2011 in UEFA

The following are the scheduled events, results and champions of association football for the year 2011 throughout the Union of European Football Associations.

Scheduled events

Men's football

Women's football

Headlines

International football

Men's events

Gianni Infantino (left) and Zbigniew Boniek during a draw for the play-offs

Most notably, 2011 consisted of all men's UEFA teams competing in qualification for UEFA Euro 2012. As tournament hosts, both Poland and Ukraine earned direct qualification into Group Stage.

The qualification season ended on 11 October 2011, with group winners earning berths into Euro 2012. For group runners-up, the highest ranked second team qualified automatically for the tournament, while the remainder entered the play-offs. As some groups contain six teams and some five, matches against the sixth-placed team in each group were not included in this ranking. As a result, a total of eight matches played by each team count toward the purpose of the second-placed ranking table.

The teams, other than the hosts, to qualify for the tournament included: Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, England, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Republic of Ireland, Russia, Spain and Sweden.

Women's events

The German Football Association hosted the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, making it the first time since 1995 a European nation hosted the FIFA Women's World Cup. While the German nation team was eliminated in the quarterfinals, two UEFA nations, namely Sweden and France reached the semifinals of the World Cup. Both teams lost, however, to Japan and the United States, respectively. Goals from Sweden's Lotta Schelin and Marie Hammarström gave the Swedes a 2–1 victory over France in the consolation match.

Considered the second largest international women's football tournament, the Portugal's 2011 edition of the Algarve Cup took place. While the final was not won by a European side, Iceland reached the final match before losing to the United States. Sweden reached the consolation match, but lost to Japan.

Club football

Continental champions

Men's football

Champions League
Wembley Stadium hosted the 2011 UEFA Champions League Final.

Barcelona of Spain's La Liga won the 2010–11 edition of the UEFA Champions League, making it the fourth time the club won either the Champions League or European Cup. Barcelona defeated Manchester United of England's Premier League in the championship. The final was played at Wembley Stadium in London, making it the first time since renovations that the venue hosted the Champions League final.

The entire knockout round of the tournament was played in 2011, beginning with sixteen clubs from seven different UEFA nations. The five largest leagues by UEFA coefficients had at least two representatives in the knockout phase of the tournament. Outside of the "big five", Denmark's Copenhagen and Ukraine's Shakhtar Donetsk earned berths into the knockout round, with Shakhtar Dontsk reaching the quarterfinals, before losing to eventual champions, Barcelona.

Lionel Messi of Barcelona was the tournament's top-scorer scoring twelve goals in thirteen appearances.

Bracket
Europa League
Round of 32Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
GreecePAOK011
RussiaCSKA Moscow112RussiaCSKA Moscow011
SpainSevilla112PortugalPorto123
PortugalPorto (a)202PortugalPorto5510
BelgiumAnderlecht000RussiaSpartak Moscow123
NetherlandsAjax235NetherlandsAjax000
SwitzerlandBasel213RussiaSpartak Moscow134
RussiaSpartak Moscow314PortugalPorto527
UkraineMetalist Kharkiv000SpainVillarreal134
GermanyBayer Leverkusen246GermanyBayer Leverkusen213
ItalyNapoli011SpainVillarreal325
SpainVillarreal022SpainVillarreal538
RussiaRubin Kazan022NetherlandsTwente112
NetherlandsTwente224NetherlandsTwente303
SwitzerlandYoung Boys213RussiaZenit Saint Petersburg02218 May – Dublin
RussiaZenit Saint Petersburg134PortugalPorto1
PortugalBenfica224PortugalBraga0
GermanyVfB Stuttgart101PortugalBenfica213
BelarusBATE Borisov202FranceParis Saint-Germain112
FranceParis Saint-Germain (a)202PortugalBenfica426
FranceLille213NetherlandsPSV Eindhoven123
NetherlandsPSV Eindhoven235NetherlandsPSV Eindhoven011
ScotlandRangers (a)123ScotlandRangers000
PortugalSporting CP123PortugalBenfica202
TurkeyBeşiktaş101PortugalBraga (a)112
UkraineDynamo Kyiv448UkraineDynamo Kyiv202
GreeceAris000EnglandManchester City011
EnglandManchester City033UkraineDynamo Kyiv101
PolandLech Poznań101PortugalBraga (a)101
PortugalBraga022PortugalBraga101
Czech RepublicSparta Prague000EnglandLiverpool000
EnglandLiverpool011

Women's football

Champions League

In the tenth edition of the UEFA Women's Champions League, France's Lyon won their first ever title, defeating Germany's Turbine Potsdam in the final. The final, like the Men's Champions League, was also played at London, but at the Craven Cottage.

Bracket
Round of 32Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
                  
BelarusZorka-BDU Minsk101
NorwayRøa202
NorwayRøa101
RussiaZvezda Perm145
CyprusApollon Limassol112
RussiaZvezda Perm224
RussiaZvezda Perm000
FranceLyon011
UkraineLehenda-ShVSM101
RussiaRossiyanka347
RussiaRossiyanka101
FranceLyon6511
NetherlandsAZ101
FranceLyon2810
FranceLyon235
EnglandArsenal022
SpainRayo Vallecano314
IcelandValur011
SpainRayo Vallecano213
EnglandArsenal044
SerbiaMašinac Niš101
EnglandArsenal3912
EnglandArsenal (a)123
SwedenLinköping123
SloveniaKrka000
SwedenLinköping7512
SwedenLinköping213
Czech RepublicSparta Prague000
BelgiumSint-Truiden000
Czech RepublicSparta Prague3710
FranceLyon2
GermanyTurbine Potsdam0
PolandUnia Racibórz112
DenmarkBrøndby (a)202
DenmarkBrøndby112
EnglandEverton415
HungaryMTK Hungária011
EnglandEverton077
EnglandEverton112
GermanyDuisburg325
KazakhstanCSHVSM000
GermanyDuisburg5611
GermanyDuisburg437
DenmarkFortuna202
DenmarkFortuna8614
ItalyBardolino011
GermanyDuisburg202
GermanyTurbine Potsdam213
SwitzerlandZürich213
ItalyTorres347
ItalyTorres123
FranceJuvisy (a.e.t.)224
IcelandBreiðablik000
FranceJuvisy369
FranceJuvisy022
GermanyTurbine Potsdam369
FinlandÅland United000
GermanyTurbine Potsdam9615
GermanyTurbine Potsdam7916
AustriaNeulengbach000
GreecePAOK101
AustriaNeulengbach033

Domestic league champions

Men's football

Women's football

Domestic Cup Champions

Men's Football

Footnotes

A^ Including the Yugoslav First League, Dinamo Zagreb has won a total of 19 top division domestic football championships.
B^ Includes Manchester United's First Division (pre-1992) and Premier League (since 1992) championships.
C^ Includes Maccabi Haifa's Israel First Division and Premier League championships.
D^ Includes FK Ekranas' Soviet Lithuania league championship along with their A Lyga titles.
E^ The Russian Premier League is switching to the FIFA calendar and a 2011–12 calendar. The previous season was 2010, and there will be no champion crowned in 2011.

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article 2011 in UEFA, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.