1995–96 UEFA Champions League qualifying round

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The 1995–96 UEFA Champions League featured 24 teams, with eight teams (the league champions from the seven top-ranked nations in the UEFA country coefficient table, plus the defending champions from 1994–95) qualifying automatically for the group stage and the remaining 16 (the league champions of the nations ranked 8–23 in the country coefficient table) playing in a two-legged preliminary round. The winners of each tie entered the Champions League group stage

Dynamo Kyiv won their tie against Aalborg BK, but, in their first group game against Panathinaikos, they were accused of a failed attempt to bribe referee Antonio López Nieto to get a win. Despite an appeal, they were thrown out of the competition by UEFA and were banned for the subsequent two years. Aalborg BK replaced them in the group stage. Dynamo's ban was eventually reduced to just one season.

Preliminary round[]

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Grasshopper Switzerland 2–1 Israel Maccabi Tel Aviv 1–1 1–0
Rangers Scotland 1–0 Cyprus Anorthosis 1–0 0–0
Legia Warsaw Poland 3–1 Sweden IFK Göteborg 1–0 2–1
Casino Salzburg Austria 0–1 Romania Steaua București 0–0 0–1
Dynamo Kyiv Ukraine 4–1 Denmark Aalborg BK 1–0 3–1
Rosenborg Norway 4–3 Turkey Beşiktaş 3–0 1–3
Anderlecht Belgium 1–2 Hungary Ferencváros 0–1 1–1
Panathinaikos Greece 1–1 (a) Croatia Hajduk Split 0–0 1–1

First leg[]

Casino Salzburg Austria0–0Romania Steaua București
Report
Stadion Lehen, Salzburg
Attendance: 8,500
Referee: Anders Frisk (Sweden)

Grasshopper Switzerland1–1Israel Maccabi Tel Aviv
Ibrahim 49' Report Kashentsev 54'
Hardturm, Zürich
Attendance: 11,100
Referee: (Spain)

Rangers Scotland1–0Cyprus Anorthosis
Durie 68' Report
Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow
Attendance: 43,519
Referee: Eric Blareau (Belgium)

Legia Warsaw Poland1–0Sweden IFK Göteborg
Podbrożny 49' (pen.) Report
Polish Army Stadium, Warsaw
Attendance: 10,000
Referee: Jaap Uilenberg (Netherlands)

Dynamo Kyiv Ukraine1–0Denmark Aalborg BK
Pokhlebayev 81' (pen.) Report
Republican Stadium, Kyiv
Attendance: 61,000
Referee: Jiří Ulrich (Czech Republic)

Rosenborg Norway3–0Turkey Beşiktaş
Hoftun 23'
Strand 27'
Brattbakk 75'
Report
Lerkendal Stadion, Trondheim
Attendance: 14,083
Referee: Hermann Albrecht (Germany)

Anderlecht Belgium0–1Hungary Ferencváros
Report Kuntić 58'
Constant Vanden Stock Stadium, Brussels
Attendance: 15,036
Referee: Hellmut Krug (Germany)

Panathinaikos Greece0–0Croatia Hajduk Split
Report
Olympic Stadium (Athens), Athens
Attendance: 42,000
Referee: Urs Meier (Switzerland)

Second leg[]

Steaua București Romania1–0Austria Casino Salzburg
Ilie 33' Report
Stadionul Steaua, Bucharest
Attendance: 19,987
Referee: Jorge Monteiro Coroado (Portugal)

Maccabi Tel Aviv Israel0–1Switzerland Grasshopper
Report Comisetti 4'
Bloomfield, Tel Aviv
Attendance: 15,432
Referee: Marcello Nicchi (Italy)

Anorthosis Cyprus0–0Scotland Rangers
Report
Attendance: 9,400

IFK Göteborg Sweden1–2Poland Legia Warsaw
Blomqvist 25' Report Pisz 72'
Wieszczycki 90'
Ullevi, Gothenburg
Attendance: 11,017
Referee: David Elleray (England)

Aalborg BK Denmark1–3Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
Rasmussen 87' Report Kalitvintsev 36'
Shevchenko 49', 77'
Aalborg Stadium, Aalborg
Attendance: 13,200
Referee: Atanas Ouzounov (Bulgaria)

Beşiktaş Turkey3–1Norway Rosenborg
Özdilek 9'
Kuntz 85' (pen.), 87'
Report Brattbakk 67'[1]
Attendance: 23,882
Referee: Marc Batta (France)

Ferencváros Hungary1–1Belgium Anderlecht
Kopunović 50' Report De Bilde 65'
Üllői út, Budapest
Attendance: 16,737
Referee: Leslie Mottram (Scotland)

Hajduk Split Croatia1–1Greece Panathinaikos
Štimac 5' Report Borelli 54'
Attendance: 10,800
Referee: Ion Craciunescu (Romania)

References[]

External links[]

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