0–4 | 0–4 |
Midtjylland | 3–7 | Rangers | 2–4 | 1–3 |
Mariupol | 0–4 | AZ | 0–0 | 0–4 |
AEK Larnaca | 1–4 | Gent | 1–1 | 0–3 |
Legia Warsaw | 2–0 | Atromitos | 0–0 | 2–0 |
Haugesund | 0–1 | PSV Eindhoven | 0–1 | 0–0 |
Rijeka | 4–0 | Aberdeen | 2–0 | 2–0 |
Ventspils | 0–9 | Vitória de Guimarães | 0–3 | 0–6 |
Vaduz | 0–6 | Eintracht Frankfurt | 0–5 | 0–1 |
Partizan | 3–2 | Yeni Malatyaspor | 3–1 | 0–1 |
Malmö FF | 3–1 | Zrinjski Mostar | 3–0 | 0–1 |
CSKA Sofia | 1–2 | Zorya Luhansk | 1–1 | 0–1 |
Neftçi Baku | 3–4 | Bnei Yehuda | 2–2 | 1–2 |
Luzern | 0–6 | Espanyol | 0–3 | 0–3 |
Sparta Prague | 3–4 | Trabzonspor | 2–2 | 1–2 |
Universitatea Craiova | 1–3 | AEK Athens | 0–2 | 1–1 |
The play-off round was split into two separate sections: Champions Path (for league champions) and League Path (for cup winners and league non-champions). The draw for the play-off round was held on 5 August 2019.[35] The first legs were played on 22 August, and the second legs will be played on 29 August 2019.
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Sūduva | 2–4 | Ferencváros | 0–0 | 2–4 |
Copenhagen | 3–2 | Riga | 3–1 | 0–1 |
Celtic | 6–1 | AIK | 2–0 | 4–1 |
Ararat-Armenia | 3–3 (4–5 p) | F91 Dudelange | 2–1 | 1–2 (a.e.t.) |
Ludogorets Razgrad | 2–2 (a) | Maribor | 0–0 | 2–2 |
Linfield | 4–4 (a) | Qarabağ | 3–2 | 1–2 |
Slovan Bratislava | 3–3 (a) | PAOK | 1–0 | 2–3 |
Astana | 3–2 | BATE Borisov | 3–0 | 0–2 |
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Torino | 3–5 | Wolverhampton Wanderers | 2–3 | 1–2 |
Legia Warsaw | 0–1 | Rangers | 0–0 | 0–1 |
FCSB | 0–1 | Vitória de Guimarães | 0–0 | 0–1 |
PSV Eindhoven | 7–0 | Apollon Limassol | 3–0 | 4–0 |
AEK Athens | 3–3 (a) | Trabzonspor | 1–3 | 2–0 |
Feyenoord | 6–0 | Hapoel Be'er Sheva | 3–0 | 3–0 |
Gent | 3–2 | Rijeka | 2–1 | 1–1 |
Espanyol | 5–3 | Zorya Luhansk | 3–1 | 2–2 |
Partizan | 3–2 | Molde | 2–1 | 1–1 |
Braga | 3–1 | Spartak Moscow | 1–0 | 2–1 |
Malmö FF | 4–0 | Bnei Yehuda | 3–0 | 1–0 |
Strasbourg | 1–3 | Eintracht Frankfurt | 1–0 | 0–3 |
AZ | 5–2 | Antwerp | 1–1 | 4–1 (a.e.t.) |
The draw for the group stage was held on 30 August 2019, 13:00 CEST, at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco.[36] The 48 teams were drawn into twelve groups of four, with the restriction that teams from the same association could not be drawn against each other. For the draw, the teams were seeded into four pots based on their 2019 UEFA club coefficients.[30]
In each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format. The group winners and runners-up advanced to the round of 32, where they were joined by the eight third-placed teams of the 2019–20 UEFA Champions League group stage. The matchdays were 19 September, 3 October, 24 October, 7 November, 28 November, and 12 December 2019.
A total of 26 national associations were represented in the group stage. Espanyol, Ferencváros, LASK, Oleksandriya, Wolfsberger AC and Wolverhampton Wanderers made their debut appearances in the group stage (although Espanyol and Ferencváros had appeared in the UEFA Cup group stage).
Tiebreakers |
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Teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Articles 16.01):[5]
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In the knockout phase, teams played against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the one-match final. The mechanism of the draws for each round was as follows:
On 17 June 2020, UEFA announced that due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe, the final stages of the competition would feature a format change. The quarter-finals, semi-finals, and final would be played in a single-leg format from 10 to 21 August 2020 in the German cities of Cologne, Düsseldorf, Duisburg and Gelsenkirchen. The matches were tentatively played behind closed doors, though spectators could be allowed subject to a review of the situation and the decisions of the national and local government.
Following the competition restarts in August 2020, a maximum of five substitutions were allowed, with a sixth allowed in extra time. However, each team was only given three opportunities to make substitutions, with a fourth opportunity in extra time, excluding substitutions made at half-time, before the start of extra time, and at half-time in extra time. This followed a proposal from FIFA and approval by IFAB to lessen the impact of fixture congestion.[37]
The draw for the round of 32 was held on 16 December 2019, 13:00 CET.[38] The first legs were played on 20 February, and the second legs were played on 26, 27 and 28 February 2020.
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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Wolverhampton Wanderers | 6–3 | Espanyol | 4–0 | 2–3 |
Sporting CP | 4–5 | İstanbul Başakşehir | 3–1 | 1–4 (a.e.t.) |
Getafe | 3–2 | Ajax | 2–0 | 1–2 |
Bayer Leverkusen | 5–2 | Porto | 2–1 | 3–1 |
Copenhagen | 4–2 | Celtic | 1–1 | 3–1 |
APOEL | 0–4 | Basel | 0–3 | 0–1 |
CFR Cluj | 1–1 (a) | Sevilla | 1–1 | 0–0 |
Olympiacos | 2–2 (a) | Arsenal | 0–1 | 2–1 (a.e.t.) |
AZ | 1–3 | LASK | 1–1 | 0–2 |
Club Brugge | 1–6 | Manchester United | 1–1 | 0–5 |
Ludogorets Razgrad | 1–4 | Inter Milan | 0–2 | 1–2 |
Eintracht Frankfurt | 6–3 | Red Bull Salzburg | 4–1 | 2–2 |
Shakhtar Donetsk | 5–4 | Benfica | 2–1 | 3–3 |
VfL Wolfsburg | 5–1 | Malmö FF | 2–1 | 3–0 |
Roma | 2–1 | Gent | 1–0 | 1–1 |
Rangers | 4–2 | Braga | 3–2 | 1–0 |
The draw for the round of 16 was held on 28 February 2020, 13:00 CET.[39] Six of the eight first leg matches were played on 12 March, while the remaining first legs and all second leg fixtures were postponed by UEFA due to concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe.[40] On 17 June 2020, UEFA announced that the second legs would be played on 5–6 August 2020. In July 2020, they confirmed that the second legs would be played at the home team's stadium as normal. For the two ties that had not played their first legs, the matches were instead played in a single-leg format, at neutral venues in Germany.[41][42]
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
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İstanbul Başakşehir | 1–3 | Copenhagen | 1–0 | 0–3 |
Olympiacos | 1–2 | Wolverhampton Wanderers | 1–1 | 0–1 |
Rangers | 1–4 | Bayer Leverkusen | 1–3 | 0–1 |
VfL Wolfsburg | 1–5 | Shakhtar Donetsk | 1–2 | 0–3 |
Inter Milan | 2–0 | Getafe | ||
Sevilla | 2–0 | Roma | ||
Eintracht Frankfurt | 0–4 | Basel | 0–3 | 0–1 |
LASK | 1–7 | Manchester United | 0–5 | 1–2 |
The draw for the quarter-finals took place on 10 July 2020.[40][43] The matches were played on 10 and 11 August 2020.
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
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Shakhtar Donetsk | 4–1 | Basel |
Manchester United | 1–0 (a.e.t.) | Copenhagen |
Inter Milan | 2–1 | Bayer Leverkusen |
Wolverhampton Wanderers | 0–1 | Sevilla |
The draw for the semi-finals took place on 10 July 2020 (after the quarter-final draw). The matches were played on 16 and 17 August 2020.
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
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Sevilla | 2–1 | Manchester United |
Inter Milan | 5–0 | Shakhtar Donetsk |
The final was played at the RheinEnergieStadion in Cologne. The "home" team (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws.[43]
Statistics exclude qualifying rounds and play-off round.
Rank[46] | Player | Team(s) | Goals | Minutes played |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Bruno Fernandes[A] | Sporting CP Manchester United |
8 | 811 |
2 | Romelu Lukaku | Inter Milan | 7 | 443 |
3 | Diogo Jota | Wolverhampton Wanderers | 6 | 373 |
Andraž Šporar[B] | Slovan Bratislava Sporting CP |
718 | ||
Daichi Kamada | Eintracht Frankfurt | 738 | ||
Alfredo Morelos | Rangers | 792 | ||
Edin Višća | İstanbul Başakşehir | 930 | ||
8 | Munir | Sevilla | 5 | 445 |
Marko Raguž | LASK | 486 | ||
Mason Greenwood | Manchester United | 640 | ||
Fabian Frei | Basel | 964 |
Notes
Rank[46] | Player | Team(s) | Assists | Minutes played |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Galeno | Braga | 6 | 567 |
2 | Juan Mata | Manchester United | 5 | 767 |
3 | Uroš Matić | APOEL | 4 | 720 |
Bruno Fernandes[A] | Sporting CP Manchester United |
811 | ||
5 | 23 players | 3 | — |
The UEFA technical study group selected the following 23 players as the squad of the tournament.[47]
Notes
Votes were cast by coaches of the 48 teams in the group stage, together with 55 journalists selected by the European Sports Media (ESM) group, representing each of UEFA's member associations. The coaches were not allowed to vote for players from their own teams. Jury members selected their top three players, with the first receiving five points, the second three and the third one. The shortlist of the top three players was announced on 17 September 2020.[48] The award winner was announced during the 2020–21 UEFA Europa League group stage draw in Switzerland on 2 October 2020.
Rank | Player | Team(s) | Points |
---|---|---|---|
Shortlist of top three | |||
1 | Romelu Lukaku[1] | Inter Milan | 270 |
2 | Bruno Fernandes[A] | Sporting CP Manchester United |
128 |
3 | Éver Banega | Sevilla | 118 |
Players ranked 4–10 | |||
4 | Luuk de Jong | Sevilla | 64 |
5 | Jesús Navas | Sevilla | 59 |
6 | Lucas Ocampos | Sevilla | 39 |
7 | Kai Havertz | Bayer Leverkusen | 17 |
8 | Diego Carlos | Sevilla | 9 |
9 | Adama Traoré | Wolverhampton Wanderers | 8 |
10 | Jules Koundé | Sevilla | 7 |
Notes
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