Artemio Franchi Trophy
The Artemio Franchi Trophy was an association football competition held twice (1985 and 1993) between the champions of the UEFA European Championship and the Copa América. It was the national team equivalent to the Intercontinental Cup featuring the top European and South American clubs, and can be considered a precursor of the King Fahd Cup, played in 1992 for the first time and renamed the FIFA Confederations Cup after FIFA took over its organization for the third edition in 1997.
The trophy was named after the late Artemio Franchi, former President of UEFA who died in a road accident in 1983.
Editions
1985
France (UEFA Euro 1984 winners) | 2–0 | Uruguay (1983 Copa América winners) |
---|---|---|
Rocheteau 5' Touré 56' |
France
|
Uruguay
|
|
|
1993
Argentina (1991 Copa América winners) | 1–1 (a.e.t.) | Denmark (UEFA Euro 1992 winners) |
---|---|---|
Caniggia 30' | Report | Craviotto 12' (o.g.) |
Penalties | ||
Maradona Batistuta Simeone Mancuso Caniggia Saldaña |
5 – 4 | Elstrup Mølby B. Nielsen Vilfort B. Laudrup Goldbæk |
Argentina
|
Denmark
|
|
|
See also
References
Sources
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.