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2003 UEFA Champions League final

The 2003 UEFA Champions League final was a football match that took place at Old Trafford in Manchester, England on 28 May 2003 to decide the winner of the 2002–03 UEFA Champions League. The match was contested by two Italian teams: Juventus and Milan. The match made history as it was the first time two clubs from Italy had faced each other in the final. It was also the second intra-national final of the competition, following the all-Spanish 2000 UEFA Champions League final between Real Madrid and Valencia three years earlier. Milan won the match via a penalty shoot-out after the game had finished 0–0 after extra time. It gave Milan their sixth success in the European Cup.

2003 UEFA Champions League final
Match programme cover
Event2002–03 UEFA Champions League
After silver goal extra time
Milan won 3–2 on penalties
Date28 May 2003
VenueOld Trafford, Manchester
Man of the MatchPaolo Maldini (Milan)[1]
RefereeMarkus Merk (Germany)
Attendance62,315[1]
WeatherClear
18 °C (64 °F)[2]
2002
2004

Background edit

Juventus entered the 2002–03 UEFA Champions League as 2001–02 Serie A champions and so qualified for the group phase, Milan finished fourth so started off in the third qualifying round.

Juventus went into the Champions League final as champions of Italy for the 27th time. Milan came third in the league, finishing with eleven fewer points than Juventus, but would win the 2002–03 Coppa Italia. The league games between the two teams in 2002–03 had each side winning their home fixture 2–1.

Route to the final edit

  Juventus Round   Milan
Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Qualifying phase Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg
Bye Third qualifying round   Slovan Liberec 2–2 (a) 1–0 (H) 1–2 (A)
Opponent Result First group stage Opponent Result
  Feyenoord 1–1 (A) Matchday 1   Lens 2–1 (H)
  Dynamo Kyiv 5–0 (H) Matchday 2   Deportivo La Coruña 4–0 (A)
  Newcastle United 2–0 (H) Matchday 3   Bayern Munich 2–1 (A)
  Newcastle United 0–1 (A) Matchday 4   Bayern Munich 2–1 (H)
  Feyenoord 2–0 (H) Matchday 5   Lens 1–2 (A)
  Dynamo Kyiv 2–1 (A) Matchday 6   Deportivo La Coruña 1–2 (H)
Group E winners

Pos Team Pld Pts
1   Juventus 6 13
2   Newcastle United 6 9
3   Dynamo Kyiv 6 7
4   Feyenoord 6 5
Source:
Final standings Group G winners

Pos Team Pld Pts
1   Milan 6 12
2   Deportivo La Coruña 6 12
3   Lens 6 8
4   Bayern Munich 6 2
Source:
Opponent Result Second group stage Opponent Result
  Deportivo La Coruña 2–2 (A) Matchday 1   Real Madrid 1–0 (H)
  Basel 4–0 (H) Matchday 2   Borussia Dortmund 1–0 (A)
  Manchester United 1–2 (A) Matchday 3   Lokomotiv Moscow 1–0 (H)
  Manchester United 0–3 (H) Matchday 4   Lokomotiv Moscow 1–0 (A)
  Deportivo La Coruña 3–2 (H) Matchday 5   Real Madrid 1–3 (A)
  Basel 1–2 (A) Matchday 6   Borussia Dortmund 0–1 (H)
Group D runners-up

Pos Team Pld Pts
1   Manchester United 6 13
2   Juventus 6 7
3   Basel 6 7
4   Deportivo La Coruña 6 7
Source:
Final standings Group C winners

Pos Team Pld Pts
1   Milan 6 12
2   Real Madrid 6 11
3   Borussia Dortmund 6 10
4   Lokomotiv Moscow 6 1
Source:
Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Knockout phase Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg
  Barcelona 3–2 1–1 (H) 2–1 (a.e.t.) (A) Quarter-finals   Ajax 3–2 0–0 (A) 3–2 (H)
  Real Madrid 4–3 1–2 (A) 3–1 (H) Semi-finals   Inter Milan 1–1 (a) 0–0 (H) 1–1 (A)

Milan edit

Milan won Group G of the first group round, a group that also included Bayern Munich, Lens and Deportivo La Coruña, advancing to the second group round where they won Group C. They defeated Real Madrid, Borussia Dortmund and Lokomotiv Moscow. They lost only two matches (Dortmund 1–0, and Real Madrid 3–1), and advanced to the quarter-finals where they met Ajax. The first leg was a draw (0–0) so the decisive match was the one at the San Siro which Milan won (3–2). In the semi-finals, they met local rivals Inter Milan. Both matches finished equal (0–0; 1–1), but Milan advanced on the away goals rule, despite both teams technically playing at home.

Juventus edit

Juventus won Group E of the first group round, in which the other teams were Newcastle United, Dynamo Kyiv and Feyenoord. They finished second in Group D of the second group round, after Manchester United, due to their losses against the English side (2–1; 3–0) and against Basel (2–1), but they qualified to the quarter-finals where they eliminated Barcelona in extra-time (1–1; 2–1). In the semi-final, Juventus met Real Madrid; they lost the first match (2–1), but they won the second (3–1), key midfielder Pavel Nedved picked up a second yellow card which meant he was suspended for the final.

Pre-match edit

Venue edit

 
Old Trafford was selected to host the final in December 2001.

Old Trafford, the home of Manchester United, was selected to host the match in December 2001, following a meeting of the UEFA Executive Committee in Nyon, Switzerland, at the same time as Estadio de La Cartuja in Seville was selected to host the 2003 UEFA Cup Final.[3] It was selected ahead of the likes of the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium in Madrid, the Stade de France in Saint-Denis near Paris, and the Amsterdam Arena.[4]

It would be the first time the stadium had hosted a major European final,[5] although it had been the venue for both the two-legged 1968 Intercontinental Cup between Manchester United and Argentine club Estudiantes de La Plata, and the 1991 European Super Cup between Manchester United and Yugoslavian club Red Star Belgrade, which had been scheduled to be played over two legs, only for the Yugoslavian leg to be cancelled due to the wars in the country at the time.

The stadium had recently undergone a major expansion; following the mandatory conversion to an all-seater venue as a result of the Taylor Report and ahead of England hosting UEFA Euro 1996, the stadium's North Stand was expanded to three tiers, with a capacity of 25,500 spectators. This was followed by the addition of second tiers to the East and West Stands, which brought the overall capacity of the stadium to 68,217.

As has taken place for every Champions League final since 1997, a ceremonial handover of the European Champion Clubs' Cup from the holders to the host city took place on 3 April 2003. After receiving the trophy from a representative of holders Real Madrid in the ceremony at the Manchester Town Hall, UEFA Chief Executive Gerhard Aigner presented it to the Lord Mayor of Manchester, Roy Walters. Former Real Madrid players Alfredo Di Stéfano, Francisco Gento, Amancio and Emilio Butragueño, as were Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson, members of the club's 1968 European Cup final team, and members of Liverpool and Manchester City's past European trophy-winning teams.[6]

Also in April 2003, a 24-hour football match – named the "Starball Match" in reference to the logo of the UEFA Champions League – was played in Manchester's Albert Square. It was the second Starball Match, after the inaugural match was held in Glasgow ahead of the 2002 UEFA Champions League final at Hampden Park. Over 1,000 players participated in the match, playing for sides named "Internazionale Manchester" and "Real Mancunian", in reference to Italian club Inter Milan and Spanish club Real Madrid. Internazionale Manchester won the match 252–162.[7]

Match edit

Summary edit

 
Milan celebrate their sixth European Cup title.

After a brisk start, Milan had an Andriy Shevchenko goal ruled out after Rui Costa was deemed to have blocked Gianluigi Buffon's line of view from an offside position, although television replays showed that the Portuguese had moved out of Buffon's line of sight before the shot. Antonio Conte nearly scored for Juventus after coming on as a substitute in the second half, his header clattering against the post with Dida beaten. Andrea Pirlo also hit the bar for Milan. In the second half, both teams began to sit back and created few chances.

Both Juventus and Milan had injuries to defenders during the course of the game; Igor Tudor had to be substituted for Alessandro Birindelli towards the end of the first half of regular time after pulling a muscle in his right thigh. Five minutes into the first half of extra time, Roque Júnior sustained an injury to his left thigh in a challenge against Pablo Montero and had to play the rest of the game through the pain as Milan had run out of substitutions.

The penalty shoot-out has caused controversy among some fans as replays showed that Dida was in front of the goal line when saving penalties from David Trezeguet, Marcelo Zalayeta and Paolo Montero. Buffon was also off his line when saving penalties from Clarence Seedorf and Kakha Kaladze. Shevchenko put away the final penalty to win the European Cup for Milan for the sixth time.

Details edit

Juventus  0–0 (a.e.t.)  Milan
Report
Penalties
2–3
Attendance: 62,315[1]
Referee: Markus Merk (Germany)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Juventus[8]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Milan[8]
GK 1   Gianluigi Buffon
RB 21   Lilian Thuram
CB 2   Ciro Ferrara
CB 5   Igor Tudor   42'
LB 4   Paolo Montero
RM 16   Mauro Camoranesi   46'
CM 3   Alessio Tacchinardi   69'
CM 26   Edgar Davids   65'
LM 19   Gianluca Zambrotta
CF 17   David Trezeguet
CF 10   Alessandro Del Piero (c)   111'
Substitutes:
GK 12   Antonio Chimenti
DF 7   Gianluca Pessotto
DF 13   Mark Iuliano
DF 15   Alessandro Birindelli   42'
MF 8   Antonio Conte   46'
FW 24   Marco Di Vaio
FW 25   Marcelo Zalayeta   65'
Manager:
  Marcello Lippi
 
GK 12   Dida
RB 19   Alessandro Costacurta   18'   66'
CB 13   Alessandro Nesta
CB 3   Paolo Maldini (c)
LB 4   Kakha Kaladze
RM 8   Gennaro Gattuso
CM 21   Andrea Pirlo   71'
LM 20   Clarence Seedorf
AM 10   Rui Costa   87'
CF 7   Andriy Shevchenko
CF 9   Filippo Inzaghi
Substitutes:
GK 18   Christian Abbiati
DF 24   Martin Laursen
DF 25   Roque Júnior   66'
MF 23   Massimo Ambrosini   87'
MF 27   Serginho   71'
MF 32   Cristian Brocchi
FW 11   Rivaldo
Manager:
  Carlo Ancelotti

Man of the Match:
Paolo Maldini (Milan)[1]

Assistant referees:
Christian Schräer (Germany)
Heiner Müller (Germany)
Fourth official:
Wolfgang Stark (Germany)

Match rules

Statistics edit

Post-match and legacy edit

The teams would again meet in a feature final several months later in the 2003 Supercoppa Italiana in the United States. The game again required penalties to determine the winners, this time, however, Juventus came out on top.

On 28 May 2023, the twentieth anniversary of the UEFA Champions League final in Manchester, both teams coincidentally met on the penultimate matchday of their Serie A domestic league, with Milan once again prevailing over Juventus in a 1–0 away victory in Turin.[11] Out of all players and technical staff from both teams present in Manchester twenty years ago, only Paolo Maldini was still involved with his club as a technical director at the time, shortly before his resignation in early June. Ironically, Pavel Nedvěd, suspended for the 2003 final through accumulation of yellow cards, had also been suspended from his executive duties at Juventus for 8 months in January 2023 due to his club's involvement in violations of financial fair play, and therefore could not attend the game.[12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "2. Finals" (PDF). UEFA Champions League Statistics Handbook 2016/17. Nyon, Switzerland: Union of European Football Associations. 2017. p. 1. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
  2. ^ "Local Weather Forecast, News and Conditions | Weather Underground".
  3. ^ "Old Trafford to stage European final". London Evening Standard. 13 December 2001. Retrieved 6 August 2015.
  4. ^ Ganguly, Aubrey, ed. (February 2002). "It's coming home". United. Manchester: Future Publishing under licence from Manchester United (112): 13.
  5. ^ UEFA Champions League Statistics Handbook 2012/13. Nyon: Union of European Football Associations. 2012. p. 154.
  6. ^ "Manchester welcomes Champion Clubs' Cup". UEFA.org. Union of European Football Associations. 2 April 2003. Retrieved 6 August 2015.
  7. ^ Hart, Patrick (3 April 2003). "Football for all in Manchester". UEFA. Retrieved 6 August 2015.
  8. ^ a b "Tactical Line-ups – Final – Wednesday 28 May 2003" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 28 May 2003. Retrieved 29 December 2017.
  9. ^ (PDF). UEFA. 28 May 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
  10. ^ a b (PDF). UEFA. 28 May 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
  11. ^ https://www.skysports.com/football/juventus-vs-ac-milan/470263
  12. ^ https://www.cbssports.com/soccer/news/juventus-penalized-15-points-from-serie-a-standings-11-execs-banned-for-mishandling-transfer-finances/#:~:text=Juventus%20have%20been%20handed%20a,(FIGC)%20announced%20on%20Friday.

External links edit

  • Official Site] (Archived)

2003, uefa, champions, league, final, football, match, that, took, place, trafford, manchester, england, 2003, decide, winner, 2002, uefa, champions, league, match, contested, italian, teams, juventus, milan, match, made, history, first, time, clubs, from, ita. The 2003 UEFA Champions League final was a football match that took place at Old Trafford in Manchester England on 28 May 2003 to decide the winner of the 2002 03 UEFA Champions League The match was contested by two Italian teams Juventus and Milan The match made history as it was the first time two clubs from Italy had faced each other in the final It was also the second intra national final of the competition following the all Spanish 2000 UEFA Champions League final between Real Madrid and Valencia three years earlier Milan won the match via a penalty shoot out after the game had finished 0 0 after extra time It gave Milan their sixth success in the European Cup 2003 UEFA Champions League finalMatch programme coverEvent2002 03 UEFA Champions LeagueJuventus Milan0 0After silver goal extra time Milan won 3 2 on penaltiesDate28 May 2003VenueOld Trafford ManchesterMan of the MatchPaolo Maldini Milan 1 RefereeMarkus Merk Germany Attendance62 315 1 WeatherClear18 C 64 F 2 20022004 Contents 1 Background 2 Route to the final 2 1 Milan 2 2 Juventus 3 Pre match 3 1 Venue 4 Match 4 1 Summary 4 2 Details 4 3 Statistics 5 Post match and legacy 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBackground editJuventus entered the 2002 03 UEFA Champions League as 2001 02 Serie A champions and so qualified for the group phase Milan finished fourth so started off in the third qualifying round Juventus went into the Champions League final as champions of Italy for the 27th time Milan came third in the league finishing with eleven fewer points than Juventus but would win the 2002 03 Coppa Italia The league games between the two teams in 2002 03 had each side winning their home fixture 2 1 Route to the final editFurther information 2002 03 UEFA Champions League nbsp Juventus Round nbsp MilanOpponent Agg 1st leg 2nd leg Qualifying phase Opponent Agg 1st leg 2nd legBye Third qualifying round nbsp Slovan Liberec 2 2 a 1 0 H 1 2 A Opponent Result First group stage Opponent Result nbsp Feyenoord 1 1 A Matchday 1 nbsp Lens 2 1 H nbsp Dynamo Kyiv 5 0 H Matchday 2 nbsp Deportivo La Coruna 4 0 A nbsp Newcastle United 2 0 H Matchday 3 nbsp Bayern Munich 2 1 A nbsp Newcastle United 0 1 A Matchday 4 nbsp Bayern Munich 2 1 H nbsp Feyenoord 2 0 H Matchday 5 nbsp Lens 1 2 A nbsp Dynamo Kyiv 2 1 A Matchday 6 nbsp Deportivo La Coruna 1 2 H Group E winners Pos Teamvte Pld Pts1 nbsp Juventus 6 132 nbsp Newcastle United 6 93 nbsp Dynamo Kyiv 6 74 nbsp Feyenoord 6 5Source RSSSF Final standings Group G winners Pos Teamvte Pld Pts1 nbsp Milan 6 122 nbsp Deportivo La Coruna 6 123 nbsp Lens 6 84 nbsp Bayern Munich 6 2Source RSSSFOpponent Result Second group stage Opponent Result nbsp Deportivo La Coruna 2 2 A Matchday 1 nbsp Real Madrid 1 0 H nbsp Basel 4 0 H Matchday 2 nbsp Borussia Dortmund 1 0 A nbsp Manchester United 1 2 A Matchday 3 nbsp Lokomotiv Moscow 1 0 H nbsp Manchester United 0 3 H Matchday 4 nbsp Lokomotiv Moscow 1 0 A nbsp Deportivo La Coruna 3 2 H Matchday 5 nbsp Real Madrid 1 3 A nbsp Basel 1 2 A Matchday 6 nbsp Borussia Dortmund 0 1 H Group D runners up Pos Teamvte Pld Pts1 nbsp Manchester United 6 132 nbsp Juventus 6 73 nbsp Basel 6 74 nbsp Deportivo La Coruna 6 7Source RSSSF Final standings Group C winners Pos Teamvte Pld Pts1 nbsp Milan 6 122 nbsp Real Madrid 6 113 nbsp Borussia Dortmund 6 104 nbsp Lokomotiv Moscow 6 1Source RSSSFOpponent Agg 1st leg 2nd leg Knockout phase Opponent Agg 1st leg 2nd leg nbsp Barcelona 3 2 1 1 H 2 1 a e t A Quarter finals nbsp Ajax 3 2 0 0 A 3 2 H nbsp Real Madrid 4 3 1 2 A 3 1 H Semi finals nbsp Inter Milan 1 1 a 0 0 H 1 1 A Milan edit Milan won Group G of the first group round a group that also included Bayern Munich Lens and Deportivo La Coruna advancing to the second group round where they won Group C They defeated Real Madrid Borussia Dortmund and Lokomotiv Moscow They lost only two matches Dortmund 1 0 and Real Madrid 3 1 and advanced to the quarter finals where they met Ajax The first leg was a draw 0 0 so the decisive match was the one at the San Siro which Milan won 3 2 In the semi finals they met local rivals Inter Milan Both matches finished equal 0 0 1 1 but Milan advanced on the away goals rule despite both teams technically playing at home Juventus edit Juventus won Group E of the first group round in which the other teams were Newcastle United Dynamo Kyiv and Feyenoord They finished second in Group D of the second group round after Manchester United due to their losses against the English side 2 1 3 0 and against Basel 2 1 but they qualified to the quarter finals where they eliminated Barcelona in extra time 1 1 2 1 In the semi final Juventus met Real Madrid they lost the first match 2 1 but they won the second 3 1 key midfielder Pavel Nedved picked up a second yellow card which meant he was suspended for the final Pre match editVenue edit nbsp Old Trafford was selected to host the final in December 2001 Old Trafford the home of Manchester United was selected to host the match in December 2001 following a meeting of the UEFA Executive Committee in Nyon Switzerland at the same time as Estadio de La Cartuja in Seville was selected to host the 2003 UEFA Cup Final 3 It was selected ahead of the likes of the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium in Madrid the Stade de France in Saint Denis near Paris and the Amsterdam Arena 4 It would be the first time the stadium had hosted a major European final 5 although it had been the venue for both the two legged 1968 Intercontinental Cup between Manchester United and Argentine club Estudiantes de La Plata and the 1991 European Super Cup between Manchester United and Yugoslavian club Red Star Belgrade which had been scheduled to be played over two legs only for the Yugoslavian leg to be cancelled due to the wars in the country at the time The stadium had recently undergone a major expansion following the mandatory conversion to an all seater venue as a result of the Taylor Report and ahead of England hosting UEFA Euro 1996 the stadium s North Stand was expanded to three tiers with a capacity of 25 500 spectators This was followed by the addition of second tiers to the East and West Stands which brought the overall capacity of the stadium to 68 217 As has taken place for every Champions League final since 1997 a ceremonial handover of the European Champion Clubs Cup from the holders to the host city took place on 3 April 2003 After receiving the trophy from a representative of holders Real Madrid in the ceremony at the Manchester Town Hall UEFA Chief Executive Gerhard Aigner presented it to the Lord Mayor of Manchester Roy Walters Former Real Madrid players Alfredo Di Stefano Francisco Gento Amancio and Emilio Butragueno as were Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson members of the club s 1968 European Cup final team and members of Liverpool and Manchester City s past European trophy winning teams 6 Also in April 2003 a 24 hour football match named the Starball Match in reference to the logo of the UEFA Champions League was played in Manchester s Albert Square It was the second Starball Match after the inaugural match was held in Glasgow ahead of the 2002 UEFA Champions League final at Hampden Park Over 1 000 players participated in the match playing for sides named Internazionale Manchester and Real Mancunian in reference to Italian club Inter Milan and Spanish club Real Madrid Internazionale Manchester won the match 252 162 7 Match editSummary edit nbsp Milan celebrate their sixth European Cup title After a brisk start Milan had an Andriy Shevchenko goal ruled out after Rui Costa was deemed to have blocked Gianluigi Buffon s line of view from an offside position although television replays showed that the Portuguese had moved out of Buffon s line of sight before the shot Antonio Conte nearly scored for Juventus after coming on as a substitute in the second half his header clattering against the post with Dida beaten Andrea Pirlo also hit the bar for Milan In the second half both teams began to sit back and created few chances Both Juventus and Milan had injuries to defenders during the course of the game Igor Tudor had to be substituted for Alessandro Birindelli towards the end of the first half of regular time after pulling a muscle in his right thigh Five minutes into the first half of extra time Roque Junior sustained an injury to his left thigh in a challenge against Pablo Montero and had to play the rest of the game through the pain as Milan had run out of substitutions The penalty shoot out has caused controversy among some fans as replays showed that Dida was in front of the goal line when saving penalties from David Trezeguet Marcelo Zalayeta and Paolo Montero Buffon was also off his line when saving penalties from Clarence Seedorf and Kakha Kaladze Shevchenko put away the final penalty to win the European Cup for Milan for the sixth time Details edit 28 May 200319 45 BSTJuventus nbsp 0 0 a e t nbsp MilanReportPenaltiesTrezeguet nbsp Birindelli nbsp Zalayeta nbsp Montero nbsp Del Piero nbsp 2 3 nbsp Serginho nbsp Seedorf nbsp Kaladze nbsp Nesta nbsp ShevchenkoOld Trafford TraffordAttendance 62 315 1 Referee Markus Merk Germany nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Juventus 8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Milan 8 GK 1 nbsp Gianluigi BuffonRB 21 nbsp Lilian ThuramCB 2 nbsp Ciro FerraraCB 5 nbsp Igor Tudor nbsp 42 LB 4 nbsp Paolo MonteroRM 16 nbsp Mauro Camoranesi nbsp 46 CM 3 nbsp Alessio Tacchinardi nbsp 69 CM 26 nbsp Edgar Davids nbsp 65 LM 19 nbsp Gianluca ZambrottaCF 17 nbsp David TrezeguetCF 10 nbsp Alessandro Del Piero c nbsp 111 Substitutes GK 12 nbsp Antonio ChimentiDF 7 nbsp Gianluca PessottoDF 13 nbsp Mark IulianoDF 15 nbsp Alessandro Birindelli nbsp 42 MF 8 nbsp Antonio Conte nbsp 46 FW 24 nbsp Marco Di VaioFW 25 nbsp Marcelo Zalayeta nbsp 65 Manager nbsp Marcello Lippi nbsp GK 12 nbsp DidaRB 19 nbsp Alessandro Costacurta nbsp 18 nbsp 66 CB 13 nbsp Alessandro NestaCB 3 nbsp Paolo Maldini c LB 4 nbsp Kakha KaladzeRM 8 nbsp Gennaro GattusoCM 21 nbsp Andrea Pirlo nbsp 71 LM 20 nbsp Clarence SeedorfAM 10 nbsp Rui Costa nbsp 87 CF 7 nbsp Andriy ShevchenkoCF 9 nbsp Filippo InzaghiSubstitutes GK 18 nbsp Christian AbbiatiDF 24 nbsp Martin LaursenDF 25 nbsp Roque Junior nbsp 66 MF 23 nbsp Massimo Ambrosini nbsp 87 MF 27 nbsp Serginho nbsp 71 MF 32 nbsp Cristian BrocchiFW 11 nbsp RivaldoManager nbsp Carlo AncelottiMan of the Match Paolo Maldini Milan 1 Assistant referees Christian Schraer Germany Heiner Muller Germany Fourth official Wolfgang Stark Germany Match rules 90 minutes 30 minutes of silver goal extra time if necessary Penalty shoot out if scores still level Seven named substitutes Maximum of three substitutions Statistics edit First half 9 Statistic Juventus MilanGoals scored 0 0Total shots 4 5Shots on target 1 3Ball possession 46 54 Corner kicks 2 7Fouls committed 12 13Offsides 0 4Yellow cards 0 1Red cards 0 0 Second half and extra time 10 Statistic Juventus MilanGoals scored 0 0Total shots 7 9Shots on target 1 3Ball possession 51 49 Corner kicks 3 6Fouls committed 22 10Offsides 1 2Yellow cards 2 0Red cards 0 0 Overall 10 Statistic Juventus MilanGoals scored 0 0Total shots 11 14Shots on target 2 6Ball possession 49 51 Corner kicks 5 13Fouls committed 34 23Offsides 1 6Yellow cards 2 1Red cards 0 0Post match and legacy editThe teams would again meet in a feature final several months later in the 2003 Supercoppa Italiana in the United States The game again required penalties to determine the winners this time however Juventus came out on top On 28 May 2023 the twentieth anniversary of the UEFA Champions League final in Manchester both teams coincidentally met on the penultimate matchday of their Serie A domestic league with Milan once again prevailing over Juventus in a 1 0 away victory in Turin 11 Out of all players and technical staff from both teams present in Manchester twenty years ago only Paolo Maldini was still involved with his club as a technical director at the time shortly before his resignation in early June Ironically Pavel Nedved suspended for the 2003 final through accumulation of yellow cards had also been suspended from his executive duties at Juventus for 8 months in January 2023 due to his club s involvement in violations of financial fair play and therefore could not attend the game 12 See also edit2002 03 UEFA Champions League A C Milan in European football Italian football clubs in international competitions Juventus F C A C Milan rivalry Juventus F C in European footballReferences edit a b c d 2 Finals PDF UEFA Champions League Statistics Handbook 2016 17 Nyon Switzerland Union of European Football Associations 2017 p 1 Retrieved 22 April 2017 Local Weather Forecast News and Conditions Weather Underground Old Trafford to stage European final London Evening Standard 13 December 2001 Retrieved 6 August 2015 Ganguly Aubrey ed February 2002 It s coming home United Manchester Future Publishing under licence from Manchester United 112 13 UEFA Champions League Statistics Handbook 2012 13 Nyon Union of European Football Associations 2012 p 154 Manchester welcomes Champion Clubs Cup UEFA org Union of European Football Associations 2 April 2003 Retrieved 6 August 2015 Hart Patrick 3 April 2003 Football for all in Manchester UEFA Retrieved 6 August 2015 a b Tactical Line ups Final Wednesday 28 May 2003 PDF UEFA com Union of European Football Associations 28 May 2003 Retrieved 29 December 2017 Half Time Summary PDF UEFA 28 May 2003 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 20 May 2012 a b Full Time Summary PDF UEFA 28 May 2003 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 20 May 2012 https www skysports com football juventus vs ac milan 470263 https www cbssports com soccer news juventus penalized 15 points from serie a standings 11 execs banned for mishandling transfer finances text Juventus 20have 20been 20handed 20a FIGC 20announced 20on 20Friday External links edithttps web archive org web 20030608221319 http www uefa com competitions UCL Final2003 FixturesResults Round 3D1640 Match 3D1045288 index html Official Site Archived nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to UEFA Champions League Final 2003 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2003 UEFA Champions League final amp oldid 1186669041, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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