Metalartin
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 15 Jul 2015
- Messages
- 12,372
Because the gulf between the top clubs(and leagues for that matter) was not insurmountable, today it is, there's no getting around this for your argument to work.How was it easier to pull off a shock and win the competition back then?
For a start teams had to win their respective league. Then the 'smaller' teams had to beat the bigger teams to even reach the final. Bruges beat Juventus in the semi-final before facing Liverpool in the final in 1978. Hamburg beat Real Madrid in the semi-final before facing Forest in the final in 1980.
There were no second chances either, it was knockout football. Liverpool went out in the first round to Forest when they were reigning European champions. These days they would have been kept apart until the latter stages.
They were good teams but they weren't giants full of galacticos. There was something purer about it back then because a big club back then meant something different than it does today. It was as I said a more even playing field(which = easier by definition if you get a good team under a good manager). A one off knockout game suits the smaller team if anything.
UEFA didn't exist until the mid 50s. It didn't really get serious until the 60s, it's a much younger competition than our domestic leagues. Sorry but I stand by it, the reason we had teams like Steaua Bucharest or Red Star Belgrade picking up the trophies wasn't because they were out of this world. The competition changed so much when it became the champions league. If anything the larger teams are more protected these days than they were back then, I'm not sure how you can argue otherwise.
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