2003/04: Defence is key for Valencia
Tuesday 1 June 2004Valencia CF 2-0 Olympique de Marseille
(Vicente 45p, Mista 58)
Ullevi Stadium, Gothenburg
Fittingly in a season when defences dominated, Valencia CF full-back Benito Carboni, at the age of 39 years and 43 days, became the oldest player to win a European final. Vicente Rodríguez and Mista may have scored the goals in the Gothenburg final to defeat Olympique de Marseille 2-0, but it was the unsung defender that most epitomized Rafael Benítez's disciplined side.
Gençlerbirligi surprise
Valencia conceded just five goals in 13 matches en route to lifting the trophy, losing once in the process, to the season's surprise package, Gençlerbirligi SK. The unheralded Turkish side had overcome Blackburn Rovers FC, Sporting Clube de Portugal and Parma FC but an extra-time goal from Vicente saw Valencia through in a tight fourth-round tie. FC Girondins de Bordeaux were Valencia's next victims before compatriots Villarreal CF succumbed to a Mista strike, the only goal over two legs, in the semi-finals.
Drogba goals
Marseille, who came into the competition after finishing third in their UEFA Champions League group, also based their success on a miserly defence, with Ivory Coast striker Didier Drogba providing the firepower up front. Drogba scored six goals in the four rounds against FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, Liverpool FC, Internazionale FC and Newcastle United FC as José Anigo's side advanced imperiously to the final, backed by a rearguard that allowed just two goals, both against Liverpool.
Valencia double
OM's vaunted three-man defence had kept both Inter and Newcastle out, but Valencia would have no such trouble. Veteran goalkeeper Fabien Barthez, the French club’s sole survivor from their 1993 UEFA Champions League triumph, was sent off shortly before half-time, and once Vicente had converted the subsequent penalty, there was no stopping Los Ché adding to the Spanish crown they had captured days before.
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