Football match
2006 AFC Champions League finalEvent | 2006 AFC Champions League |
---|
Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors | Al-Karamah | | | 3 | 2 | |
First leg |
---|
Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors | Al-Karamah | 2 | 0 | |
Date | 1 November 2006 |
---|
Venue | Jeonju World Cup Stadium, Jeonju |
---|
Referee | 0 |
---|
Attendance | 25,830 |
---|
Second leg |
---|
Al-Karamah | Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors | 2 | 1 | |
Date | 8 November 2006 |
---|
Venue | Khaled bin Walid Stadium, Homs |
---|
Referee | Mark Shield |
---|
Attendance | 40,000 |
---|
← 2005 |
The 2006 AFC Champions League Final was a two-legged football tie to determine the 2006 champions of Asian club football. South Korean club Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors defeated Syrian representative Al-Karamah 3–2 on aggregate to take the title.[1] As of 2022, this was the only final of an AFC Champions League involving a Syrian club. The first leg took place on 1 November 2006 at 19:00 local time (UTC+9) at Jeonju World Cup Stadium in Jeonju, which Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors won 2–0. The second leg took place on 8 November 2006 at 20:00 local time (UTC+3) at Khaled bin Walid Stadium, Homs, which Al-Karamah took 2–1.
The rules for the final were exactly the same as for the previous knockout rounds. The tie was contested over two legs with away goals deciding the winner if the two teams were level on goals after the second leg. If the teams could still not be separated at that stage then extra time would have been played with a penalty shootout taking place if the teams were still level after that.
The Route to the final
Al-Karamah
1Al-Karamah's score is shown first.
Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors
Opponents | Round | H/A | Score1 | Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors goalscorers |
Gamba Osaka | Group Stage | H | 3–2 | Milton Rodriguez, Kim Hyeung-Bum (2) |
Dalian Shide | Group Stage | A | 0–1 | |
Da Nang | Group Stage | H | 3–0 | Milton Rodriguez, Kim Hyeung-Bum, Botti |
Da Nang | Group Stage | A | 1–0 | Zé Carlos |
Gamba Osaka | Group Stage | A | 1–1 | Cho Jin-Soo |
Dalian Shide | Group Stage | H | 3–1 | Kim Hyeung-Bum (2), Wang Jung-Hyun |
Shanghai Shenhua | Quarterfinal 1st leg | A | 0–1 | |
Shanghai Shenhua | Quarterfinal 2nd leg | H | 4–2 | Zé Carlos (2), Yeom Ki-Hun, Jung Jong-Kwan |
Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i | Semifinal 1st leg | H | 2–3 | Zé Carlos, Yeom Ki-Hun |
Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i | Semifinal 2nd leg | A | 4–1 | Choi Jin-Cheul, Jung Jong-Kwan, Lim Yoo-Hwan, Lee Kwang-Hyun |
1Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors's score is shown first.
Final summary
First leg
Attendance: 25,830
Referee: 0
Second leg
See also
References
- ^ Rizvi, Ahmed (20 July 2015). "Football in times of crisis: Syrian game continues on as inspiration, propaganda, shadow". thenationalnews.com. The National News Sport. Archived from the original on 22 May 2021. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
External links
- AFC Champions League Final
Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors matches
AFC Champions League Finals | |
---|
Korean FA Cup Finals | |
---|
|
Asian Cup Winners' Cup Finals | |
---|
K League Championship Finals | |
---|
Korean League Cup Finals | |
---|
Korean Super Cup | |
---|
AFC Champions League Elite |
---|
Asian Champion Club Tournament era, 1967–1972 | Seasons | |
---|
|
Asian Club Championship era, 1985–2002 | Seasons | |
---|
|
AFC Champions League era, 2002–2024 | Seasons | |
---|
Finals | |
---|
|
AFC Champions League Elite era, since 2024 | Seasons | |
---|
Finals | |
---|
|
- History
- Finals
- Winning managers
- Records and statistics
| - Clubs by nation
- Australia
- Bangladesh
- China
- Indonesia
- Iran
- Iraq
- Japan
- Malaysia
- Myanmar
- Pakistan
- Qatar
- Saudi Arabia
- South Korea
- Thailand
- Vietnam
|
|
|
---|
|
Global | | |
---|
Africa | |
---|
Asia | |
---|
Europe | |
---|
North, Central America and the Caribbean | |
---|
Oceania | |
---|
South America | |
---|
See also: International women's club football |