List of UEFA Cup and Europa League top scorers

Summary

The UEFA Europa League is the second most important club competition in Europe organized by UEFA. Originally a knockout competition, it later evolved to include group stages and a series of qualifying rounds. It was known as the UEFA Cup from its inception in 1971 until a re-branding in 2009. This article lists both the competition's seasonal top scorers and overall top scorers, including a list of goals scored in the competition proper and a list of goals scored including qualifying rounds.

All-time top scorers (group stage to final) edit

As of 14 December 2023[1]
Players taking part in the 2023–24 UEFA Europa League are highlighted in bold.
Players still active but not in this year's Europa League are highlighted in italics.
Rank Player Goals Apps Ratio Years Club(s) (Goals)
1   Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang 33 57 0.54 2009– Lille (0/7), Borussia Dortmund (8/10), Arsenal (14/26), Barcelona (2/6), Marseille (9/8)
2   Henrik Larsson 31 45 0.69 1994–2008 Feyenoord (1/6), Celtic (24/31), Helsingborg (6/8)
3   Radamel Falcao 30 31 0.97 2010– Porto (17/14), Atlético Madrid (13/17)
4   Klaas-Jan Huntelaar 30 50 0.6 2004–2020 Heerenveen (5/13), Ajax (11/15), Schalke 04 (14/22)
5   Dieter Müller 29 36 0.81 1973–1984 1. FC Köln (25/31), VfB Stuttgart (1/2), Bordeaux (3/3)
6   Aritz Aduriz 26 39 0.67 2012–2018 Valencia (0/6), Athletic Bilbao (26/33)
7   Romelu Lukaku 25 39 0.64 2009– Anderlecht (5/18), Everton (8/9), Inter Milan (7/6), AS Roma (5/6)
  Edin Džeko 25 48 0.52 2003– Željezničar (0/1), VfL Wolfsburg (5/14), Manchester City (3/7), Roma (17/26)
  Alessandro Altobelli 25 58 0.43 1977–1989 Inter Milan (21/50), Juventus (4/8)
10   Shota Arveladze 24 41 0.59 1994–2007 Dinamo Tbilisi (1/2), Trabzonspor (2/2), Ajax (10/13), Rangers (2/7), AZ (9/17)
  Mu'nas Dabbur 24 49 0.49 2011– Maccabi Tel Aviv (1/8), Red Bull Salzburg (14/28), Sevilla (3/6), 1899 Hoffenheim (6/7)
  Kevin Gameiro 24 54 0.44 2005– Strasbourg (2/3), Paris Saint-Germain (0/5), Sevilla (17/33), Atlético Madrid (2/5), Valencia (3/8)
13   Jupp Heynckes 23 21 1.1 1971–1975 Borussia Mönchengladbach
  Vágner Love 23 36 0.64 2004–2018 CSKA Moscow (20/31), Beşiktaş (3/5)
  Dimitris Salpingidis 23 67 0.34 1999–2015 PAOK (13/43), Panathinaikos (10/24)
16   Martin Chivers 22 34 0.65 1971–1978 Tottenham Hotspur
  Jürgen Klinsmann 22 36 0.61 1988–1998 VfB Stuttgart (4/8), Inter Milan (3/13), Bayern Munich (15/14), Sampdoria (0/1)
  Dennis Bergkamp 22 42 0.52 1988–2000 Ajax (9/21), Inter Milan (9/13), Arsenal (4/8)
  Alexandre Lacazette 22 48 0.46 2012– Lyon (9/21), Arsenal (13/27)
  Karl-Heinz Rummenigge 22 49 0.45 1977–1989 Bayern Munich (13/22), Inter Milan (9/23), Servette (0/4)

All-time top scorers (including qualifying rounds) edit

As of 14 December 2023[2][3]
Players taking part in the 2023–24 UEFA Europa League (including qualifying rounds) are highlighted in bold.
Players still active but not in this year's Europa League are highlighted in italics.
Rank Player Goals Apps Ratio Years Club(s) (Goals)
1   Henrik Larsson 40 56 0.71 1994–2009 Feyenoord (1/6), Celtic (27/35), Helsingborg (12/15)
2   Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang 36 60 0.53 2009– Lille (0/9), Borussia Dortmund (11/14), Arsenal (14/26), Barcelona (2/6), Marseille (9/8)
3   Klaas-Jan Huntelaar 34 54 0.63 2004–2020 Heerenveen (5/13), Ajax (11/17), Schalke 04 (18/24)
4   Alfredo Morelos 32 62 0.52 2016– HJK (4/6), Rangers (28/56)
5   Radamel Falcao 31 35 0.89 2009– Porto (18/16), Atlético Madrid (13/17), Galatasaray (0/2)
  Aritz Aduriz 31 47 0.66 2011–2018 Valencia (0/6), Athletic Bilbao (31/41)
7   Dieter Müller 29 36 0.81 1973–1984 1. FC Köln (25/31), VfB Stuttgart (1/2), Bordeaux (3/3)
8   Vágner Love 27 44 0.61 2004–2022 CSKA Moscow (20/32), Beşiktaş (4/8), Kairat (3/4)
  Shota Arveladze 27 45 0.6 1993–2007 Dinamo Tbilisi (2/4), Trabzonspor (4/4), Ajax (10/13), Rangers (2/7), AZ (9/17)
10   Mu'nas Dabbur 26 57 0.46 2011– Maccabi Tel Aviv (1/12), Red Bull Salzburg (16/30), Grasshopper (0/2), Sevilla (3/6), 1899 Hoffenheim (6/7)
  Kevin Gameiro 26 57 0.46 2005–2019 Strasbourg (2/3), Paris Saint-Germain (1/7), Sevilla (18/34), Atlético Madrid (2/5), Valencia (3/8)
12   Romelu Lukaku 25 39 0.64 2009– Anderlecht (5/18), Everton (8/9), Inter Milan (7/6), AS Roma (5/6)
  Jermain Defoe 25 40 0.63 2006–2021 Tottenham Hotspur (20/28), Portsmouth (2/4), Rangers (3/8)
  Edin Džeko 25 49 0.51 2003– Željezničar (0/1), VfL Wolfsburg (5/14), Manchester City (3/7), Roma (17/26)
  Alessandro Altobelli 25 55 0.45 1977–1989 Inter Milan (21/50), Juventus (4/8)
  Mladen Petrić 25 72 0.35 2004–2016 Grasshopper (1/11), Basel (8/26), Hamburger SV (15/27), Panathinaikos (1/8)
17   Aleksandr Kerzhakov 24 44 0.55 2002–2017 Zenit Saint Petersburg (21/34), Sevilla (2/8), Dynamo Moscow (1/2)
  Carlos Bacca 24 60 0.4 2012– Club Brugge (3/7), Sevilla (14/31), Villarreal (7/22)
  Ivan Trichkovski 24 67 0.36 2005– Vardar (1/6), Rabotnički (0/6), Red Star Belgrade (0/2), APOEL (1/5), Club Brugge (1/3), Legia Warsaw (0/6), AEK Larnaca (21/39)
20   Jupp Heynckes 23 21 1.1 1972–1975 Borussia Mönchengladbach
  Claudio Pizarro 23 33 0.7 1999–2010 Werder Bremen
  Ricky van Wolfswinkel 23 47 0.49 2010– FC Utrecht (9/12), Sporting CP (9/20), Saint-Étienne (1/6), Basel (4/9)
  Alexandre Lacazette 23 52 0.44 2012– Lyon (10/25), Arsenal (13/27)
  Óscar Cardozo 23 59 0.39 2007–2017 Benfica (22/43), Trabzonspor (1/11), Olympiacos (0/5)
  Dimitris Salpingidis 23 76 0.3 1999–2015 PAOK (13/52), Panathinaikos (10/24)

Top scorers by season edit

The top scorer award is for the player who amassed the most goals in the tournament (tournament phase differs from qualification phase).[4]

Season Player(s) Club(s) Goals[5]
1971–72   Ludwig Bründl   Eintracht Braunschweig 10
1972–73   Jupp Heynckes   Borussia Mönchengladbach 12
  Jan Jeuring   Twente
1973–74   Lex Schoenmaker   Feyenoord 11
1974–75   Jupp Heynckes   Borussia Mönchengladbach 10
1975–76   Ruud Geels   Ajax 14
1976–77   Stan Bowles   Queens Park Rangers 11
1977–78   Gerrie Deijkers   PSV Eindhoven 8
  Raimondo Ponte   Grasshopper
1978–79   Allan Simonsen   Borussia Mönchengladbach 9
1979–80   Dieter Hoeneß   Bayern Munich 7
  Harald Nickel   Borussia Mönchengladbach
1980–81   John Wark   Ipswich Town 14
1981–82   Torbjörn Nilsson   IFK Göteborg 9
1982–83   Zoran Filipović   Benfica 8
1983–84   Tibor Nyilasi   Austria Wien 9
1984–85   Edin Bahtić   Željezničar 7
  Gary Bannister   Queens Park Rangers
1985–86   Klaus Allofs   1. FC Köln 9
1986–87   Paulinho Cascavel   Vitória de Guimarães 5
  Peter Houtman   Groningen
  Wim Kieft   Torino
  Jari Rantanen   IFK Göteborg
1987–88   Kenneth Brylle Larsen   Club Brugge 6
  Dimitris Saravakos   Panathinaikos
1988–89   Torsten Gütschow   Dynamo Dresden 7
1989–90   Falko Götz   1. FC Köln 6
  Karl-Heinz Riedle   Werder Bremen
1990–91   Rudi Völler   Roma 10
1991–92   Dean Saunders   Liverpool 9
1992–93   Gérald Baticle   Auxerre 8
1993–94   Dennis Bergkamp   Inter Milan 8
  Edgar Schmitt   Karlsruher SC
1994–95   Ulf Kirsten   Bayer Leverkusen 10
1995–96   Jürgen Klinsmann   Bayern Munich 15
1996–97   Maurizio Ganz   Inter Milan 8
1997–98   Stéphane Guivarc'h   Auxerre 7
1998–99   Enrico Chiesa   Parma 8
  Darko Kovačević   Real Sociedad
  Tomasz Kulawik   Wisła Kraków
1999–2000   Darko Kovačević   Juventus 10
2000–01   Dimitar Berbatov   CSKA Sofia 7
  Bolo   Rayo Vallecano
2001–02   Pierre van Hooijdonk   Feyenoord 8
2002–03   Derlei   Porto 12
2003–04   Sonny Anderson   Villarreal 6
2004–05   Alan Shearer   Newcastle United 11
2005–06   Matías Delgado   Basel 7
2006–07   Walter Pandiani   Espanyol 11
2007–08   Pavel Pogrebnyak   Zenit Saint Petersburg 10
  Luca Toni   Bayern Munich
2008–09   Vágner Love   CSKA Moscow 11
2009–10   Óscar Cardozo   Benfica 9
  Claudio Pizarro   Werder Bremen
2010–11   Radamel Falcao   Porto 17
2011–12   Radamel Falcao   Atlético Madrid 12
2012–13   Libor Kozák   Lazio 8
2013–14   Jonathan Soriano   Red Bull Salzburg 8
2014–15   Alan   Red Bull Salzburg 8
  Romelu Lukaku   Everton
2015–16   Aritz Aduriz   Athletic Bilbao 10
2016–17   Edin Džeko   Roma 8
  Giuliano   Zenit Saint Petersburg
2017–18   Aritz Aduriz   Athletic Bilbao 8
  Ciro Immobile   Lazio
2018–19   Olivier Giroud   Chelsea 11
2019–20   Bruno Fernandes[nb 1]   Sporting CP
  Manchester United
8
2020–21   Borja Mayoral   Roma 7
  Gerard Moreno   Villarreal
  Pizzi   Benfica
  Yusuf Yazıcı   Lille
2021–22   James Tavernier   Rangers 7
2022–23   Victor Boniface   Union Saint-Gilloise 6
  Marcus Rashford   Manchester United

By club edit

Rank Club Titles Goals Season(s)
1   Borussia Mönchengladbach 4 38 1972–73*, 1974–75, 1978–79, 1979–80*
2   Bayern Munich 3 32 1979–80*, 1995–96, 2007–08*
  Benfica 24 1982–83, 2009–10*, 2020–21*
  Roma 25 1990–91, 2016–17*, 2020–21*
5   Feyenoord 2 19 1973–74, 2001–02
  Queens Park Rangers 18 1976–77, 1984–85*
  IFK Göteborg 14 1981–82, 1986–87*
  1. FC Köln 15 1985–86, 1989–90*
  Werder Bremen 15 1989–90*, 2009–10*
  Auxerre 15 1992–93, 1997–98
  Inter Milan 16 1993–94*, 1996–97
  Porto 29 2002–03, 2010–11
  Villareal 13 2003–04, 2020–21*
  Zenit Saint Petersburg 18 2007–08*, 2016–17*
  Lazio 16 2012–13, 2017–18*
  Red Bull Salzburg 16 2013–14, 2014–15*
  Athletic Bilbao 18 2015–16, 2017–18*
  Manchester United 14 2019–20**, 2022–23*
19   Twente 1 12 1972–73*
  Ajax 14 1975–76
  Grasshopper 8 1977–78*
  PSV Eindhoven 8 1977–78*
  Ipswich Town 14 1980–81
  Austria Wien 9 1983–84
  Željezničar 7 1984–85*
  Groningen 5 1986–87*
  Torino 5 1986–87*
  Vitória de Guimarães 5 1986–87*
  Club Brugge 6 1987–88*
  Panathinaikos 6 1987–88*
  Dynamo Dresden 7 1988–89
  Liverpool 9 1991–92
  Karlsruher SC 9 1993–94*
  Bayer Leverkusen 10 1994–95
  Parma 8 1998–99*
  Real Sociedad 8 1998–99*
  Wisła Kraków 8 1998–99*
  Juventus 10 1999–2000
  CSKA Sofia 7 2000–01*
  Rayo Vallecano 7 2000–01*
  Newcastle United 11 2004–05
  Basel 9 2005–06
  Espanyol 11 2006–07
  CSKA Moscow 11 2008–09
  Atlético Madrid 12 2011–12
  Everton 8 2014–15*
  Chelsea 11 2018–19
  Sporting CP 8 2019–20**
  Lille 7 2020–21*
  Rangers 7 2021–22
  Union Saint-Gilloise 6 2022–23*
  • * Two or more players were equal top scorers.
  • ** A top scorer played for two different clubs during given season.
  • List is ordered by date of accomplishment.

By country edit

Rank Country Titles Goals Seasons
1   Germany[nb 2][nb 3] 11 104 1971–72, 1972–73*, 1968–69, 1974–75, 1979–80*, 1979–80*, 1985–86, 1989–90*, 1990–91, 1993–94*, 1994–95, 1995–96
2   Netherlands[nb 4] 8 71 1972–73*, 1973–74, 1975–76, 1977–78*, 1986–87*, 1986–87*, 1993–94*, 2001–02
3   Brazil 6 50 1986–87*, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2008–09, 2014–15*, 2016–17*
  Spain[nb 5] 47 2000–01*, 2013–14, 2015–16, 2017–18*, 2020–21*, 2020–21*
5   England 5 48 1976–77, 1984–85*, 2004–05, 2021–22, 2022–23*
6   Yugoslavia[nb 6] 4 33 1982–83, 1984–85*, 1998–99*, 1999–2000
  Italy 34 1996–97, 1998–99, 2007–08*, 2017–18*
8   France 3 26 1992–93, 1997–98, 2018–19
9   Denmark 2 15 1978–79, 1987–88*
  Sweden 20 1981–82, 1985–86*
  East Germany 13 1988–89, 1989–90*
  Colombia 29 2010–11, 2011–12
  Portugal 15 2019–20, 2020–21*
14   Scotland 1 14 1980–81
  Hungary 9 1983–84
  Finland 5 1986–87*
  Greece 6 1987–88*
  Wales 9 1991–92
  Poland 8 1998–99*
  Bulgaria 7 2000–01*
  Argentina 9 2005–06
  Uruguay 11 2006–07
  Russia 10 2007–08*
  Paraguay 9 2009–10*
  Peru 9 2009–10*
  Czech Republic 8 2012–13
  Belgium 8 2014–15*
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 8 2016–17*
  Turkey 7 2020–21*
  Nigeria 6 2022–23*
  • * Two or more players were equal top scorers.
  • List is ordered by date of accomplishment.

By player edit

Rank Player Titles Goals Seasons
1   Jupp Heynckes 2 23 1972–73*, 1974–75
  Darko Kovačević 18 1998–99*, 1999–2000
  Radamel Falcao 30 2010–11, 2011–12
  Aritz Aduriz 26 2015–16, 2017–18*
  • * Two or more players were equal top scorers.
  • List is ordered by date of accomplishment.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Player featured in two clubs during the same season after the squad changes were introduced from the 2018–19 season onwards.
  2. ^ Includes West Germany but not East Germany.
  3. ^ In the 1979–80 season two German players were joint top scorers.
  4. ^ In the 1986–87 season two Dutch players were joint top scorers.
  5. ^ In the 2020–21 season two Spanish players were joint top scorers.
  6. ^ Includes SFR Yugoslavia.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Europa League - All-time Topscorers". WorldFootball.net. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  2. ^ "Europa League All-time Topscorers". WorldFootball.net.
  3. ^ "Europa League Qual All-time Topscorers". WorldFootball.net.
  4. ^ "Fairs/UEFA Cup Topscorers". RSSSF.
  5. ^ Excluding the qualifying rounds since the 2004–05 season.