Saturday, December 3, 2016

European Champion Clubs' Cup (UEFA Champions League) 1982/1983 Final Hamburger SV - Juventus FC

The 1982–83 season of the European Cup football club tournament was won for the first time by Hamburg, who beat Juventus 1–0 in the final at Athens' Olympic Stadium.
It was the first time since 1976 that the trophy did not go to a club from England. Aston Villa, the defending champions, were eliminated by Juventus in the quarter-finals. Liverpool, the other English side in the tournament, were defeated by Polish champions Widzew Lodz, also in the quarter-finals.
The 1983 European Cup Final was a football match held at the Olympic StadiumAthens, on 25 May 1983, that saw Hamburg of Germany defeat Juventus of Italy 1–0. A single goal from Felix Magath eight minutes into the game was enough for Hamburg to claim their first European Cup title.




Downloads

Sunday, November 27, 2016

European Champion Clubs' Cup (UEFA Champions League) 1978/1979 Final Nottingham Forest - Malmö FF

The 1979 European Cup Final was a football match held at the OlympiastadionMunich, on 30 May 1979 (the venue was decided in Bern by the UEFA Executive Committee on 27 September 1978). It saw Nottingham Forestof England defeat Malmö FF of Sweden 1–0. The win represented a third successive victory for an English side in the European Cup after Liverpool's victories in 1977 and 1978.
The competition had provided many great stories and had thrown up a final that no-one could have predicted when it had started the previous August. Unfortunately, with two of their best players – midfielder Bo Larsson and defender Roy Andersson – already ruled out with injury and with their captain and key midfielder – Staffan Tapper – breaking his toe in training on the eve of the final, Malmö FF resorted to the same defensive tactics that Belgian team Club Brugeshad used at Wembley in the final twelve months earlier. With neither of the finalists being one of Europe’s major clubs, Munich’s Olympiastadion was far from full for the Final, and the game itself was something of an anti-climax. There was, however, one memorable story still to be told. Back in February, Brian Clough had elected to spend the money that Forest had made from winning the league title in 1978 on a forward from Birmingham City. Clough made Trevor Francis Britain’s first £1 million footballer when he took him to Nottingham, but UEFA rules stipulated that he could not play European football for another three months. The first game that Francis was eligible for, therefore, was the final itself and, with Martin O'Neill injured and Archie Gemmill not selected by Clough, Francis was picked to play his first ever European club game, albeit out on the right wing.
With Malmö FF sitting back in defence, the game was merely about whether Forest could break through. Despite constant pressure, the English side had still failed to score as first half injury time began, but then John Robertson, a man who was now one of the most feared wingers in European football, beat two Swedish defenders on the left hand side before whipping in a cross. Goalkeeper Jan Möller, who had been solid up to this point, did not come out to clear the ball, and at the far post was none other than Trevor Francis to head the ball into the roof of the net.
And that was effectively the end of the match. Both Garry Birtles and Robertson missed good chances in the second half, but it did not matter, as Malmö FF never looked likely to score.
It may have been an unremarkable final, but it was certainly the end to a remarkable story. Under their maverick manager Brian CloughNottingham Forest, a relatively small English provincial club, had won European club football’s biggest prize. In a competition that had started with the likes of Real MadridJuventusand Liverpool taking part, it was Nottingham Forest who had run out winners, even knocking the current holders Liverpool (who had won the last two finals) in the first round. They had shown what man management and teamwork could achieve and they would be back the following season to defend their title, although Europe’s finest would be there to challenge them and they were unlikely to capitulate so easily next time around.

Downloads

1st Half:
http://rapidgator.net/file/efe86ca528faafbf6aee6d1a6995eb7f/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_1st_Half_[MYR].zip.001.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/06ae7b6f8de0aa66bf35c744b7a48f3c/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_1st_Half_[MYR].zip.002.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/d5eba584b09679bd1d69322398094930/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_1st_Half_[MYR].zip.003.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/59fd66e3d6e550acd5fde42ca7b1effb/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_1st_Half_[MYR].zip.004.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/b7074913a6535f0689b196a445cba1dc/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_1st_Half_[MYR].zip.005.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/a1c2b3ea3e1194d9dab612542d34cd4d/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_1st_Half_[MYR].zip.006.html


2nd Half:
http://rapidgator.net/file/9691cbb3e32b3a8f257bcf5f89caf1d2/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.001.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/5e7859c70e444ae85298a3afc600bfb4/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.002.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/a9ed3468c07e2346f31c337055a32d20/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.003.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/2fa6a60892bc2c634dc1eda35eaad2db/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.004.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/a10caafe0ab7c0790b035dd617ea365b/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.005.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/621340cc522ea4f041d54084ae6a2c53/1979_UCL_final_Malmo_FF_-_Nottingham_Forest_FC_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.006.html



Size: 3.92 Gb
Video: mkv, 720p, H264, 5000kbps, 25fps,.
Audio: MP3, 128kbps, 2 ch.
Totall duration: 1h 46m 48s
Comments:
01 English
02 German


Screenshots:




Sunday, October 16, 2016

UEFA Champions League 2005/2006 Final FC Barcelona - Arsenal FC

The 2006 UEFA Champions League Final was an association football match between Barcelona of Spain and Arsenal of England at the Stade de France in Saint-DenisParis, France, on Wednesday, 17 May 2006. It was the final match of the 2005–06 season of Europe's primary cup competition, the UEFA Champions League. Barcelona were appearing in their fifth final, having won the competition once in1992, and lost the other three finals. Arsenal were appearing in the final for the first time and in doing so became the first club from London to feature in the final.
Each club needed to progress through the group stage and knockout rounds to reach the final, playing 12 matches in total. Barcelona won their group and progressed to the final after beating ChelseaBenficaand Milan, respectively. Arsenal won their group to move into the knockout stage, and progressed without conceding a goal against Real MadridJuventus and Villarreal, respectively.
A crowd of 79,500 watched Arsenal's Jens Lehmann sent off early in the game. However they took the lead through Sol Campbell towards the end of the first half. The game turned with the 61st minute introduction of Henrik Larsson as a Barcelona substitute. Larsson provided two assists, one for each of Samuel Eto'o and Juliano Belletti. The 2–1 victory was Barcelona's second triumph in the competition 14 years after they won the European Cup in 1992.
Opening ceremony:


Downloads

1st Half:
Archive part 1 - http://kaitect.com/233f
Archive part 2 - http://kaitect.com/1ufu
Archive part 3 - http://kaitect.com/1ugV
Archive part 4 - http://kaitect.com/1uh3


2nd Half:
Archive part 1 - http://kaitect.com/1uhj
Archive part 2 - http://kaitect.com/1uiC
Archive part 3 - http://kaitect.com/1uiX
Archive part 4 - http://kaitect.com/1uiq
Archive part 5 - http://kaitect.com/1ukY


Size: 6.24 Gb
Video: mkv, 720p, H264, 5000kbps, 25fps,.
Audio: MP3, 128kbps, 2 ch.
Totall duration: 2h 11m 23s
Comments:
01 Stadium sound
02 Ukrainian
03 Russian
04 Spanish
05 English
06 German
07 Italian
08 Arabic
09 Hungarian
10 Spanish
11 Spanish
12 Spanish
13 English
14 Russian

Screenshots:




Tuesday, September 20, 2016

UEFA Champions League 2000/2001 Final FC Bayern Munich - Valencia CF

The 2001 UEFA Champions League Final was a football match that took place at San Siro in MilanItaly, on 23 May 2001, to decide the winner of the 2000–01 UEFA Champions League. The match pitted Bayern Munich against Valencia. The match finished in a 1–1 draw, but Bayern clinched their fourth title by winning 5–4 on penalties. This was also their first European Cup title in a quarter-century, also representing Valencia's second consecutive final defeat (2000 and 2001). Due to all the goals scored by penalties and the penalty shootout needed to decide the winner, this UEFA Champions League match became an "all-penalty" final and the only one ever to happen to this day. The 2001 final saw the two previous seasons' losing finalists clash, Bayern Munich lost to Manchester United in the 1999 final and Valencia lost to Real Madrid in the 2000 final.
This was the sixth European Cup final to be decided on penalties, and the second under the Champions League format. This was Héctor Cúper's third consecutive European final defeat (after his Mallorca side lost the 1999 Cup Winners' Cup Final and Valencia lost to Real Madrid in the 2000 Champions League final) while Ottmar Hitzfeld claimed his second Champions League title after he won it with Borussia Dortmund in 1997. He became the second coach in European Cup history, after Ernst Happel, to win the competition with two clubs.

Opening ceremony:

Downloads

1st Half:
2nd Half:
https://mega.nz/#!y5h1EBDA!_nI4RNVz0k2SEKqQjDrL-hL2MPGwfZTymddYLTbmBmg


Extra time & penalty:
https://mega.nz/#!NBwgFCIY!i3FqEI9Vl8AF_fY2zafSOJS0bmfL2_r8wZXK50asx9c


Size:  8.02 Gb
Video: mkv, 720p, H264, 5000kbps, 25fps,.
Audio: MP3, 128kbps, 2 ch.
Totall duration: 3h 17m 47s
Comments:
01 Stadium sound
02 Russian
03 German
04 Spanish
05 Hungarian
06 Russian

Screenshots:




Tuesday, September 6, 2016

UEFA European Championship 2016 Final Portugal - France

The UEFA Euro 2016 Final was a football match that took place on 10 July 2016 at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, France, to determine the winners of UEFA Euro 2016Portugal defeated the hosts and two-time winners France 1–0 after extra time, with a goal from substitute Éder, to claim their first-ever major trophy. In doing so, they became the tenth nation to win the UEFA European Championship, 12 years after losing theirfirst final at home in 2004. France became the second host team to lose the final, after Portugal in 2004, and suffered their first defeat at a major tournament hosted in the country since the 1960 European Nations' Cupthird-place playoff against Czechoslovakia.
As the winners, Portugal gained entry into their first-ever FIFA Confederations Cup, to be played in Russia in 2017.
France had previously played in two European Championship finals, winning against Spain in 1984 on home soil, and via golden goal against Italy in the Netherlands in 2000. Portugal had played in one prior final, losing to Greece in their own country in 2004.
The two teams had previously met 24 times, starting in 1926 when France won 4–2 in Toulouse. Before the final, France had won 18 of those meetings, Portugal 5, and 1 draw. Portugal's last victory was in a 1975 friendly in France, after which France won all ten of the subsequent meetings. All three of their competitive meetings – in the semi-finals of Euro 1984Euro 2000, and the 2006 FIFA World Cup – had been French victories.

Downloads

1st Half:

2nd Half:


Size: 9.97 Gb
Video: mkv, 720p, H264, 5000kbps, 50fps,.
Audio: MP3, 128kbps, 2 ch.
Totall duration: 3h 05m 33s
Comments:
01 Stadium sound
02 Ukrainian
03 Russian
04 Portuguese
05 French
06 English
07 Spanish
08 German
09 Italian
10 Belarusian
11 French
12 English
13 English
14 English
15 Russian
16 Spanish
17 Spanish
18 German

Screenshots:




Monday, August 8, 2016

European Champion Clubs' Cup (UEFA Champions League) 1975/1976 Final FC Bayern Munich - AS Saint-Étienne

The 1976 European Cup Final was a football match held at Hampden ParkGlasgow, on 12 May 1976, that saw Bayern Munich of West Germany defeat Saint-Étienne of France 1–0.
The match took place at Hampden Park in Glasgow, a city that already had seen Saint-Étienne defeat local team Rangers during the competition. Les Verts were playing against Bayern Munich, a team that was hoping to win a third consecutive European Cup.
The game began with Gerd Müller finding the back of the net after fine preparatorial work by Bernd Dürnberger who won the ball in his own half and went on a 50-metre solo run. But his effort was disallowed by the referee for offside by the Hungarian referee Károly Palotai; a decision that may well deemed too harsh when reviewed with the benefit of televisual slow motion. After this Saint-Étienne were more and more confident but Franz Roth was keeping an eye on Jean-Michel Larqué, the team captain. In the 37th minute, Uli Hoeneß shot but it did not worry goalkeeper Ivan Ćurković. Saint-Étienne had plenty of chances to score though, at the 34th minute Dominique Bathenay's shot hit the crossbar, with Bayern's keeper Sepp Maier beaten. Five minutes later, Jacques Santini connected with a cross from Christian Sarramagna, but shot went just wide of the goalpost. After the final, French people called Hampden Park's goalposts "les poteaux carrés" (English: the square posts).[1] This bad luck had influence on Saint-Étienne's players, and Bayern Munich would have been satisfied that they were still on terms at the break.
After the start of the 2nd half, Bayern Munich were more confident. In the 57th minute, Franz Beckenbauer passed to Gerd Müller, who was tackled by Osvaldo Piazza and the referee gave a free-kick to the German team from twenty metres just left of the semicircle. Franz Beckenbauer tipped the ball to Roth on his right who scored half high into the left side of the goal. After this, les Verts tried everything. Robert Herbin chose to substitute Christian Sarramagna for Dominique Rocheteau but to no avail.
At the end of the match, Saint-Étienne's players were crying, because they felt that they had been unlucky, but their supporters (at least 25,000 in Glasgow, plus 20,000 supportive and sympathetic Scots) were congratulating them, and their return in France was heroic, even though they were defeated.

Downloads

1st Half:



2nd Half:
http://rapidgator.net/file/37d6940e9e889b2644c949f89c7e5845/1976_UCL_final_FC_Bayern_Munich_-_AS_Saint-Etienne_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.001.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/92de4bca7d2a3d3d8c8495dc3d22b23c/1976_UCL_final_FC_Bayern_Munich_-_AS_Saint-Etienne_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.002.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/da35215babd42327eef3c50ef84b337b/1976_UCL_final_FC_Bayern_Munich_-_AS_Saint-Etienne_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.003.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/206bfbb196cbd2f322da9b1ddd5af368/1976_UCL_final_FC_Bayern_Munich_-_AS_Saint-Etienne_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.004.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/0bcd6e7ab605625f293d5069538cc6e6/1976_UCL_final_FC_Bayern_Munich_-_AS_Saint-Etienne_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.005.html
http://rapidgator.net/file/b3922bdb7de13236a8ed29f2c4248998/1976_UCL_final_FC_Bayern_Munich_-_AS_Saint-Etienne_2nd_Half_[MYR].zip.006.html





Size: 3.77 Gb
Video: mkv, 720p, H264, 5000kbps, 25fps,.
Audio: MP3, 128kbps, 2 ch.
Totall duration: 1h 37m 56s
Comments:
01 Stadium sound
02 German
03 French
04 English


Screenshots: