2002–03 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds

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The qualifying rounds for the 2002–03 UEFA Champions League began on 17 July 2002. In total, there were three qualifying rounds which provided 16 clubs to join the group stage.

Teams

More information Key to colours ...
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Qualify for the group stage
Eliminated in the Third qualifying round; Advanced to the UEFA Cup first round
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More information Third qualifying round, Team ...
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First qualifying round

The draw for this round was performed on 21 June 2002 in Geneva, Switzerland.

Seeding

Teams with a coefficient of at least 1.498 were seeded.[1]

Summary

More information Team 1, Agg. Tooltip Aggregate score ...
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Matches

More information F91 Dudelange, 1–1 ...
F91 Dudelange Luxembourg1–1North Macedonia Vardar
  • Rémy 54'
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Attendance: 1,002[2]
Referee: Kostadin Kostadinov (Bulgaria)
More information Vardar, 3–0 ...
Vardar North Macedonia3–0Luxembourg F91 Dudelange
  • Spasovski 71', 75'
  • Petkov 86'
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Attendance: 3,000[2]
Referee: Attila Juhos (Hungary)

Vardar won 4–1 on aggregate.


More information Hibernians, 2–2 ...
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Attendance: 1,000[2]
Referee: Eric Blareau (Belgium)
More information Shelbourne, 0–1 ...
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Attendance: 4,500[2]

Hibernians won 3–2 on aggregate.


More information Portadown, 0–0 ...
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Attendance: 750[2]
Referee: Draženko Kovačić (Croatia)
More information Belshina Bobruisk, 3–2 ...
Belshina Bobruisk Belarus3–2Northern Ireland Portadown
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Attendance: 437[2]
Referee: Jouni Hyytiä (Finland)

Belshina Bobruisk won 3–2 on aggregate.


More information Željezničar, 3–0 ...
Željezničar Bosnia and Herzegovina3–0Iceland ÍA
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More information ÍA, 0–1 ...
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Attendance: 370[2]
Referee: Romāns Lajuks (Latvia)

Željezničar won 4–0 on aggregate.


More information Skonto, 5–0 ...
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More information Barry Town, 0–1 ...
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Attendance: 1,157[2]
Referee: Gylfi Thor Orrason (Iceland)

Skonto won 6–0 on aggregate.


More information Flora, 0–0 ...
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More information APOEL, 1–0 ...
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Attendance: 5,447[2]
Referee: Miroslav Radoman (FR Yugoslavia)

APOEL won 1–0 on aggregate.


More information Sheriff Tiraspol, 2–1 ...
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Attendance: 14,000[2]
Referee: Bülent Uzun (Turkey)
More information Zhenis, 3–2 ...
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4–4 on aggregate; Sheriff Tiraspol won on away goals.


More information Tampere United, 0–4 ...
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Attendance: 3,007[2]
Referee: Marian Mircea Salomir (Romania)
More information Pyunik, 2–0 ...
Pyunik Armenia2–0Finland Tampere United
  • Diawara 53'
  • Cisterna 90+1'
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Pyunik won 6–0 on aggregate.


More information Kaunas, 2–3 ...
Kaunas Lithuania2–3Albania Dinamo Tirana
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Attendance: 3,000[2]
Referee: Aleh Chykun (Belarus)
More information Dinamo Tirana, 0–0 ...
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Attendance: 3,000[2]
Referee: Roland Beck (Liechtenstein)

Dinamo Tirana won 3–2 on aggregate.


More information Torpedo Kutaisi, 5–2 ...
Torpedo Kutaisi Georgia (country)5–2Faroe Islands B36
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  • Lakjuni 53'
  • Mortansson 74'
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Attendance: 2,125[2]
Referee: Ceri Richards (Wales)
More information B36, 0–1 ...
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Attendance: 675[2]
Referee: Paul McKeon (Republic of Ireland)

Torpedo Kutaisi won 6–2 on aggregate.

Second qualifying round

The draw for this round was performed on 21 June 2002 in Geneva, Switzerland.

Seeding

Teams with a coefficient of at least 10.916 were seeded.[1]

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

More information Sheriff Tiraspol, 1–4 ...
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More information GAK, 2–0 ...
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Attendance: 4,350[2]
Referee: Edo Trivković (Croatia)

GAK won 6–1 on aggregate.


More information Maccabi Haifa, 4–0 ...
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Attendance: 221[2]
Referee: Anton Stredak (Slovakia)
More information Belshina Bobruisk, 0–1 ...
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Attendance: 700[2]
Referee: Emil Božinovski (Macedonia)

Maccabi Haifa won 5–0 on aggregate.


More information Dynamo Kyiv, 4–0 ...
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Attendance: 15,500[2]
Referee: Bernhard Brugger (Austria)
More information Pyunik, 2–2 ...
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Dynamo Kyiv won 6–2 on aggregate.


More information Zalaegerszeg, 1–0 ...
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More information Zagreb, 2–1 ...
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2–2 on aggregate; Zalaegerszeg won on away goals.


More information Boavista, 4–0 ...
Boavista Portugal4–0Malta Hibernians
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Attendance: 6,172[2]
Referee: Tomasz Mikulski (Poland)
More information Hibernians, 3–3 ...
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Boavista won 7–3 on aggregate.


More information Sparta Prague, 3–0 ...
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Attendance: 9,690[2]
More information Torpedo Kutaisi, 1–2 ...
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Sparta Prague won 5–1 on aggregate.


More information Skonto, 0–0 ...
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Attendance: 4,354[2]
Referee: Philippe Leuba (Switzerland)
More information Levski Sofia, 2–0 ...
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Attendance: 12,000[2]
Referee: Mikko Vuorela (Finland)

Levski Sofia won 2–0 on aggregate.


More information Vardar, 1–3 ...
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Attendance: 4,000[2]
More information Legia Warsaw, 1–1 ...
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Attendance: 5,640[2]
Referee: Dick van Egmond (Netherlands)

Legia Warsaw won 4–2 on aggregate.


More information Hammarby IF, 1–1 ...
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Attendance: 19,500[2]
Referee: Lutz Michael Fröhlich (Germany)
More information Partizan, 4–0 ...
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Attendance: 13,507[2]

Partizan won 5–1 on aggregate.


More information Žilina, 1–1 ...
Žilina Slovakia1–1Switzerland Basel
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More information Basel, 3–0 ...
Basel Switzerland3–0Slovakia Žilina
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Attendance: 16,562[2]

Basel won 4–1 on aggregate.


More information Maribor, 2–1 ...
Maribor Slovenia2–1Cyprus APOEL
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Attendance: 4,094[2]
More information APOEL, 4–2 ...
APOEL Cyprus4–2Slovenia Maribor
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APOEL won 5–4 on aggregate.


More information Lillestrøm, 0–1 ...
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Attendance: 3,532[2]
Referee: Alon Yefet (Israel)
More information Željezničar, 1–0 ...
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Attendance: 12,000[2]
Referee: Attila Hanacsek (Hungary)

Željezničar won 2–0 on aggregate.


More information Club Brugge, 3–1 ...
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Attendance: 10,837[2]
More information Dinamo București, 0–1 ...
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Club Brugge won 4–1 on aggregate.


More information Brøndby, 1–0 ...
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More information Dinamo Tirana, 0–4 ...
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Attendance: 8,900[2]
Referee: Georgios Kasnaferis (Greece)

Brøndby won 5–0 on aggregate.

Third qualifying round

The draw for this round was performed on 26 July 2002 in Nyon, Switzerland.

Seeding

Teams with a coefficient of at least 36.062 were seeded.[1]

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

More information Genk, 2–0 ...
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Attendance: 9,969[2]
More information Sparta Prague, 4–2 ...
Sparta Prague Czech Republic4–2Belgium Genk
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Attendance: 12,856[2]

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


More information Feyenoord, 1–0 ...
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Attendance: 28,500[2]
More information Fenerbahçe, 0–2 ...
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Feyenoord won 3–0 on aggregate.


More information Maccabi Haifa, 2–0 ...
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Attendance: 1,200[2]
More information Sturm Graz, 3–3 ...
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Maccabi Haifa won 5–3 on aggregate.


More information Boavista, 0–1 ...
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Attendance: 8,000[2]
More information Auxerre, 0–0 ...
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Auxerre won 1–0 on aggregate.


More information APOEL, 2–3 ...
APOEL Cyprus2–3Greece AEK Athens
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Attendance: 16,192[2]
Referee: Éric Poulat (France)
More information AEK Athens, 1–0 ...
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AEK Athens won 4–2 on aggregate.


More information Zalaegerszeg, 1–0 ...
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More information Manchester United, 5–0 ...
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Manchester United won 5–1 on aggregate.


More information Sporting CP, 0–0 ...
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More information Internazionale, 2–0 ...
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Attendance: 51,405[2]

Internazionale won 2–0 on aggregate.


More information Partizan, 0–3 ...
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Attendance: 29,000[2]
More information Bayern Munich, 3–1 ...
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Attendance: 40,000[2]

Bayern Munich won 6–1 on aggregate.


More information Shakhtar Donetsk, 1–1 ...
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Attendance: 27,982[2]
More information Club Brugge, 1–1 (a.e.t.) ...
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Attendance: 17,463[2]
Referee: Terje Hauge (Norway)

2–2 on aggregate; Club Brugge won 4–1 on penalties.


More information Željezničar, 0–1 ...
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More information Newcastle United, 4–0 ...
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Newcastle United won 5–0 on aggregate.


More information Celtic, 3–1 ...
Celtic Scotland3–1Switzerland Basel
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More information Basel, 2–0 ...
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Attendance: 30,510[2]
Referee: Anders Frisk (Sweden)

3–3 on aggregate; Basel won on away goals.


More information GAK, 0–2 ...
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More information Lokomotiv Moscow, 3–3 ...
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Lokomotiv Moscow won 5–3 on aggregate.


More information Rosenborg, 1–0 ...
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More information Brøndby, 2–3 ...
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Rosenborg won 4–2 on aggregate.


More information Levski Sofia, 0–1 ...
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More information Dynamo Kyiv, 1–0 ...
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Dynamo Kyiv won 2–0 on aggregate.


More information Milan, 1–0 ...
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Attendance: 30,064[2]
More information Slovan Liberec, 2–1 ...
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2–2 on aggregate; Milan won on away goals.


More information Barcelona, 3–0 ...
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Attendance: 67,078[2]
More information Legia Warsaw, 0–1 ...
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Barcelona won 4–0 on aggregate.

Notes

  1. F91 Dudelange played their home match at Stade Josy Barthel in Luxembourg City, instead of their regular venue Stade Jos Nosbaum in Dudelange.
  2. Belshina Bobruisk played their home matches at City Stadium in Borisov, as their regular home venue Spartak Stadium in Bobruisk did not meet UEFA criteria.
  3. Željezničar played their home matches at Koševo City Stadium in Sarajevo, instead of their regular venue Stadion Grbavica.
  4. B36 played their home match at Tórsvøllur stadium, instead of their regular home venue Gundadalur stadium.
  5. Due to security issues caused by the Second Intifada, Israeli teams were required to play their home matches at neutral venues until further notice.[3] As a result, Maccabi Haifa played their home matches at GSP Stadium, Nicosia, Cyprus, and Stadion Balgarska Armia, Sofia, Bulgaria, instead of their regular venue, Kiryat Eliezer Stadium, Haifa.
  6. Zalaegerszeg played their home matches at Stadion Üllöi Út and Ferenc Puskás Stadium in Budapest, instead of their regular venue ZTE Arena in Zalaegerszeg.
  7. Zagreb played their home matches at Stadion Maksimir in Zagreb, instead of their regular venue Stadion Kranjčevićeva in Zagreb.
  8. Hammarby IF played their home match at Råsunda Stadium in Solna, instead of their regular venue Söderstadion in Stockholm.
  9. Dinamo București played their home match at Stadionul Cotroceni in Bucharest, instead of their regular venue Stadionul Dinamo.

References

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