The games will be split between Benfica's Estádio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica (which will host the final) and Sporting CP's Estádio José Alvalade.7–8 August: Round of 16 second legs (home teams' stadiums)The 2019/20 UEFA Champions League quarter-final, semi-final and final draws took place on Friday 10 July at UEFA's headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.The winner of the first semi-final was drawn as the home team – for administrative purposes – for the final, which is being held at the Estádio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica on Sunday 23 August.This season's quarter-finals, semi-finals and final will be played as a straight knockout tournament in Lisbon, Portugal in August. Last updated: Thursday 30 July 2020 All rights reserved. All these ties will be single-leg fixtures.
Goals, drama, star performances; were these the best of the 22 one-legged deciders to date?Since 1998, the UEFA Cup and UEFA Europa League final has been decided over one leg, seven of the 22 deciders going to extra time and three all the way to penalties. Competitions
UEFA Champions League - UEFA Champions League quarter-final, semi-final and final draws - NewsUEFA Champions League quarter-final, semi-final and final drawsUEFA Champions League - UEFA Champions League quarter-final, semi-final and final draws - NewsUEFA Champions League quarter-final, semi-final and final draws All these ties will be single-leg fixtures.There were four teams already qualified for the quarter-finals when the draw took place:There were four round of 16 ties still to be concluded when the draw took place:There were three draws: for the quarter-finals; for the semi-finals, pitting together quarter-final ties; and then a third to determine the 'home' side in the final for administrative reasons.There were no seedings and no country protection, so teams could face opposition from the same national association. No use for commercial purposes may be made of such trademarks. Get the latest UEFA Champions League news straight to your inbox
"[Sevilla's] goalkeeper, an outstanding player, made the difference," said gracious Espanyol boss Ernesto Valverde.With Sevilla targeting a fifth title and Liverpool their fourth, Daniel Sturridge put the Reds ahead, but Unai Emery’s side were revived by a goal just after the break before captain Coke struck twice to complete the turnaround. There were 73 goals in those matches, an impressive average of 3.32 goals per game.Were these the best five of those all-action deciders?A repeat of the two-legged 1991 final ended in Inter's third UEFA Cup triumph in a decade. Draw as it happened, … José Manuel Esnal’s unfancied Alavés made it 4-4 on 88 minutes, but salvation came from an unlikely source for Gérard Houllier’s side, Delfi Geli heading an extra-time golden goal into his own net to stop the clock.Victorious Porto boss José Mourinho – then 40 – rated the Seville decider as "a great example to those who love football", and losing manager Martin O’Neill agreed saying: “This was a wonderful, wonderful experience.” Derlei won the match with the only silver goal in UEFA Cup final history, but the star of the show was midfielder Deco, who drifted left and right, causing endless problems for the Scottish side.Sevilla became the second side to defend the UEFA Cup – following Real Madrid’s 1985 and 1986 successes - but Juande Ramos' side had to battle all the way, and were grateful to goalkeeper Andrés Palop, who set up their opener with a long throw, and saved from Luis García, Jônatas and Marc Torrejón in the shoot-out.