fbpx
Wikipedia

2009–10 UEFA Europa League

The 2009–10 UEFA Europa League was the first season of the UEFA Europa League, Europe's secondary club football tournament organised by UEFA. The competition was previously known as the UEFA Cup, which had been in existence for 38 years.[1]

2009–10 UEFA Europa League
The Volksparkstadion in Hamburg hosted the final.
Tournament details
Dates17 September 2009 – 12 May 2010 (competition proper)
2 July – 27 August 2009 (qualifying)
Teams48+8 (competition proper)
159+33 (total) (from 53 associations)
Final positions
Champions Atlético Madrid (1st title)
Runners-up Fulham
Tournament statistics
Matches played205
Goals scored539 (2.63 per match)
Top scorer(s)Claudio Pizarro (Werder Bremen)
Óscar Cardozo (Benfica)
9 goals each
2008–09 (UEFA Cup)

Spain's Atlético Madrid won the tournament for the first time, beating Fulham – who were playing in their first European final – at the Volksparkstadion, home ground of Hamburger SV, in Hamburg, Germany.[2]

Shakhtar Donetsk were the defending champions but were eliminated by eventual finalists Fulham in the Round of 32.

Association team allocation edit

A total of 192 teams from 53 UEFA associations participated in the 2009–10 UEFA Europa League. Associations are allocated places according to their 2008 UEFA country coefficient, which takes into account their performance in European competitions from 2003–04 to 2007–08.[3]

Below is the qualification scheme for the 2009–10 UEFA Europa League:[4]

  • Associations 1–6 each enter three teams
  • Associations 7–9 each enter four teams
  • Associations 10–51 each enter three teams, except Liechtenstein (it organises only a domestic cup competition and no domestic league competition)
  • Associations 52–53 plus Liechtenstein each enter one team
  • The top three associations of the 2008–09 UEFA Fair Play ranking each gain an additional berth
  • Moreover, 33 teams eliminated from the 2009–10 UEFA Champions League are transferred to the Europa League

Association ranking edit

Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
1   England 75.749 3 +1(UCL)
2   Spain 75.266 +1(UCL)
3   Italy 60.410 +1(UCL)
4   France 52.668 +1(UCL)
5   Germany 48.722 +1(UCL)
6   Russia 43.750 +2(UCL)
7   Romania 40.599 4 +2(UCL)
8   Portugal 39.927 +1(UCL)
9   Netherlands 38.213 +1(UCL)
10   Scotland 33.375 3 +1(FP)
+1(UCL)
11   Turkey 31.725 +1(UCL)
12   Ukraine 30.100 +1(UCL)
13   Belgium 26.700 +2(UCL)
14   Greece 25.831 +1(UCL)
15   Czech Republic 25.750 +2(UCL)
16   Switzerland 24.225
17   Bulgaria 23.166 +1(UCL)
18   Norway 22.425 +1(FP)
+1(UCL)
Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
19   Denmark 20.450 3 +1(FP)
+1(UCL)
20   Austria 17.700 +1(UCL)
21   Serbia 16.750 +1(UCL)
22   Israel 15.750
23   Sweden 13.691
24   Slovakia 12.332 +1(UCL)
25   Poland 12.041
26   Hungary 11.999
27   Croatia 11.624 +1(UCL)
28   Cyprus 10.082
29   Slovenia 9.915 +1(UCL)
30   Finland 9.623
31   Latvia 8.831 +1(UCL)
32   Bosnia and Herzegovina 8.498
33   Lithuania 7.999
34   Moldova 7.499 +1(UCL)
35   Republic of Ireland 7.332
36   Macedonia 6.331
Rank Association Coeff. Teams Notes
37   Iceland 5.999 3
38   Georgia 5.831
39   Liechtenstein 5.500 1
40   Belarus 5.332 3 +1(UCL)
41   Estonia 4.332 +1(UCL)
42   Azerbaijan 3.832 +1(UCL)
43   Albania 3.666
44   Armenia 3.665
45   Kazakhstan 2.582 +1(UCL)
46   Northern Ireland 2.332
47   Wales 2.331
48   Faroe Islands 1.832
49   Luxembourg 1.498
50   Malta 0.832
51   Montenegro 0.500
52   Andorra 0.500 1
53   San Marino 0.250
Notes
  • (FP): Additional fair play berth (Norway, Denmark, Scotland)[5]
  • (UCL): Additional teams transferred from the UEFA Champions League

Distribution edit

Since the winners of the 2008–09 UEFA Cup, Shakhtar Donetsk, qualified for the 2009–10 UEFA Champions League through domestic performance, the title holder spot reserved for them in the group stage was vacated. As this was the first edition of the Europa League, it was initially unknown whether UEFA would simply disregard the vacant title holder spot and rearrange entries so that one more team would qualify from the play-off round, or replace the title holders' group stage place with that of the top-ranked association's cup winner and move teams from lower rounds appropriately, as the regulations are unclear on this matter.[4] The former set-up was confirmed by UEFA's official list of participants, published on 16 June 2009.[6] As a result, the following changes to the default allocation system were made to compensate for the vacant title holder spot in the group stage:[7]

  • The domestic cup winners of associations 16 and 17 (Switzerland and Bulgaria) were promoted from the third qualifying round to the play-off round.
  • The domestic cup winners of associations 28 and 29 (Cyprus and Slovenia) were promoted from the second qualifying round to the third qualifying round.
  • The domestic cup winners of associations 52 and 53 (Andorra and San Marino) and the domestic league runners-up of associations 35 and 36 (Republic of Ireland and Macedonia) were promoted from the first qualifying round to the second qualifying round.
Teams entering in this round Teams advancing from previous round Teams transferred from Champions League
First qualifying round
(46 teams)
  • 14 domestic league runners-up from associations 37–51 (except Liechtenstein)
  • 29 domestic league third-placed teams from associations 22–51 (except Liechtenstein)
  • 3 teams which qualified via Fair Play rankings
Second qualifying round
(80 teams)
  • 24 domestic cup winners from associations 30–53
  • 18 domestic league runners-up from associations 19–36
  • 6 domestic league third-placed teams from associations 16–21
  • 6 domestic league fourth-placed teams from associations 10–15
  • 3 domestic league fifth-placed teams from associations 7–9
  • 23 winners from the first qualifying round
Third qualifying round
(70 teams)
  • 12 domestic cup winners from associations 18–29
  • 3 domestic league runners-up from associations 16–18
  • 6 domestic league third-placed teams from associations 10–15
  • 3 domestic league fourth-placed teams from associations 7–9
  • 3 domestic league fifth-placed teams from associations 4–6 (League Cup winners for France)
  • 3 domestic league sixth-placed teams from associations 1–3 (League Cup winners for England)
  • 40 winners from the second qualifying round
Play-off round
(76 teams)
  • 17 domestic cup winners from associations 1–17
  • 3 domestic league third-placed teams from associations 7–9
  • 3 domestic league fourth-placed teams from associations 4–6
  • 3 domestic league fifth-placed teams from associations 1–3
  • 35 winners from the third qualifying round
  • 15 losers from the Champions League third qualifying round
Group stage
(48 teams)
  • 38 winners from the play-off round
  • 10 losers from the Champions League play-off round
Knockout phase
(32 teams)
  • 12 group winners from the group stage
  • 12 group runners-up from the group stage
  • 8 third-placed teams from the Champions League group stage

Redistribution rules edit

A Europa League place is vacated when a team qualify for both the Champions League and the Europa League, or qualify for the Europa League by more than one method. When a place is vacated, it is redistributed within the national association by the following rules:[4]

  • When the domestic cup winners (considered as the "highest-placed" qualifier within the national association) also qualify for the Champions League, their Europa League place is vacated, and the remaining Europa League qualifiers are moved up one place, with the final place (with the earliest starting round) taken by the domestic cup runners-up, provided they do not already qualify for the Champions League or the Europa League. Otherwise, this place is taken by the highest-placed league finisher which do not qualify for the Europa League yet.
  • When the domestic cup winners also qualify for the Europa League through league position, their place through the league position is vacated, and the Europa League qualifiers which finish lower in the league are moved up one place, with the final place taken by the highest-placed league finisher which do not qualify for the Europa League yet.
  • A place vacated by the League Cup winners is taken by the highest-placed league finisher which do not qualify for the Europa League yet.
  • A Fair Play place is taken by the highest-ranked team in the domestic Fair Play table which do not qualify for the Champions League or Europa League yet.

Teams edit

The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:[6]

  • CW: Cup winners
  • CR: Cup runners-up
  • LC: League Cup winners
  • Nth: League position
  • P-W: End-of-season European competition play-off winners
  • FP: Fair play
  • UCL: Relegated from the Champions League
    • GS: Third-placed teams from the group stage
    • PO: Losers from the play-off round
    • Q3: Losers from the third qualifying round
Round of 32
  Juventus (UCL GS)   Wolfsburg (UCL GS)   Marseille (UCL GS)   Atlético Madrid (UCL GS)
  Liverpool (UCL GS)   Rubin Kazan (UCL GS)   Unirea Urziceni (UCL GS)   Standard Liège (UCL GS)
Group stage
  Timișoara (UCL PO)   Sporting CP (UCL PO)   Celtic (UCL PO)   Anderlecht (UCL PO)
  Panathinaikos (UCL PO)   Levski Sofia (UCL PO)   Copenhagen (UCL PO)   Red Bull Salzburg (UCL PO)
  Ventspils (UCL PO)   Sheriff Tiraspol (UCL PO)
Play-off round
  Everton (5th)   Zenit St. Petersburg (5th)   Racing Genk (CW)   Maribor (UCL Q3)
  Aston Villa (6th)   CFR Cluj (CW)   AEK Athens (3rd)   BATE Borisov (UCL Q3)
  Villarreal (5th)   Dinamo București (3rd)   Teplice (CW)   Levadia (UCL Q3)
  Valencia (6th)   Benfica (3rd)   Sion (CW)   Baku (UCL Q3)
  Lazio (CW)   Nacional (4th)   Litex Lovech (CW)   Aktobe (UCL Q3)
  Genoa (5th)   Heerenveen (CW)   Slavia Prague (UCL Q3)   Dynamo Moscow (UCL Q3)
  Guingamp (CW)   Ajax (3rd)   Stabæk (UCL Q3)   Twente (UCL Q3)
  Toulouse (4th)   Hearts (3rd)   Partizan (UCL Q3)   Sivasspor (UCL Q3)
  Werder Bremen (CW)   Trabzonspor (3rd)   Slovan Bratislava (UCL Q3)   Shakhtar DonetskTH (UCL Q3)
  Hertha BSC (4th)   Vorskla Poltava (CW)   Dinamo Zagreb (UCL Q3)   Sparta Prague (UCL Q3)
  Amkar Perm (4th)
Third qualifying round
  Fulham (7th)   PSV Eindhoven (4th)   CSKA Sofia (2nd)   IFK Göteborg (CW)
  Athletic Bilbao (CR)   Aberdeen (4th)   Vålerenga (CW)   Košice (CW)
  Roma (6th)   Fenerbahçe (4th)   Fredrikstad (2nd)   Lech Poznań (CW)
  Lille (5th)   Metalist Kharkiv (3rd)   Odense (2nd)   Budapest Honvéd (CW)
  Hamburg (5th)   Club Brugge (3rd)   Austria Wien (CW)   Hajduk Split (2nd)
  Krylia Sovetov Samara (6th)   PAOK (4th)   Vojvodina (2nd)   APOP Kinyras (CW)
  Vaslui (5th)   Slovan Liberec (3rd)   Hapoel Tel Aviv (2nd)Note ISR   Interblock (CW)
  Braga (5th)   Young Boys (2nd)
Second qualifying round
  Steaua București (6th)   Sturm Graz (4th)   Skonto (3rd)Note LVA   Naftan Novopolotsk (CW)
  Paços de Ferreira (CR)   Red Star Belgrade (3rd)   Slavija (CW)   Flora (CW)
  NAC Breda (P-W)   Sevojno (CR)   Sarajevo (4th)Note BIH   Qarabağ (CW)
  Falkirk (CR)   Maccabi Netanya (4th)Note ISR   Sūduva (CW)   Flamurtari (CW)
  Galatasaray (5th)   Elfsborg (2nd)   Kaunas (2nd)   Gandzasar (3rd)Note ARM
  Metalurh Donetsk (4th)   Žilina (2nd)   Dacia Chișinău (2nd)   Tobol (2nd)
  AA Gent (4th)   Legia Warsaw (2nd)   Iskra-Stal (3rd)   Crusaders (CW)
  AEL (5th)   Újpest (2nd)   St Patrick's Athletic (2nd)   Bangor City (CW)
  Sigma Olomouc (4th)   Rijeka (3rd)   Derry City (3rd)   HB Tórshavn (2nd)
  Basel (3rd)   Omonia (2nd)   Rabotnički (CW)   Differdange (2nd)
  Cherno More Varna (3rd)   Gorica (2nd)   Milano Kumanovo (2nd)   Sliema Wanderers (CW)
  Tromsø (3rd)   HJK (CW)   KR (CW)   Petrovac (CW)
  Brøndby (3rd)   Honka (2nd)   Dinamo Tbilisi (CW)   FC Santa Coloma (CW)
  AaB (CR)   Liepājas Metalurgs (2nd)   Vaduz (CW)   Juvenes/Dogana (CW)
  Rapid Wien (2nd)
First qualifying round
  Bnei Yehuda (5th)Note ISR   Zimbru Chișinău (4th)   Simurq (3rd)   B36 Tórshavn (3rd)
  Helsingborg (4th)   Sligo Rovers (4th)   Vllaznia (2nd)   NSÍ Runavík (4th)
  Spartak Trnava (3rd)   Renova (3rd)   Dinamo Tirana (3rd)   Grevenmacher (3rd)
  Polonia Warsaw (4th)   Keflavík (2nd)   Mika (4th)Note ARM   Käerjéng 97 (CR)
  Haladás (3rd)   Fram (3rd)   Banants (CR)   Birkirkara (2nd)
  Slaven Belupo (4th)   Olimpi Rustavi (3rd)   Irtysh (3rd)   Valletta (3rd)
  Anorthosis (3rd)   Zestaponi (4th)   Okzhetpes (9th)Note KAZ   Budućnost Podgorica (2nd)
  Rudar Velenje (3rd)   Dinamo Minsk (2nd)   Linfield (2nd)   Sutjeska Nikšić (3rd)
  Lahti (3rd)   MTZ-RIPO Minsk (3rd)   Lisburn Distillery (4th)   Rosenborg (FP)
  Dinaburg (4th)Note LVA   Narva Trans (3rd)   Llanelli (2nd)   Randers (FP)
  Široki Brijeg (6th)Note BIH   Nõmme Kalju (4th)   The New Saints (3rd)   Motherwell (FP)
  Vėtra (3rd)   Inter Baku (2nd)
Notes

Round and draw dates edit

All draws held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland unless stated otherwise.[7]

Phase Round Draw date First leg Second leg
Qualifying First qualifying round 22 June 2009 2 July 2009 9 July 2009
Second qualifying round 16 July 2009 23 July 2009
Third qualifying round 17 July 2009 30 July 2009 6 August 2009
Play-off Play-off round 7 August 2009 20 August 2009 27 August 2009
Group stage Matchday 1 28 August 2009
(Monaco)
17 September 2009
Matchday 2 1 October 2009
Matchday 3 22 October 2009
Matchday 4 5 November 2009
Matchday 5 2–3 December 2009
Matchday 6 16–17 December 2009
Knockout phase Round of 32 18 December 2009 18 February 2010 25 February 2010
Round of 16 11 March 2010 18 March 2010
Quarter-finals 19 March 2010 1 April 2010 8 April 2010
Semi-finals 22 April 2010 29 April 2010
Final 12 May 2010 at Volksparkstadion, Hamburg

Qualifying rounds edit

In the qualifying phase and the play-off round, teams play against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis.

The draw for the first and second qualifying rounds, conducted by UEFA President Michel Platini and UEFA General Secretary David Taylor, was held on 22 June 2009, and the draw for the third qualifying round, conducted by UEFA Competitions Director Giorgio Marchetti and Head of Club Competitions Michael Heselschwerdt, was held on 17 July 2009. For the draws, clubs were separated into seeded and unseeded teams based on their club coefficient. Because the draws for the second and third qualifying rounds took place before the previous round was completed, the teams were seeded assuming the seeded side in the previous round would be victorious.

First qualifying round edit

The first legs were played on 2 July, and the second legs were played on 9 July 2009.

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Sutjeska Nikšić   2–3   MTZ-RIPO Minsk 1–1 1–2 (aet)
Lahti   4–3   Dinamo Tirana 4–1 0–2
Grevenmacher   0–6   Vėtra 0–3 0–3
NSÍ Runavík   1–6   Rosenborg 0–3 1–3
Haladás   2–2 (a)   Irtysh 1–0 1–2
Sligo Rovers   2–3   Vllaznia 1–2 1–1
Olimpi Rustavi   4–0   B36 Tórshavn 2–0 2–0
Anorthosis Famagusta   7–1   Käerjéng 97 5–0 2–1
Slaven Belupo   1–0   Birkirkara 1–0 0–0
Zimbru Chișinău   3–2   Okzhetpes 1–2 2–0
Lisburn Distillery   1–11   Zestaponi 1–5 0–6
Helsingborg   4–2   Mika 3–1 1–1
Valletta   5–2   Keflavík 3–0 2–2
Dinaburg   2–1   Nõmme Kalju 2–1 0–0
Budućnost Podgorica   1–2   Polonia Warsaw 0–2 1–0
Narva Trans   1–6   Rudar Velenje 0–3 1–3
Motherwell   3–1   Llanelli 0–1 3–0
Banants   1–2   Široki Brijeg 0–2 1–0
Spartak Trnava   5–2   Inter Baku 2–1 3–1
Dinamo Minsk   3–2   Renova 2–1 1–1
Randers   7–0   Linfield 4–0 3–0
Simurq   0–4   Bnei Yehuda 0–1 0–3
Fram   4–2   The New Saints 2–1 2–1

Order of legs reversed after original draw

Second qualifying round edit

The first legs were played on 14 and 16 July, and the second legs were played on 23 July 2009.

Both the first and second legs between Bnei Yehuda and Dinaburg and between Rapid Wien and Vllaznia were under investigation by UEFA and German authorities for possible match-fixing.[8]

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Rosenborg   0–1   Qarabağ 0–0 0–1
Zimbru Chișinău   0–1   Paços de Ferreira 0–0 0–1
Juvenes/Dogana   0–5   Polonia Warsaw 0–1 0–4
Sturm Graz   3–2   Široki Brijeg 2–1 1–1
Basel   7–1   FC Santa Coloma 3–0 4–1
Honka   3–0   Bangor City 2–0 1–0
MŠK Žilina   3–0   Dacia Chișinău 2–0 1–0
Anorthosis   3–4   Petrovac 2–1 1–3 (aet)
St Patrick's Athletic   2–1   Valletta 1–1 1–0
Omonia   8–1   HB Tórshavn 4–0 4–1
Gorica   1–2   Lahti 1–0 0–2
Sigma Olomouc   3–1   Fram 1–1 2–0
Legia Warsaw   4–0   Olimpi Rustavi 3–0 1–0
Falkirk   1–2   Vaduz 1–0 0–2 (aet)
Elfsborg   3–0   Haladás 3–0 0–0
Rapid Wien   8–0   Vllaznia 5–0 3–0
Naftan Novopolotsk   2–2 (a)   Gent 2–1 0–1
Liepājas Metalurgs   3–4   Dinamo Tbilisi 2–1 1–3
Differdange   1–3   Rijeka 1–0 0–3
Sūduva   1–2   Randers 0–1 1–1
Vėtra   3–2   HJK 0–1 3–1
Milano   2–12   Slaven Belupo 0–4 2–8
Dinamo Minsk   1–4   Tromsø 0–0 1–4
KR   3–1   AEL 2–0 1–1
Brøndby   4–2   Flora Tallinn 0–1 4–1
AaB   1–3   Slavija 0–0 1–3
Steaua București   4–1   Újpest 2–0 2–1
Metalurh Donetsk   5–1   MTZ-RIPO Minsk 3–0 2–1
Crusaders   3–5   Rabotnički 1–1 2–4
Bnei Yehuda   5–0   Dinaburg 4–0 1–0
NAC Breda   8–0   Gandzasar 6–0 2–0
Cherno More Varna   4–0   Iskra-Stal 1–0 3–0
Sevojno   1–1 (a)   Kaunas 0–0 1–1
Flamurtari   2–8   Motherwell 1–0 1–8
Zestaponi   3–4   Helsingborg 1–2 2–2 (aet)
Skonto   1–2   Derry City 1–1 0–1
Sliema Wanderers   0–3   Maccabi Netanya 0–0 0–3
Tobol   1–3   Galatasaray 1–1 0–2
Rudar Velenje   0–5   Red Star Belgrade 0–1 0–4
Sarajevo   2–1   Spartak Trnava 1–0 1–1

Order of legs reversed after original draw

Third qualifying round edit

The first legs were played on 28 and 30 July, and the second legs were played on 4 and 6 August 2009.

The first leg between Fenerbahçe and Budapest Honvéd and the second leg between Interblock Ljubljana and Metalurh Donetsk were under investigation by UEFA and German authorities for possible match-fixing.[8]

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Helsingborg   3–3 (4–5 p)   Sarajevo 2–1 1–2 (aet)
Fredrikstad   3–7   Lech Poznań 1–6 2–1
Rijeka   1–4   Metalist Kharkiv 1–2 0–2
Roma   10–2   Gent 3–1 7–1
Vaslui   3–1   Omonia 2–0 1–1
Slavija   1–5   Košice 0–2 1–3
IFK Göteborg   2–4   Hapoel Tel Aviv 1–3 1–1
PSV Eindhoven   2–0   Cherno More Varna 1–0 1–0
Metalurh Donetsk   5–0   Interblock 2–0 3–0
Vålerenga   2–2 (a)   PAOK 1–2 1–0
Rapid Wien   4–3   APOP Kinyras 2–1 2–2 (aet)
Honka   1–3   Qarabağ 0–1 1–2
Vaduz   0–3   Slovan Liberec 0–1 0–2
St Patrick's Athletic   3–3 (a)   Krylia Sovetov 1–0 2–3
Randers   1–4   Hamburg 0–4 1–0
Tromsø   4–1   Slaven Belupo 2–1 2–0
Brøndby   3–3 (a)   Legia Warsaw 1–1 2–2
Vojvodina   3–5   Austria Wien 1–1 2–4
CSKA Sofia   2–1   Derry City 1–0 1–1
Steaua București   6–1   Motherwell 3–0 3–1
MŠK Žilina   2–1   Hajduk Split 1–1 1–0
Braga   1–4   Elfsborg 1–2 0–2
Aberdeen   1–8   Sigma Olomouc 1–5 0–3
Rabotnički   3–7   Odense 3–4 0–3
Sevojno   0–4   Lille 0–2 0–2
Petrovac   1–7   Sturm Graz 1–2 0–5
Fenerbahçe   6–2   Budapest Honvéd 5–1 1–1
Bnei Yehuda   2–0   Paços de Ferreira 1–0 1–0
Club Brugge   4–3   Lahti 3–2 1–1
Athletic Bilbao   2–2 (a)   Young Boys 0–1 2–1
KR   3–5   Basel 2–2 1–3
Maccabi Netanya   1–10   Galatasaray 1–4 0–6
Dinamo Tbilisi   4–5   Red Star Belgrade 2–0 2–5
Polonia Warsaw
2009, uefa, europa, league, first, season, uefa, europa, league, europe, secondary, club, football, tournament, organised, uefa, competition, previously, known, uefa, which, been, existence, years, volksparkstadion, hamburg, hosted, final, tournament, detailsd. The 2009 10 UEFA Europa League was the first season of the UEFA Europa League Europe s secondary club football tournament organised by UEFA The competition was previously known as the UEFA Cup which had been in existence for 38 years 1 2009 10 UEFA Europa LeagueThe Volksparkstadion in Hamburg hosted the final Tournament detailsDates17 September 2009 12 May 2010 competition proper 2 July 27 August 2009 qualifying Teams48 8 competition proper 159 33 total from 53 associations Final positionsChampionsAtletico Madrid 1st title Runners upFulhamTournament statisticsMatches played205Goals scored539 2 63 per match Top scorer s Claudio Pizarro Werder Bremen oscar Cardozo Benfica 9 goals each 2008 09 UEFA Cup 2010 11 Spain s Atletico Madrid won the tournament for the first time beating Fulham who were playing in their first European final at the Volksparkstadion home ground of Hamburger SV in Hamburg Germany 2 Shakhtar Donetsk were the defending champions but were eliminated by eventual finalists Fulham in the Round of 32 Contents 1 Association team allocation 1 1 Association ranking 1 2 Distribution 1 3 Redistribution rules 1 4 Teams 2 Round and draw dates 3 Qualifying rounds 3 1 First qualifying round 3 2 Second qualifying round 3 3 Third qualifying round 4 Play off round 5 Group stage 5 1 Group A 5 2 Group B 5 3 Group C 5 4 Group D 5 5 Group E 5 6 Group F 5 7 Group G 5 8 Group H 5 9 Group I 5 10 Group J 5 11 Group K 5 12 Group L 6 Knockout phase 6 1 Bracket 6 2 Round of 32 6 3 Round of 16 6 4 Quarter finals 6 5 Semi finals 6 6 Final 7 Statistics 7 1 Top goalscorers 7 2 Top assists 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksAssociation team allocation editA total of 192 teams from 53 UEFA associations participated in the 2009 10 UEFA Europa League Associations are allocated places according to their 2008 UEFA country coefficient which takes into account their performance in European competitions from 2003 04 to 2007 08 3 Below is the qualification scheme for the 2009 10 UEFA Europa League 4 Associations 1 6 each enter three teams Associations 7 9 each enter four teams Associations 10 51 each enter three teams except Liechtenstein it organises only a domestic cup competition and no domestic league competition Associations 52 53 plus Liechtenstein each enter one team The top three associations of the 2008 09 UEFA Fair Play ranking each gain an additional berth Moreover 33 teams eliminated from the 2009 10 UEFA Champions League are transferred to the Europa LeagueAssociation ranking edit Rank Association Coeff Teams Notes1 nbsp England 75 749 3 1 UCL 2 nbsp Spain 75 266 1 UCL 3 nbsp Italy 60 410 1 UCL 4 nbsp France 52 668 1 UCL 5 nbsp Germany 48 722 1 UCL 6 nbsp Russia 43 750 2 UCL 7 nbsp Romania 40 599 4 2 UCL 8 nbsp Portugal 39 927 1 UCL 9 nbsp Netherlands 38 213 1 UCL 10 nbsp Scotland 33 375 3 1 FP 1 UCL 11 nbsp Turkey 31 725 1 UCL 12 nbsp Ukraine 30 100 1 UCL 13 nbsp Belgium 26 700 2 UCL 14 nbsp Greece 25 831 1 UCL 15 nbsp Czech Republic 25 750 2 UCL 16 nbsp Switzerland 24 22517 nbsp Bulgaria 23 166 1 UCL 18 nbsp Norway 22 425 1 FP 1 UCL Rank Association Coeff Teams Notes19 nbsp Denmark 20 450 3 1 FP 1 UCL 20 nbsp Austria 17 700 1 UCL 21 nbsp Serbia 16 750 1 UCL 22 nbsp Israel 15 75023 nbsp Sweden 13 69124 nbsp Slovakia 12 332 1 UCL 25 nbsp Poland 12 04126 nbsp Hungary 11 99927 nbsp Croatia 11 624 1 UCL 28 nbsp Cyprus 10 08229 nbsp Slovenia 9 915 1 UCL 30 nbsp Finland 9 62331 nbsp Latvia 8 831 1 UCL 32 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 8 49833 nbsp Lithuania 7 99934 nbsp Moldova 7 499 1 UCL 35 nbsp Republic of Ireland 7 33236 nbsp Macedonia 6 331 Rank Association Coeff Teams Notes37 nbsp Iceland 5 999 338 nbsp Georgia 5 83139 nbsp Liechtenstein 5 500 140 nbsp Belarus 5 332 3 1 UCL 41 nbsp Estonia 4 332 1 UCL 42 nbsp Azerbaijan 3 832 1 UCL 43 nbsp Albania 3 66644 nbsp Armenia 3 66545 nbsp Kazakhstan 2 582 1 UCL 46 nbsp Northern Ireland 2 33247 nbsp Wales 2 33148 nbsp Faroe Islands 1 83249 nbsp Luxembourg 1 49850 nbsp Malta 0 83251 nbsp Montenegro 0 50052 nbsp Andorra 0 500 153 nbsp San Marino 0 250Notes FP Additional fair play berth Norway Denmark Scotland 5 UCL Additional teams transferred from the UEFA Champions LeagueDistribution edit Since the winners of the 2008 09 UEFA Cup Shakhtar Donetsk qualified for the 2009 10 UEFA Champions League through domestic performance the title holder spot reserved for them in the group stage was vacated As this was the first edition of the Europa League it was initially unknown whether UEFA would simply disregard the vacant title holder spot and rearrange entries so that one more team would qualify from the play off round or replace the title holders group stage place with that of the top ranked association s cup winner and move teams from lower rounds appropriately as the regulations are unclear on this matter 4 The former set up was confirmed by UEFA s official list of participants published on 16 June 2009 6 As a result the following changes to the default allocation system were made to compensate for the vacant title holder spot in the group stage 7 The domestic cup winners of associations 16 and 17 Switzerland and Bulgaria were promoted from the third qualifying round to the play off round The domestic cup winners of associations 28 and 29 Cyprus and Slovenia were promoted from the second qualifying round to the third qualifying round The domestic cup winners of associations 52 and 53 Andorra and San Marino and the domestic league runners up of associations 35 and 36 Republic of Ireland and Macedonia were promoted from the first qualifying round to the second qualifying round Teams entering in this round Teams advancing from previous round Teams transferred from Champions LeagueFirst qualifying round 46 teams 14 domestic league runners up from associations 37 51 except Liechtenstein 29 domestic league third placed teams from associations 22 51 except Liechtenstein 3 teams which qualified via Fair Play rankingsSecond qualifying round 80 teams 24 domestic cup winners from associations 30 53 18 domestic league runners up from associations 19 36 6 domestic league third placed teams from associations 16 21 6 domestic league fourth placed teams from associations 10 15 3 domestic league fifth placed teams from associations 7 9 23 winners from the first qualifying roundThird qualifying round 70 teams 12 domestic cup winners from associations 18 29 3 domestic league runners up from associations 16 18 6 domestic league third placed teams from associations 10 15 3 domestic league fourth placed teams from associations 7 9 3 domestic league fifth placed teams from associations 4 6 League Cup winners for France 3 domestic league sixth placed teams from associations 1 3 League Cup winners for England 40 winners from the second qualifying roundPlay off round 76 teams 17 domestic cup winners from associations 1 17 3 domestic league third placed teams from associations 7 9 3 domestic league fourth placed teams from associations 4 6 3 domestic league fifth placed teams from associations 1 3 35 winners from the third qualifying round 15 losers from the Champions League third qualifying roundGroup stage 48 teams 38 winners from the play off round 10 losers from the Champions League play off roundKnockout phase 32 teams 12 group winners from the group stage 12 group runners up from the group stage 8 third placed teams from the Champions League group stageRedistribution rules edit A Europa League place is vacated when a team qualify for both the Champions League and the Europa League or qualify for the Europa League by more than one method When a place is vacated it is redistributed within the national association by the following rules 4 When the domestic cup winners considered as the highest placed qualifier within the national association also qualify for the Champions League their Europa League place is vacated and the remaining Europa League qualifiers are moved up one place with the final place with the earliest starting round taken by the domestic cup runners up provided they do not already qualify for the Champions League or the Europa League Otherwise this place is taken by the highest placed league finisher which do not qualify for the Europa League yet When the domestic cup winners also qualify for the Europa League through league position their place through the league position is vacated and the Europa League qualifiers which finish lower in the league are moved up one place with the final place taken by the highest placed league finisher which do not qualify for the Europa League yet A place vacated by the League Cup winners is taken by the highest placed league finisher which do not qualify for the Europa League yet A Fair Play place is taken by the highest ranked team in the domestic Fair Play table which do not qualify for the Champions League or Europa League yet Teams edit The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round 6 CW Cup winners CR Cup runners up LC League Cup winners Nth League position P W End of season European competition play off winners FP Fair play UCL Relegated from the Champions League GS Third placed teams from the group stage PO Losers from the play off round Q3 Losers from the third qualifying roundRound of 32 nbsp Juventus UCL GS nbsp Wolfsburg UCL GS nbsp Marseille UCL GS nbsp Atletico Madrid UCL GS nbsp Liverpool UCL GS nbsp Rubin Kazan UCL GS nbsp Unirea Urziceni UCL GS nbsp Standard Liege UCL GS Group stage nbsp Timișoara UCL PO nbsp Sporting CP UCL PO nbsp Celtic UCL PO nbsp Anderlecht UCL PO nbsp Panathinaikos UCL PO nbsp Levski Sofia UCL PO nbsp Copenhagen UCL PO nbsp Red Bull Salzburg UCL PO nbsp Ventspils UCL PO nbsp Sheriff Tiraspol UCL PO Play off round nbsp Everton 5th nbsp Zenit St Petersburg 5th nbsp Racing Genk CW nbsp Maribor UCL Q3 nbsp Aston Villa 6th nbsp CFR Cluj CW nbsp AEK Athens 3rd nbsp BATE Borisov UCL Q3 nbsp Villarreal 5th nbsp Dinamo București 3rd nbsp Teplice CW nbsp Levadia UCL Q3 nbsp Valencia 6th nbsp Benfica 3rd nbsp Sion CW nbsp Baku UCL Q3 nbsp Lazio CW nbsp Nacional 4th nbsp Litex Lovech CW nbsp Aktobe UCL Q3 nbsp Genoa 5th nbsp Heerenveen CW nbsp Slavia Prague UCL Q3 nbsp Dynamo Moscow UCL Q3 nbsp Guingamp CW nbsp Ajax 3rd nbsp Stabaek UCL Q3 nbsp Twente UCL Q3 nbsp Toulouse 4th nbsp Hearts 3rd nbsp Partizan UCL Q3 nbsp Sivasspor UCL Q3 nbsp Werder Bremen CW nbsp Trabzonspor 3rd nbsp Slovan Bratislava UCL Q3 nbsp Shakhtar DonetskTH UCL Q3 nbsp Hertha BSC 4th nbsp Vorskla Poltava CW nbsp Dinamo Zagreb UCL Q3 nbsp Sparta Prague UCL Q3 nbsp Amkar Perm 4th Third qualifying round nbsp Fulham 7th nbsp PSV Eindhoven 4th nbsp CSKA Sofia 2nd nbsp IFK Goteborg CW nbsp Athletic Bilbao CR nbsp Aberdeen 4th nbsp Valerenga CW nbsp Kosice CW nbsp Roma 6th nbsp Fenerbahce 4th nbsp Fredrikstad 2nd nbsp Lech Poznan CW nbsp Lille 5th nbsp Metalist Kharkiv 3rd nbsp Odense 2nd nbsp Budapest Honved CW nbsp Hamburg 5th nbsp Club Brugge 3rd nbsp Austria Wien CW nbsp Hajduk Split 2nd nbsp Krylia Sovetov Samara 6th nbsp PAOK 4th nbsp Vojvodina 2nd nbsp APOP Kinyras CW nbsp Vaslui 5th nbsp Slovan Liberec 3rd nbsp Hapoel Tel Aviv 2nd Note ISR nbsp Interblock CW nbsp Braga 5th nbsp Young Boys 2nd Second qualifying round nbsp Steaua București 6th nbsp Sturm Graz 4th nbsp Skonto 3rd Note LVA nbsp Naftan Novopolotsk CW nbsp Pacos de Ferreira CR nbsp Red Star Belgrade 3rd nbsp Slavija CW nbsp Flora CW nbsp NAC Breda P W nbsp Sevojno CR nbsp Sarajevo 4th Note BIH nbsp Qarabag CW nbsp Falkirk CR nbsp Maccabi Netanya 4th Note ISR nbsp Suduva CW nbsp Flamurtari CW nbsp Galatasaray 5th nbsp Elfsborg 2nd nbsp Kaunas 2nd nbsp Gandzasar 3rd Note ARM nbsp Metalurh Donetsk 4th nbsp Zilina 2nd nbsp Dacia Chișinău 2nd nbsp Tobol 2nd nbsp AA Gent 4th nbsp Legia Warsaw 2nd nbsp Iskra Stal 3rd nbsp Crusaders CW nbsp AEL 5th nbsp Ujpest 2nd nbsp St Patrick s Athletic 2nd nbsp Bangor City CW nbsp Sigma Olomouc 4th nbsp Rijeka 3rd nbsp Derry City 3rd nbsp HB Torshavn 2nd nbsp Basel 3rd nbsp Omonia 2nd nbsp Rabotnicki CW nbsp Differdange 2nd nbsp Cherno More Varna 3rd nbsp Gorica 2nd nbsp Milano Kumanovo 2nd nbsp Sliema Wanderers CW nbsp Tromso 3rd nbsp HJK CW nbsp KR CW nbsp Petrovac CW nbsp Brondby 3rd nbsp Honka 2nd nbsp Dinamo Tbilisi CW nbsp FC Santa Coloma CW nbsp AaB CR nbsp Liepajas Metalurgs 2nd nbsp Vaduz CW nbsp Juvenes Dogana CW nbsp Rapid Wien 2nd First qualifying round nbsp Bnei Yehuda 5th Note ISR nbsp Zimbru Chișinău 4th nbsp Simurq 3rd nbsp B36 Torshavn 3rd nbsp Helsingborg 4th nbsp Sligo Rovers 4th nbsp Vllaznia 2nd nbsp NSI Runavik 4th nbsp Spartak Trnava 3rd nbsp Renova 3rd nbsp Dinamo Tirana 3rd nbsp Grevenmacher 3rd nbsp Polonia Warsaw 4th nbsp Keflavik 2nd nbsp Mika 4th Note ARM nbsp Kaerjeng 97 CR nbsp Haladas 3rd nbsp Fram 3rd nbsp Banants CR nbsp Birkirkara 2nd nbsp Slaven Belupo 4th nbsp Olimpi Rustavi 3rd nbsp Irtysh 3rd nbsp Valletta 3rd nbsp Anorthosis 3rd nbsp Zestaponi 4th nbsp Okzhetpes 9th Note KAZ nbsp Buducnost Podgorica 2nd nbsp Rudar Velenje 3rd nbsp Dinamo Minsk 2nd nbsp Linfield 2nd nbsp Sutjeska Niksic 3rd nbsp Lahti 3rd nbsp MTZ RIPO Minsk 3rd nbsp Lisburn Distillery 4th nbsp Rosenborg FP nbsp Dinaburg 4th Note LVA nbsp Narva Trans 3rd nbsp Llanelli 2nd nbsp Randers FP nbsp Siroki Brijeg 6th Note BIH nbsp Nomme Kalju 4th nbsp The New Saints 3rd nbsp Motherwell FP nbsp Vetra 3rd nbsp Inter Baku 2nd NotesTH Title Holder Shakhtar Donetsk qualified for the UEFA Champions League as the runner up of the 2008 09 Ukrainian Premier League After losing in the Champions League third qualifying round they entered the UEFA Europa League at the play off round Armenia ARM Ararat Yerevan which finished second in the 2008 Armenian Premier League did not obtain a UEFA license so Gandzasar which finished third were moved up to the second qualifying round while Mika which finished fourth took the first qualifying round spot Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Sloboda Tuzla which finished third in the 2008 09 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina did not obtain a UEFA license so Sarajevo which finished fourth were moved up to the second qualifying round Borac Banja Luka which finished fifth also did not obtain a UEFA license so Siroki Brijeg which finished sixth took the first qualifying round spot Israel ISR 2008 09 Israel State Cup winners Beitar Jerusalem which also finished third in the 2008 09 Israeli Premier League did not obtain a UEFA license Since Maccabi Haifa the cup runners up qualified for the Champions League as the league champions all three Israeli Europa League spots were redistributed based on league position with second placed Hapoel Tel Aviv moving up to the third qualifying round fourth placed Maccabi Netanya moving up to the second qualifying round and fifth placed Bnei Yehuda taking the first qualifying round spot Kazakhstan KAZ Almaty the 2008 Kazakhstan Cup runners up merged with Megasport to form Lokomotiv Astana However the new club did not obtain a UEFA license Following the denied license and withdrawal of three higher placed teams in the 2008 Kazakhstan Premier League Okzhetpes which finished ninth took the first qualifying round spot Latvia LVA Daugava Daugavpils the 2008 Latvian Football Cup winners merged with Dinaburg Skonto which finished third in the 2008 Latvian Higher League were moved up to the second qualifying round while Dinaburg which finished fourth took the first qualifying round spot Round and draw dates editAll draws held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon Switzerland unless stated otherwise 7 Phase Round Draw date First leg Second legQualifying First qualifying round 22 June 2009 2 July 2009 9 July 2009Second qualifying round 16 July 2009 23 July 2009Third qualifying round 17 July 2009 30 July 2009 6 August 2009Play off Play off round 7 August 2009 20 August 2009 27 August 2009Group stage Matchday 1 28 August 2009 Monaco 17 September 2009Matchday 2 1 October 2009Matchday 3 22 October 2009Matchday 4 5 November 2009Matchday 5 2 3 December 2009Matchday 6 16 17 December 2009Knockout phase Round of 32 18 December 2009 18 February 2010 25 February 2010Round of 16 11 March 2010 18 March 2010Quarter finals 19 March 2010 1 April 2010 8 April 2010Semi finals 22 April 2010 29 April 2010Final 12 May 2010 at Volksparkstadion HamburgQualifying rounds editMain article 2009 10 UEFA Europa League qualifying rounds In the qualifying phase and the play off round teams play against each other over two legs on a home and away basis The draw for the first and second qualifying rounds conducted by UEFA President Michel Platini and UEFA General Secretary David Taylor was held on 22 June 2009 and the draw for the third qualifying round conducted by UEFA Competitions Director Giorgio Marchetti and Head of Club Competitions Michael Heselschwerdt was held on 17 July 2009 For the draws clubs were separated into seeded and unseeded teams based on their club coefficient Because the draws for the second and third qualifying rounds took place before the previous round was completed the teams were seeded assuming the seeded side in the previous round would be victorious First qualifying round edit The first legs were played on 2 July and the second legs were played on 9 July 2009 Team 1 Agg Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd legSutjeska Niksic nbsp 2 3 nbsp MTZ RIPO Minsk 1 1 1 2 aet Lahti nbsp 4 3 nbsp Dinamo Tirana 4 1 0 2Grevenmacher nbsp 0 6 nbsp Vetra 0 3 0 3NSI Runavik nbsp 1 6 nbsp Rosenborg 0 3 1 3Haladas nbsp 2 2 a nbsp Irtysh 1 0 1 2Sligo Rovers nbsp 2 3 nbsp Vllaznia 1 2 1 1Olimpi Rustavi nbsp 4 0 nbsp B36 Torshavn 2 0 2 0Anorthosis Famagusta nbsp 7 1 nbsp Kaerjeng 97 5 0 2 1Slaven Belupo nbsp 1 0 nbsp Birkirkara 1 0 0 0Zimbru Chișinău nbsp 3 2 nbsp Okzhetpes 1 2 2 0Lisburn Distillery nbsp 1 11 nbsp Zestaponi 1 5 0 6Helsingborg nbsp 4 2 nbsp Mika 3 1 1 1Valletta nbsp 5 2 nbsp Keflavik 3 0 2 2Dinaburg nbsp 2 1 nbsp Nomme Kalju 2 1 0 0Buducnost Podgorica nbsp 1 2 nbsp Polonia Warsaw 0 2 1 0Narva Trans nbsp 1 6 nbsp Rudar Velenje 0 3 1 3Motherwell nbsp 3 1 nbsp Llanelli 0 1 3 0Banants nbsp 1 2 nbsp Siroki Brijeg 0 2 1 0Spartak Trnava nbsp 5 2 nbsp Inter Baku 2 1 3 1Dinamo Minsk nbsp 3 2 nbsp Renova 2 1 1 1Randers nbsp 7 0 nbsp Linfield 4 0 3 0Simurq nbsp 0 4 nbsp Bnei Yehuda 0 1 0 3Fram nbsp 4 2 nbsp The New Saints 2 1 2 1 Order of legs reversed after original draw Second qualifying round edit The first legs were played on 14 and 16 July and the second legs were played on 23 July 2009 Both the first and second legs between Bnei Yehuda and Dinaburg and between Rapid Wien and Vllaznia were under investigation by UEFA and German authorities for possible match fixing 8 Team 1 Agg Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd legRosenborg nbsp 0 1 nbsp Qarabag 0 0 0 1Zimbru Chișinău nbsp 0 1 nbsp Pacos de Ferreira 0 0 0 1Juvenes Dogana nbsp 0 5 nbsp Polonia Warsaw 0 1 0 4Sturm Graz nbsp 3 2 nbsp Siroki Brijeg 2 1 1 1Basel nbsp 7 1 nbsp FC Santa Coloma 3 0 4 1Honka nbsp 3 0 nbsp Bangor City 2 0 1 0MSK Zilina nbsp 3 0 nbsp Dacia Chișinău 2 0 1 0Anorthosis nbsp 3 4 nbsp Petrovac 2 1 1 3 aet St Patrick s Athletic nbsp 2 1 nbsp Valletta 1 1 1 0Omonia nbsp 8 1 nbsp HB Torshavn 4 0 4 1Gorica nbsp 1 2 nbsp Lahti 1 0 0 2Sigma Olomouc nbsp 3 1 nbsp Fram 1 1 2 0Legia Warsaw nbsp 4 0 nbsp Olimpi Rustavi 3 0 1 0Falkirk nbsp 1 2 nbsp Vaduz 1 0 0 2 aet Elfsborg nbsp 3 0 nbsp Haladas 3 0 0 0Rapid Wien nbsp 8 0 nbsp Vllaznia 5 0 3 0Naftan Novopolotsk nbsp 2 2 a nbsp Gent 2 1 0 1Liepajas Metalurgs nbsp 3 4 nbsp Dinamo Tbilisi 2 1 1 3Differdange nbsp 1 3 nbsp Rijeka 1 0 0 3Suduva nbsp 1 2 nbsp Randers 0 1 1 1Vetra nbsp 3 2 nbsp HJK 0 1 3 1Milano nbsp 2 12 nbsp Slaven Belupo 0 4 2 8Dinamo Minsk nbsp 1 4 nbsp Tromso 0 0 1 4KR nbsp 3 1 nbsp AEL 2 0 1 1Brondby nbsp 4 2 nbsp Flora Tallinn 0 1 4 1AaB nbsp 1 3 nbsp Slavija 0 0 1 3Steaua București nbsp 4 1 nbsp Ujpest 2 0 2 1Metalurh Donetsk nbsp 5 1 nbsp MTZ RIPO Minsk 3 0 2 1Crusaders nbsp 3 5 nbsp Rabotnicki 1 1 2 4Bnei Yehuda nbsp 5 0 nbsp Dinaburg 4 0 1 0NAC Breda nbsp 8 0 nbsp Gandzasar 6 0 2 0Cherno More Varna nbsp 4 0 nbsp Iskra Stal 1 0 3 0Sevojno nbsp 1 1 a nbsp Kaunas 0 0 1 1Flamurtari nbsp 2 8 nbsp Motherwell 1 0 1 8Zestaponi nbsp 3 4 nbsp Helsingborg 1 2 2 2 aet Skonto nbsp 1 2 nbsp Derry City 1 1 0 1Sliema Wanderers nbsp 0 3 nbsp Maccabi Netanya 0 0 0 3Tobol nbsp 1 3 nbsp Galatasaray 1 1 0 2Rudar Velenje nbsp 0 5 nbsp Red Star Belgrade 0 1 0 4Sarajevo nbsp 2 1 nbsp Spartak Trnava 1 0 1 1 Order of legs reversed after original draw Third qualifying round edit The first legs were played on 28 and 30 July and the second legs were played on 4 and 6 August 2009 The first leg between Fenerbahce and Budapest Honved and the second leg between Interblock Ljubljana and Metalurh Donetsk were under investigation by UEFA and German authorities for possible match fixing 8 Team 1 Agg Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd legHelsingborg nbsp 3 3 4 5 p nbsp Sarajevo 2 1 1 2 aet Fredrikstad nbsp 3 7 nbsp Lech Poznan 1 6 2 1Rijeka nbsp 1 4 nbsp Metalist Kharkiv 1 2 0 2Roma nbsp 10 2 nbsp Gent 3 1 7 1Vaslui nbsp 3 1 nbsp Omonia 2 0 1 1Slavija nbsp 1 5 nbsp Kosice 0 2 1 3IFK Goteborg nbsp 2 4 nbsp Hapoel Tel Aviv 1 3 1 1PSV Eindhoven nbsp 2 0 nbsp Cherno More Varna 1 0 1 0Metalurh Donetsk nbsp 5 0 nbsp Interblock 2 0 3 0Valerenga nbsp 2 2 a nbsp PAOK 1 2 1 0Rapid Wien nbsp 4 3 nbsp APOP Kinyras 2 1 2 2 aet Honka nbsp 1 3 nbsp Qarabag 0 1 1 2Vaduz nbsp 0 3 nbsp Slovan Liberec 0 1 0 2St Patrick s Athletic nbsp 3 3 a nbsp Krylia Sovetov 1 0 2 3Randers nbsp 1 4 nbsp Hamburg 0 4 1 0Tromso nbsp 4 1 nbsp Slaven Belupo 2 1 2 0Brondby nbsp 3 3 a nbsp Legia Warsaw 1 1 2 2Vojvodina nbsp 3 5 nbsp Austria Wien 1 1 2 4CSKA Sofia nbsp 2 1 nbsp Derry City 1 0 1 1Steaua București nbsp 6 1 nbsp Motherwell 3 0 3 1MSK Zilina nbsp 2 1 nbsp Hajduk Split 1 1 1 0Braga nbsp 1 4 nbsp Elfsborg 1 2 0 2Aberdeen nbsp 1 8 nbsp Sigma Olomouc 1 5 0 3Rabotnicki nbsp 3 7 nbsp Odense 3 4 0 3Sevojno nbsp 0 4 nbsp Lille 0 2 0 2Petrovac nbsp 1 7 nbsp Sturm Graz 1 2 0 5Fenerbahce nbsp 6 2 nbsp Budapest Honved 5 1 1 1Bnei Yehuda nbsp 2 0 nbsp Pacos de Ferreira 1 0 1 0Club Brugge nbsp 4 3 nbsp Lahti 3 2 1 1Athletic Bilbao nbsp 2 2 a nbsp Young Boys 0 1 2 1KR nbsp 3 5 nbsp Basel 2 2 1 3Maccabi Netanya nbsp 1 10 nbsp Galatasaray 1 4 0 6Dinamo Tbilisi nbsp 4 5 nbsp Red Star Belgrade 2 0 2 5Polonia Warsaw span data cla, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.