Football tournament season
1969 Coppa delle AlpiAlpencup, Coupe des Alpes |
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Tournament details |
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Country | Switzerland and Germany |
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Teams | 12 |
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Defending champions | FC Schalke 04 |
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Final positions |
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Champions | FC Basel |
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Runner-up | Bologna |
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Tournament statistics |
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Matches played | 31 |
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Goals scored | 82 (2.65 per match) |
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Top goal scorer(s) | Giuseppe Savoldi (6) |
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1969 Coppa delle Alpi shows the results of the 1969 tournament that was held in Switzerland in the preseason 1969/70. The Coppa delle Alpi (translated as Cup of the Alps) was a football tournament, first organized by the Italian national league to start the season 1960/61 and then they aided by the Swiss League after 1962. This competition ran from 1960 until 1987.
Most of the games in the 1969 competition were played in Switzerland, three were played in Hof, one in Rüsselsheim. The teams taking part were Lausanne Sports, Zürich, Basel and Biel-Bienne. From Belgium K.S.V. Waregem were qualified and from Italy were Bologna, Hellas Verona, Sampdoria and Napoli.[1] Qualified from Germany were Alemannia Aachen, Eintracht Frankfurt[2] and Bayern Hof.[3] Two teams from each country were divided into each of the two groups. Teams did not play compatriots; Waregem did not play Eintracht.
Group A
Matches
- Round 1
Attendance: 5,500
Referee:
![Netherlands](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/20/Flag_of_the_Netherlands.svg/23px-Flag_of_the_Netherlands.svg.png)
Geluck
- Round 2
- Round 3
Attendance: 11,000
Referee:
![Belgium](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/92/Flag_of_Belgium_%28civil%29.svg/23px-Flag_of_Belgium_%28civil%29.svg.png)
Delecourt
- Round 4
Table
Group B
Matches
- Round 1
- Round 2
- Round 3
- Round 4
Table
Final
Sources and References
- Cup of the Alps 1969 at RSSSF
- ^ "Coppa delle Alpi 1969". napolistat.it. Retrieved 2016-11-13.
- ^ fg. "Alpenpokal 1969, Gruppe B". Eintracht Frankfurt. Retrieved 2016-06-01.
- ^ Anders, Franz (2008). "Der FC Bayern Hof auf der europäischen Fußballbühne". SpVgg Bayern Hof. Archived from the original on 2016-06-25. Retrieved 2016-06-01.
- ^ Bologna FC 1909 (1969). "Stagione: 1968-69". bolognafc.it. Retrieved 2016-11-16.
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