The UEFA Plaque

Summary

The UEFA Plaque was a honorific award given by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) to those clubs that had won, at least once, the title in each of the three major international competitions organised by that confederation, namely the European Champions Cup, the Cup Winners' Cup and the UEFA Cup.[1][2] It was officially established in late 1987[3] and its first award was given in the second half of the following year, with Italian Juventus being the club to be honoured. A second award was initially scheduled for the second half of 1992 in favour of Dutch side Ajax, but it was not conferred for unclarified reasons by the confederation[4] after Spanish team Barcelona —who did not comply with the requirement imposed by UEFA— at the same time unsuccessfully applied to European football's governing body for such recognition,[4] being subsequently discontinued.

The UEFA Plaque
Digital reproduction of The UEFA Plaque presented to Juventus in 1988
SportAssociation football
CompetitionUEFA competitions
Awarded forclubs' sporting merits
Local nameUEFA-Abzeichen (German), Plaque UEFA (French)
CountrySwitzerland
Presented byUnion of European Football Associations
History
First award1988; 36 years ago (1988)

Background edit

Between 1971 and 1999, UEFA organised three major competitions —the European Cup, Cup Winners' Cup and UEFA Cup— which were played as part of the international fixture calendar.[5][a] While all three carried prestige in their own right,[8] the European Cup, which was the competition for clubs that had won their own domestic league title, was considered as the most prestigious, while the UEFA Cup, in which teams that finished just below the domestic league champion were generally entered, was regarded as the hardest to win.[9]

 
 
 
The European Cup (left), the Cup Winners' Cup (middle), and the UEFA Cup (right) trophies, assembling the European Treble.[10]

At the start of the 1984–85 season, two clubs —Juventus and Hamburg SV— had won two of the three European competitions each, and each was competing that season in the competition that they needed to win to complete the set; Juventus in the European Cup and Hamburg in the UEFA Cup. Hamburg were eliminated in the third round of the UEFA Cup, while Juventus reached the 1985 European Cup final, winning the game 1–0 to become the first club to have won all three of UEFA's major competitions.[11]

In December 1987, the UEFA organising committee proposed in Zürich the institution of a special award for clubs that had won all three competitions.[10] Having been ratified, it was announced it would be awarded for the first time to all eligible clubs at the UEFA meeting planned for May 1988.[12] While Anderlecht in European Champions' Cup and Milan AC in UEFA Cup during the 1987–88 season were potentially in a position to match Juventus' achievement, being both eliminated in the quarter-finals and in the second round, respectively;[13] when the new UEFA Plaque was finally conferred in July 1988, it was to Juventus alone that it was awarded.[14][15][16] In a similar situation were both Ajax and Bayern Munich, which unsuccessfully participated in the 1988–89 UEFA Cup.[17]

Description edit

The award consists of a rectangular silver plaque on which are superimposed silhouettes of three trophies that represent the tournaments mentioned, above a golden laurel wreath and the European football government body badge, also in gold.[18][19][20] Also, the plaque have the following inscription in French, then the confederation's leading administrative language,[b] which translated to English:

Recipients edit

On 12 July 1988, at the beginning of the 1988–89 European competitions seeding held in Geneva (Switzerland), then UEFA president Jacques Georges presented the prize[19] to then Juventus president Giampiero Boniperti.[17]

In July 1992, after winning the European Champions' Cup, then FC Barcelona president Josep Lluís Núñez requested of UEFA a similar recognition, stating that his club had equalled Juventus' record, having won formerly the Cup Winners' Cup and the UEFA Cup. European football's governing body, now led by Lennart Johansson, who replaced Georges in the charge, rejected it because the Spanish club had never won the UEFA Cup proper, and UEFA does not recognize its predecessor, the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, previously won by the Blaugrana, as an official competition.[4] Eight months later, Johansson proposed, unsuccessfully, to merge all three seasonal competitions in a unique pan-European championship which the better teams in the continent would be involved.[23]

Since UEFA awarded Juventus with the UEFA Plaque, four other clubs have won the three seasonal European competitions: Ajax (1992, to whom the recognition was initially scheduled after their triumph in 1991–92 UEFA Cup, notwithstanding the confederation latter decided not to award them for unknown reasons),[4] Bayern Munich (1996), Chelsea (2013), and Manchester United (2017).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ From 1955 to 1971 each seasonal competition was regulated by its own committee. From 1972 onwards a single committee assumed responsibility for the three competitions.[6] The Intercontinental Cup and the UEFA Super Cup not have a defined date in the international calendar until 1980 and 1998, respectively, and so in some cases these didn't carried out.[7]
  2. ^ At the time, UEFA's administrative languages were French, English and German, being the first cited the most widely used.[21]

References edit

  1. ^ "Stakes high for Advocaat's Rangers reunion". Union des Associations Européennes de Football. 14 May 2006. Retrieved 15 November 2009.
  2. ^ "UEFA club competitions" (PDF). Union des Associations Européennes de Football. 25 August 2006. p. 23. Archived (PDF) from the original on 8 April 2008. Retrieved 15 November 2009.
  3. ^ "Un premio UEFA per i bianconeri". La Stampa (in Italian). 16 December 1987. p. 23.
  4. ^ a b c d Aguilar, Francesc (12 July 1992). "El Barça, gran atracción del sorteo" (PDF). El Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). p. 34.
  5. ^ Vieli (2014), p. 52.
  6. ^ Vieli (2014), p. 49.
  7. ^ Vieli (2014), pp. 50, 68.
  8. ^ Richelieu, André (28 March 2012). How can former successful European football teams capitalise on the Europa League in order to (re-)establish their brands? (PDF) (Final report submitted to UEFA). Nyon: Union des Associations Européennes de Football. p. 95. Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 August 2021.
  9. ^ "UEFA Europa League Competition Book 2009—12" (PDF). Union des Associations Européennes de Football. pp. 27–28. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 December 2013. Retrieved 4 June 2010.
  10. ^ a b "Chelsea join illustrious trio". Union of European Football Associations. 15 May 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  11. ^ "Il calcio europeo già si riprende". La Stampa (in Italian). 4 July 1984. p. 20.
  12. ^ Monti, Fabio (12 July 1988). "Gullit e van Basten alla roulette russa". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). p. 30.
  13. ^ "Juventus e Inter, i pericoli vengono dall'Est". La Stampa (in Italian). 9 July 1987. p. 24.
  14. ^ "Per me i miliardi valgono ancora, non li butto". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). 13 July 1988. p. 28. it: [...] ha ricevuto una targa dell'UEFA, destinata alla Juve, unica squadra in Europa ad aver vinto tutte le coppe. [[...] he received a UEFA plaque for Juve, the only team in Europe to have won all the cups.]
  15. ^ "Tutto iniziò con un po' di poesia". La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 24 May 1997. it: La Targa UEFA (prima squadra a vincere le tre coppe europee). [The UEFA Plaque (first team to win the three European competitions).]
  16. ^ "Boniperti Giampiero" (in Italian). Associazione Nazionale Atleti Olimpici e Azzurri d'Italia. 2016.
  17. ^ a b "Sorteo de las competiciones europeas de fútbol: el Fram de Reykjavic, primer adversario del F.C. Barcelona en la Recopa" (PDF). La Vanguardia (in Spanish). 13 July 1988. p. 53. Retrieved 15 November 2009.
  18. ^ "Boniperti si fa audace". Tuttosport (in Italian). 13 July 1988.
  19. ^ a b Viglino, Giorgio (13 July 1988). "Boniperti e Futre, è la volta buona". La Stampa (in Italian). p. 22. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  20. ^ "Juventus: Unica squadra premiata dall'UEFA". Hurrà Juventus (in Italian). Vol. 1. January 1988. pp. 42–43. ISSN 1594-5189.
  21. ^ Georges, Jacques (2 May 1986). "Bienvenue à Lyon". Finale de la Coupe des Vainqueurs de Coupe Européenne (PDF) (Programme officiel) (in French). Lyon: Union des Associations Européennes de Football. Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 April 2016.
  22. ^ "La Juventus in cifre". Hurrà Juventus (in Italian). Vol. 7/8. July–August 1988. p. 48 sqq. ISSN 1594-5189.
  23. ^ "El precedente de la Superliga europea que generó la actual Champions League". El desmarque (in Spanish). Mediaset España. 19 April 2021.

Bibliography edit

  • Vieli, André (2014). UEFA: 60 years at the heart of football (PDF). Nyon: Union des Associations Européennes de Football. doi:10.22005/bcu.175315. Archived (PDF) from the original on 3 August 2021.