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1999–2000 Swiss Cup
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| title | Swiss Cup |
| year | 1999–2000 |
| country | Switzerland |
| defending_champions | Lausanne-Sport |
| num_teams | 192 |
| champions | FC Zürich |
| runner-up | FC Lausanne-Sport |
| matches | 191 |
| prevseason | 1998–99 |
| nextseason | 2000–01 |
| runner-up = FC Lausanne-Sport The 1999–2000 Swiss Cup was the 75th season of Switzerland's annual football cup competition. It began on 7 August with the first games of Round 1 and ended on 28 May 2000 with the Final held at Wankdorf, Bern. The winners earned a place in the first round of the UEFA Cup.
Overview
This years cup competition began on the week-end 6, 7–8 August with the first round. The competition ended on Sunday 28 May 2000 with the final held at the former Wankdorf Stadium in Bern. This year saw some modifications in the early rounds. The 54 clubs from the 1999–2000 1. Liga were granted byes for the first round and were to join the competition in the second round. The 12 clubs from the Nationalliga B were granted byes for the first three rounds. The 12 clubs from the Nationalliga A were granted byes for the first four rounds. The winners of the cup qualified themselves for the first round of the first round of the UEFA Cup in the following season.
When possible, the draw respected regionalities and the lower classed team was granted home advantage. In the entire competition, the matches were played in a single knockout format. In the event of a draw after 90 minutes, the match went into extra time. In the event of a draw at the end of extra time, a penalty shoot-out was to decide which team qualified for the next round. No replays were foreseen in the entire competition.
Round 1
In the first round a total of 114 amateur clubs participated from the fourth-tier and lower. Reserve teams were not admitted to the competition. The draw respected regionalities, when possible, and the lower classed team was granted home advantage.
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Round 2
The 54 teams from the 1999–2000 1. Liga, that had been granted byes for the first round, joined the competition in this the second round. They were seeded and cound not be drawn against each other. The draw respected regionalities, when possible, and the lower classed team was granted the home advantage.
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Round 3
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Round 4
The teams from the 1999–2000 Nationalliga B (NLB) were granted byes for the first three rounds and they joined the competition in the fourth round. These 12 teams were seeded and cound not be drawn against each other. The draw respected regionalities, when possible, and the lower classed team was granted home advantage.
Summary
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Matches
Sawu Fryand Merenda Mitreski Sawu Sawu
Round 5
The 12 first-tier clubs from the 1999–2000 Nationalliga A had been granted byes for the first four rounds and they joined the competition in this round. The first-tier teams were seeded and cound not be drawn against each other. The draw respected regionalities, when possible, and the lower classed team was granted home advantage.
Summary
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Matches
Tschopp Huggel Koumantarakis Koumantarakis Güner
Descloux
Vifian Frick Kébé Andreoli Jamarauli
H. Yakin
Ivanov Skrzypczak
Vurens Wolf Lonfat
Round 6
Summary
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Matches
Tsawa Del Signore
Koumantarakis Cravero Haas Müller Chapuisat Tholot Kreuzer Koumantarakis Huggel Müller Cabanas Tikva Hodel
Servette summary Pizzinat Thurre
Quarter-finals
Summary
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Matches
Giannini Quentin Ndlovu
Frei Joller Wolf
Kuźba Gerber Kuźba Gerber M. Yakin N'Tiamoah
Semi-finals
Summary
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Matches
RSSSF summary
Frick
Del Signore
Jamarauli
Chassot
Gian
Branca
Rothenbühler
Final
The winners of the first drawn semi-final was considered as home team in the final.
Summary
Telegram
FCZ summary
Tsawa
Del Signore
Frick
Jamarauli
Đorđević
Bartlett
Fischer
Bartlett
Hänzi
Gerber
Horjak
Douglas
Kavelashvili
Londono
Christ
Zürich won the cup and this was the club's sixth cup title to this date.
Further in Swiss football
Swiss Cup
Sources and references
References
- (red) Association cantonale vaudoise de football. (2025). "FC Renens". Association cantonale vaudoise de football - acvf.football.ch.
- Swissinfo.ch. (2000). "Late-Zurich-goal-deluge-sinks-Lucerne". Swissinfo.ch.
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