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Ch.Lge. Story

History Champions League

In 1954 English Champions Wolverhampton Wanderers beat the Hungarian side Honved 3-2 and declared themselves world champions. This was going too far for the French journalist Gabriel Hanot who decided to invite 16 teams to take part in a knockout tournament - the European Cup was born. Real Madrid proved to be the strongest team at the end of the series of home and away matches, and were to remain so for the next 4 years. 
In 1958 it was expected that Matt Busby's 'Babies' Manchester United would break the Spanish monopoly but the team were wiped out in the now legedary plane crash. It wasn't until 1960 that Benfica famous team with "Black Pearl" Eusebio broke Real's grip. Southern Europe continued to dominate the tournament, especially Helenio Herrera's Internazionale, until 1966. 
Finally the Brits got a word in - first Celtic and then Manchester United won the cup before it went to Italy again, this time to AC Milan. It would be 15 years before the cup would go south again. 
Feyenoord won the first cup of the 70's but it was Ajax ( under the brilliant Johan Cruijff and Bayern Munich ( under the elegant tactician Frans Beckenbauer) who would share the cup for most of the decade - both teams winning it 3 times in a row. 
As the decade drew to a close Liverpool and Nottingham announced English intentions to lay claim to the cup. Between 1975 and 1985 English teams appeared in 9 of the 11 finals, Liverpool, Nottingham Forest and AstonVilla carried the cup home to English shores 7 times between them. 
The 39 Italian deaths caused by Liverpool hooligans in pre-match violence at the Heizel stadium in 1985 brought an end to to their supremacy. Platini scored the winning goal for Juventus in that blood stained arena, which saw the excommunication of British clubs. Towards the end of the 1980's the climate in European football changed as commercialisation began to exert a much stronger influence on the sport. The larger clubs were expecting greater financial rewards for taking part in the tournament and the breakdown of communism in Eastern Europe meant there were even more high quality teams wanting to take part in European football. The richer European nations wanted the guarantee of continued media attention and high level footballing battles for their clubs - and so, in  1992, the Champions League was born with Olympique Marseille its first winner. 
The form of the championship has been changed in the course of the 1990's to allow more teams than just the no.1's from participating countries to take part. Dominance by any one club or country is now almost impossible. The importance of television rights also grew enormously in economic importance as the decade progressed. Although the structure of the Champions League is still evolving the prospect of a Super League seems more and more likely, while the chance of a small club ever winning the cup again grows smaller all the time. For the time being the future of European football will be clear only to crystal ball gazers.
 

                                                                                                   

                                                                           

                                                     

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