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2010–11 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round

This article details the 2010–11 UEFA Champions League qualifying phase and play-off round.

There were two paths:

Each tie was played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that had the higher aggregate score over the two legs progressed to the next round. In the event that aggregate scores finished level, the away goals rule was applied, i.e., the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs progressed. If away goals were also equal, then 30 minutes of extra time were played, divided into two 15-minute halves. The away goals rule is again applied after extra time, i.e., if there were goals scored during extra time and the aggregate score was still level, the visiting team qualified by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the tie was decided via a penalty shoot-out.

All times are CEST (UTC+2).

Round and draw dates

All draws held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.[1]

Teams

Below are the 54 teams (39 in Champions Path, 15 in Non-Champions path) that were involved in the qualifying phase and play-off round, grouped by their starting rounds.[2] The ten winners of the play-off round (five in Champions Path, five in Non-Champions Path) qualified for the group stage to join the 22 automatic qualifiers. The losing teams from the third qualifying round and the play-off round entered the Europa League play-off round and the group stage, respectively.[3]

In each round, teams were seeded based on their 2010 UEFA club coefficients.[4] Prior to the draw, UEFA could form "groups" in accordance with the principles set by the Club Competitions Committee, but they were purely for convenience of the draw and did not resemble any real groupings in the sense of the competition, while ensuring that teams from the same association were not drawn against each other.

Champions Path

Non-Champions Path

First qualifying round

Seeding

Summary

Notes
  1. ^
    Match originally postponed due to bad pitch conditions caused by heavy rain. FC Santa Coloma suggested an alternative on 30 June, but UEFA awarded Birkirkara a 3–0 away win on 1 July.[5]

Matches

Stadio Olimpico, Serravalle
Attendance: 681
Referee: Alan Mario Sant (Malta)
Stadion Pod Goricom, Podgorica[note 1]
Attendance: 400
Referee: Ghennadi Sidenco (Moldova)

Rudar Pljevlja won 7–1 on aggregate.


Birkirkara won 7–3 on aggregate. The first leg was cancelled and awarded 3–0 to Birkirkara.

Second qualifying round

Seeding

Notes
  1. Winners of the previous qualifying round whose identity was not known at the time of the draw. Teams in italics defeated a team with a higher coefficient in the previous qualifying round, thus effectively taking the coefficient of their defeated opponent in the draw for this round.

Summary

Matches

Daugava Stadium, Liepāja
Attendance: 3,300
Referee: René Eisner (Austria)
Generali Arena, Prague
Attendance: 8,025
Referee: Marijo Strahonja (Croatia)

Sparta Prague won 5–0 on aggregate.


Poladi Stadium, Rustavi
Attendance: 4,200
Referee: Alexandru Deaconu (Romania)

Aktobe won 3–1 on aggregate.


Kadriorg Stadium, Tallinn
Attendance: 1,800
Referee: Aleksei Kulbakov (Belarus)

Debrecen won 4–3 on aggregate.


Stadion FK Partizan, Belgrade
Attendance: 11,134
Referee: Tommy Skjerven (Norway)

Partizan won 4–1 on aggregate.


Tofik Bakhramov Stadium, Baku[note 2]
Attendance: 7,000
Referee: Sascha Kever (Switzerland)
Stadion Miejski, Poznań
Attendance: 13,700
Referee: Milorad Mažić (Serbia)

1–1 on aggregate; Lech Poznań won on penalties.


Stadion Maksimir, Zagreb
Attendance: 10,000
Referee: Thorsten Kinhöfer (Germany)
Stadion Športni Park, Nova Gorica[note 3]
Attendance: 720
Referee: Luca Banti (Italy)

Dinamo Zagreb won 5–4 on aggregate.


Lovech Stadium, Lovech
Attendance: 6,970
Referee: Pavel Olšiak (Slovakia)
Stadion Pod Goricom, Podgorica[note 1]
Attendance: 2,137
Referee: Stanislav Sukhina (Russia)

Litex Lovech won 5–0 on aggregate.


Centenary Stadium, Ta' Qali
Attendance: 600
Referee: Simon Lee Evans (Wales)

Žilina won 3–1 on aggregate.


Qemal Stafa Stadium, Tirana[note 4]
Attendance: 3,000
Referee: Leontios Trattou (Cyprus)

Sheriff Tiraspol won 3–2 on aggregate.


Hapoel Tel Aviv won 6–0 on aggregate.


GSP Stadium, Nicosia
Attendance: 13,400
Referee: Libor Kovařík (Czech Republic)
Philip II Arena, Skopje[note 6]
Attendance: 600
Referee: Duarte Gomes (Portugal)

Omonia won 5–0 on aggregate.


Red Bull Arena, Wals-Siezenheim
Attendance: 9,100
Referee: Igor Satchi (Moldova)
Gundadalur, Tórshavn
Attendance: 250
Referee: Tony Asumaa (Finland)

Red Bull Salzburg won 5–1 on aggregate.


Dalymount Park, Dublin
Attendance: 2,500
Referee: Bas Nijhuis (Netherlands)
Park Hall, Oswestry
Attendance: 1,056
Referee: István Vad (Hungary)

The New Saints won 4–1 on aggregate.


City Stadium, Borisov
Attendance: 5,200
Referee: Anastassios Kakos (Greece)

BATE Borisov won 6–1 on aggregate.


Råsunda Stadium, Solna
Attendance: 11,515
Referee: Hubert Siejewicz (Poland)
Stade de la Frontière, Esch-sur-Alzette
Attendance: 1,568
Referee: Huw Jones (Wales)

AIK won 1–0 on aggregate.


Windsor Park, Belfast
Attendance: 1,800
Referee: Saïd Ennjimi (France)

Rosenborg won 2–0 on aggregate.


Finnair Stadium, Helsinki
Attendance: 6,030
Referee: Dougie McDonald (Scotland)

HJK won 2–1 on aggregate.

Third qualifying round

Seeding

Notes
  1. Winners of the previous qualifying round whose identity was not known at the time of the draw. Teams in italics defeated a team with a higher coefficient in the previous qualifying round, thus effectively taking the coefficient of their defeated opponent in the draw for this round.

Summary

Matches

Generali Arena, Prague
Attendance: 14,588
Referee: Paolo Tagliavento (Italy)
Stadion Miejski, Poznań
Attendance: 13,200
Referee: Fredy Fautrel (France)

Sparta won 2–0 on aggregate.


Aktobe Central Stadium, Aktobe
Attendance: 12,100
Referee: Sascha Kever (Switzerland)

Hapoel Tel Aviv won 3–2 on aggregate.


Sheriff Stadium, Tiraspol
Attendance: 9,150
Referee: Anastassios Kakos (Greece)

2–2 on aggregate; Sheriff Tiraspol won on penalties.


Lovech Stadium, Lovech
Attendance: 5,920
Referee: Kristinn Jakobsson (Iceland)

Žilina won 4–2 on aggregate.


Szusza Ferenc Stadion, Budapest[note 7]
Attendance: 6,500
Referee: César Muñiz Fernández (Spain)
St. Jakob-Park, Basel
Attendance: 17,376
Referee: Vladislav Bezborodov (Russia)

Basel won 5–1 on aggregate.


Råsunda Stadium, Solna
Attendance: 16,768
Referee: Thorsten Kinhöfer (Germany)

Rosenborg won 4–0 on aggregate.


Stadion FK Partizan, Belgrade
Attendance: 14,300
Referee: Alon Yefet (Israel)

Partizan won 5–1 on aggregate.


Racecourse Ground, Wrexham[note 8]
Attendance: 2,486
Referee: Darko Čeferin (Slovenia)

Anderlecht won 6–1 on aggregate.


City Stadium, Borisov
Attendance: 5,300
Referee: Alexandru Tudor (Romania)
Parken Stadium, Copenhagen
Attendance: 15,533
Referee: Mark Clattenburg (England)

Copenhagen won 3–2 on aggregate.


GSP Stadium, Nicosia
Attendance: 16,777
Referee: István Vad (Hungary)

Red Bull Salzburg won 5–2 on aggregate.


Amsterdam Arena, Amsterdam
Attendance: 24,151
Referee: Tony Chapron (France)

4–4 on aggregate; Ajax won on away goals.


Jules Ottenstadion, Ghent
Attendance: 6,049
Referee: Cüneyt Çakır (Turkey)

Dynamo Kyiv won 6–1 on aggregate.


Stade de Suisse, Bern
Attendance: 19,091
Referee: Svein Oddvar Moen (Norway)

Young Boys won 3–2 on aggregate.


Estádio Municipal, Braga
Attendance: 12,295
Referee: Serge Gumienny (Belgium)
Celtic Park, Glasgow
Attendance: 53,592
Referee: Ivan Bebek (Croatia)

Braga won 4–2 on aggregate.


Stadionul Steaua, Bucharest[note 9]
Attendance: 12,000
Referee: Bruno Paixão (Portugal)

Zenit Saint Petersburg won 1–0 on aggregate.

Play-off round

Seeding

Summary

Matches

Bloomfield Stadium, Tel Aviv
Attendance: 13,348
Referee: Pieter Vink (Netherlands)

Hapoel Tel Aviv won 4–3 on aggregate.


Lerkendal Stadion, Trondheim
Attendance: 18,822
Referee: Gianluca Rocchi (Italy)
Parken Stadium, Copenhagen
Attendance: 31,180
Referee: Felix Brych (Germany)

2–2 on aggregate; Copenhagen won on away goals.


St. Jakob-Park, Basel
Attendance: 13,460
Referee: Terje Hauge (Norway)
Sheriff Stadium, Tiraspol
Attendance: 12,300
Referee: Martin Hansson (Sweden)

Basel won 4–0 on aggregate.


Generali Arena, Prague
Attendance: 18,744
Referee: Martin Atkinson (England)

Žilina won 3–0 on aggregate.


4–4 on aggregate; Partizan won on penalties.


Stade de Suisse, Bern
Attendance: 30,166
Referee: Frank De Bleeckere (Belgium)
White Hart Lane, London
Attendance: 34,709
Referee: Laurent Duhamel (France)

Tottenham won 6–3 on aggregate.


Estádio Municipal, Braga
Attendance: 16,646
Referee: Wolfgang Stark (Germany)

Braga won 5–3 on aggregate.


Weserstadion, Bremen
Attendance: 25,276
Referee: Stéphane Lannoy (France)
Stadio Luigi Ferraris, Genoa
Attendance: 27,574
Referee: Viktor Kassai (Hungary)

Werder Bremen won 5–4 on aggregate.


Auxerre won 2–1 on aggregate.


Ajax won 3–2 on aggregate.

Notes

  1. ^ a b Rudar Pljevlja played their home games in Podgorica at Stadion Pod Goricom as their own Stadion Gradski did not meet UEFA criteria.
  2. ^ Played in Baku at Tofik Bakhramov Stadium as Inter Baku's Shafa Stadium did not meet UEFA criteria.
  3. ^ Played in Nova Gorica at Stadion Športni Park as Koper's Bonifika Stadium did not meet UEFA criteria.
  4. ^ Played in Tirana at Qemal Stafa Stadium as Dinamo Tirana's Selman Stërmasi Stadium did not meet UEFA criteria.
  5. ^ Played in Sarajevo at Asim Ferhatović Hase Stadium as Željezničar's Stadion Grbavica did not meet UEFA criteria.
  6. ^ Played in Skopje at Philip II Arena as Renova's City Stadium Tetovo did not meet UEFA criteria.
  7. ^ Played in Budapest at Szusza Ferenc Stadion as Debrecen's Stadion Oláh Gábor Út did not meet UEFA criteria.
  8. ^ Played in Wrexham at Racecourse Ground as The New Saints chose to move the match from their Park Hall ground to increase revenue.[6]
  9. ^ Played in Bucharest at Stadionul Steaua as Unirea Urziceni's Stadionul Tineretului did not meet UEFA criteria.

References

  1. ^ 2010/11 draw and match calendar Archived 2010-10-11 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "2010/11 list of participants". Archived from the original on 1 January 2011. Retrieved 21 June 2010.
  3. ^ "2010/11 Regulations of the UEFA Champions League" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 December 2010. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  4. ^ Seeding in the Champions League 2010/2011 Archived 2010-08-11 at the Wayback Machine Bert Kassies
  5. ^ "Santa Coloma ordered to forfeit cancelled match". uefa.com. UEFA. 2010-07-01. Retrieved 2010-07-01.
  6. ^ "TNS 'excited' by Anderlecht tie". BBC News. 26 July 2010.

External links