UEFA SUPER CUP - 2018 SEASON MATCH PRESS KITS A. Le Coq Arena - Tallinn Wednesday 15 August 2018 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Real CF Matchday 1 - Final Club Atlético de Madrid Last updated 24/08/2018 22:47CET

Previous meetings 2 Match background 6 Team facts 10 Squad list 13 Head coach 15 Match officials 16 Fixtures and results 17 Competition facts 20 Legend 21

1 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

Previous meetings Head to Head UEFA Champions League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Saúl Ñíguez 12, Club Atlético de Madrid - Real 2-1 10/05/2017 SF Madrid Griezmann 16 (P); Madrid CF agg: 2-4 42 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de 02/05/2017 SF 3-0 Madrid Ronaldo 10, 73, 86 Madrid

UEFA Champions League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de 1-1 Ramos 15; Carrasco 28/05/2016 F Milan Madrid (aet, 5-3pens) 79

UEFA Champions League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de 1-0 22/04/2015 QF Madrid Hernández 88 Madrid agg: 1-0 Club Atlético de Madrid - Real 14/04/2015 QF 0-0 Madrid Madrid CF

UEFA Champions League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Ramos 90+3, Bale Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de 4-1 110 ET, Marcelo 118 24/05/2014 F Lisbon Madrid (aet) ET, Ronaldo 120 ET (P); Godín 36

European Champions Clubs' Cup Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Di Stéfano 16, Puskás 13/05/1959 SF (Rep) 2-1 (Rep) Zaragoza Madrid 42; Collar 18 Club Atlético de Madrid - Real 1-0 07/05/1959 SF Madrid Collar 43 Madrid CF agg: 2-2 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Rial 15, Puskás 33 23/04/1959 SF 2-1 Madrid Madrid (P); Chuzo 13

Home Away Final Neutral Total Pld W D L Pld W D L Pld W D L Pld W D L Pld W D L GF GA Real Madrid CF 3 3 0 0 3 0 1 2 2 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 9 5 2 2 14 7 Club Atlético de Madrid 3 2 1 0 3 0 0 3 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 9 2 2 5 7 14 Real Madrid CF - versus clubs from opponents' country

2 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

UEFA Super Cup Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Asensio 21, Ramos 3-2 90+3, Carvajal 119 09/08/2016 F Real Madrid CF - Sevilla FC Trondheim (aet) ET; Vázquez 41, Konoplyanka 72 (P)

UEFA Super Cup Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers 12/08/2014 F Real Madrid CF - Sevilla FC 2-0 Cardiff Ronaldo 30, 49

UEFA Champions League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers 1-1 Pedro Rodríguez 54; 03/05/2011 SF FC Barcelona - Real Madrid CF Barcelona agg: 3-1 Marcelo 64 27/04/2011 SF Real Madrid CF - FC Barcelona 0-2 Madrid Messi 76, 87

UEFA Champions League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers 1-1 Raúl González 43; 01/05/2002 SF Real Madrid CF - FC Barcelona Madrid agg: 3-1 Iván Helguera 49 (og) Zidane 55, 23/04/2002 SF FC Barcelona - Real Madrid CF 0-2 Barcelona McManaman 90+2

UEFA Champions League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Morientes 39, 24/05/2000 F Real Madrid CF - CF 3-0 Paris McManaman 67, Raúl González 75

European Champions Clubs' Cup Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers 2-1 Verges 33, Evaristo 23/11/1960 R1 FC Barcelona - Real Madrid CF Barcelona agg: 4-3 82; Canário 87 Mateos 3, Gento 33; 09/11/1960 R1 Real Madrid CF - FC Barcelona 2-2 Madrid Suárez 27, 87 (P)

European Champions Clubs' Cup Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers 1-3 Kocsis 89; Puskás 25, 27/04/1960 SF FC Barcelona - Real Madrid CF Barcelona agg: 2-6 75, Gento 68 Di Stéfano 17, 84, 21/04/1960 SF Real Madrid CF - FC Barcelona 3-1 Madrid Puskás 28; Martinez 37

European Champions Clubs' Cup Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers 2-2 Paya 22, Pahuet 29; 23/02/1958 QF Sevilla FC - Real Madrid CF Seville agg: 2-10 Pereda 48, 62

3 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

European Champions Clubs' Cup Di Stéfano 10, 55 (P), 23/01/1958 QF Real Madrid CF - Sevilla FC 8-0 Madrid 85, 88, Kopa 37, 73, Marsal 48, Gento 81

Club Atlético de Madrid - Record versus clubs from opponents' country UEFA Champions League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Club Atlético de Madrid - FC 2-0 13/04/2016 QF Madrid Griezmann 36, 88 (P) Barcelona agg: 3-2 FC Barcelona - Club Atlético de Luis Suárez 63, 74; 05/04/2016 QF 2-1 Barcelona Madrid Torres 25

UEFA Champions League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Club Atlético de Madrid - FC 1-0 09/04/2014 QF Madrid Koke 5 Barcelona agg: 2-1 FC Barcelona - Club Atlético de 01/04/2014 QF 1-1 Barcelona Neymar 71; Diego 56 Madrid

UEFA Europa League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Club Atlético de Madrid - Falcao 7, 34, Diego 09/05/2012 F 3-0 Bucharest Athletic Club 85 Valencia CF - Club Atlético de 0-1 26/04/2012 SF Valencia Adrián López 60 Madrid agg: 2-5 Falcao 18, 79, Miranda 49, Adrián Club Atlético de Madrid - 19/04/2012 SF 4-2 Madrid López 54; Jonas Valencia CF 45+2, Ricardo Costa 90+4

UEFA Europa League Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Club Atlético de Madrid - 0-0 08/04/2010 QF Madrid Valencia CF agg: 2-2 ag Manuel Fernandes Valencia CF - Club Atlético de 01/04/2010 QF 2-2 Valencia 66, Villa 82; Forlán Madrid 59, Antonio López 72

UEFA Intertoto Cup Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers 2-0 Club Atlético de Madrid - Ibagaza 47, García 24/08/2004 F agg: 2-2 (aet, 1- Madrid Villarreal CF Calvo 58 3pens) Roger García 56, Villarreal CF - Club Atlético de 10/08/2004 F 2-0 Villarreal Gonzalo Rodríguez Madrid 77

4 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

UEFA Cup Date Stage Match Result Venue Goalscorers Jugović 16, 45 (P), Club Atlético de Madrid - Real 4-1 08/12/1998 R3 Madrid Santi 95 ET, José Sociedad de Fútbol agg 5-3 (aet) Mari 97 ET; Gracia 49 Kovačević 45+1, de Fútbol - Club 24/11/1998 R3 2-1 San Sebastian Roberto 85 (og); Atlético de Madrid Juninho 3

Home Away Final Neutral Total Pld W D L Pld W D L Pld W D L Pld W D L Pld W D L GF GA Real Madrid CF 8 5 2 1 8 2 3 3 5 4 1 0 1 1 0 0 22 12 6 4 45 21 Club Atlético de Madrid 8 6 2 0 8 1 2 5 5 2 1 2 1 0 0 1 22 9 5 8 29 26

5 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn Match background

The UEFA Super Cup will have an unusually local feel in 2018 as European champions Real Madrid take on city rivals Atlético Madrid in Tallinn in the first one-city meeting in the competition's history. • Real Madrid became the first club to claim three successive UEFA Champions League titles in 2017/18, and the first team to twice win the European Cup three years in a row. They are now attempting to add to that with another slice of history, by becoming the first side to win three successive UEFA Super Cups. A victory in the Estonian capital would also equal the competition record of five titles held jointly by AC Milan and Barcelona. • Atlético, however, have never lost in this competition having won on both their previous appearances, in 2010 and 2012. • Whoever wins in Tallinn, this will be a fifth successive UEFA Super Cup for Spain, who have won eight of the last nine matches. A Spanish side has not lost to non-Liga opponents since Sevilla's defeat by Milan in 2007. • This will be Spain's 15th UEFA Super Cup triumph; Italy have nine with England on seven. • This is the seventh UEFA Super Cup between two clubs from the same country, and the fifth all-Spanish affair; indeed, it is the fourth meeting between two Liga teams in five years. UEFA Super Cup pedigree Real Madrid • This is Real Madrid's seventh appearance in the UEFA Super Cup (W4 L2); having lost their first two finals, they have won the last four. • The full breakdown of their results is: 1998: Chelsea 1-0 Real Madrid (Poyet 83) 2000: Real Madrid 1-2aet Galatasaray (Raúl 79; Jardel 41pen 102) 2002: Real Madrid 3-1 (Paauwe og 15, 21, 60; Van Hooijdonk 56) 2014: Real Madrid 2-0 Sevilla (Ronaldo 30 49) 2016: Real Madrid 3-2aet Sevilla (Asensio 21, Ramos 90+3, Carvajal 119; Vázquez 41, Konoplyanka 72p) 2017: Real Madrid 2-1 Manchester United ( 24, Isco 52; Lukaku 62) • In 2017, Real Madrid became the first team to win successive UEFA Super Cups since Milan in 1989 and 1990. This year, they can become the first to win three in a row. • Real Madrid have won four UEFA Super Cups; only Milan and Barcelona, with five apiece, have won more. Atlético • This is Atlético's third UEFA Super Cup appearance, all in the past nine years. • Atlético have won their two previous fixtures in this competition, both in : 2010: Internazionale 0-2 Atlético (Reyes 62, Agüero 83) 2012: Chelsea 1-4 Atlético (Cahill 75; Falcao 6 19 45, Miranda 60) • Atlético can become the first club to make it three victories from three in this competition; they are currently level with Anderlecht, Juventus and Valencia on two wins from two. Previous meetings • This will be the teams' tenth international fixture, the previous nine all coming in the European Cup – including the UEFA Champions League finals of 2014 and 2016, both won by Real Madrid. Indeed, the Merengues have won all five of the clubs' European ties to date. • The sides' most recent European fixtures came in the 2016/17 UEFA Champions League semi-finals, when Real Madrid won 4-2 on aggregate. • Cristiano Ronaldo's first-leg hat-trick put Real Madrid in command of the tie, the Portuguese star finding the net in the tenth, 73rd and 86th minutes. • The teams at the Santiago Bernabéu on 2 May 2017 were: Real Madrid: Navas, Carvajal (Nacho 46), Ramos, Varane, Marcelo, Casemiro, Modrić, Kroos, Isco (Asensio 68), Benzema (Vázquez 77), Ronaldo. Atlético: Oblak, Lucas, Savić, Godín, Filipe Luís, Koke, Gabi, Saúl (Gaitán 58), Carrasco (Correa 68), Griezmann, Gameiro (Torres 57). • Atlético looked to be on course for a famous comeback when Saúl Ñíguez (12) and Antoine Griezmann (16pen) brought them back within a early in the second leg, but an Isco goal three minutes before half-time ultimately ended their hopes.

6 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

• The line-ups on 10 May 2017, for what was the last European fixture at Atlético's old Vicente Calderón home, were: Atlético: Oblak, Giménez (Partey 56), Savić, Godín, Filipe Luís, Koke (Correa 76), Gabi, Saúl, Carrasco, Griezmann, Torres (Gameiro 56). Real Madrid: Navas, Danilo, Ramos, Varane, Marcelo, Casemiro (Vázquez 77), Modrić, Kroos, Isco (Morata 88), Benzema (Asensio 76), Ronaldo. • Their first international fixtures came in the 1958/59 European Cup semi-finals. Madrid won the home first leg 2-1, Héctor Rial's goal (15) and a Ferenc Puskás penalty (33) overturning Chuzo's 13th-minute opener. Atlético prevailed in the return thanks to Enrique Collar's 43rd-minute effort. • That meant a replay six days later, played in Zaragoza, where Alfredo Di Stéfano's early strike was swiftly cancelled out by Collar. Puskás dealt the decisive blow three minutes before half-time to take Madrid into a fourth successive final. • It was 55 years until the teams' next European contest, in the 2014 final in Lisbon – the first final fixture involving clubs from the same city in European Cup history. Diego Godín's header (36) gave newly crowned Spanish champions Atlético the lead, and it looked like that would be enough for Simeone's side to claim their first European Cup – only for to level at the last (90+3). 's Madrid ran away with it in extra time courtesy of goals from (110), Marcelo (118) and a Ronaldo penalty (120). • The line-ups at the Estádio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica were: Real Madrid: Casillas, Carvajal, Varane, Ramos, Fábio Coentrão (Marcelo 59), Khedira (Isco 59), Modrić, Di María, Bale, Benzema (Morata 79), Ronaldo. Atlético: Courtois, Juanfran, Miranda, Godín, Filipe Luís (Alderweireld 83), Tiago, Koke, Gabi, Raúl García (Sosa 66), Villa, Diego Costa (Adrián López 9). • The Merengues also came out on top in the 2014/15 quarter-finals, Javier Hernández heading the only goal of the tie late in the second leg at the Santiago Bernabéu. • Madrid and Atlético both advanced all the way to the final again in 2015/16. Ramos's 15th-minute breakthrough in Milan was cancelled out by Atlético substitute Yannick Carrasco 11 minutes from time, Griezmann having missed a 48th-minute spot kick. • With no further goals, the match went to penalties. After Lucas Vázquez, Marcelo, Bale and Ramos had converted for Madrid, and Griezmann, Gabi and Saúl had done likewise, Juanfran struck the base of the post with Atlético's fourth kick, leaving Ronaldo to convert and take the trophy to Madrid for the 11th time. • The sides at San Siro on 28 May 2016 were: Real Madrid: Navas, Carvajal (Danilo 52), Ramos, Pepe, Marcelo, Casemiro, Kroos (Isco 72), Modrić, Bale, Benzema (Vázquez 77), Ronaldo. Atlético: Oblak, Juanfran, Godín, Savić, Filipe Luís (Lucas Hernández 109), Gabi, Augusto Fernández (Carrasco 46), Koke (Partey 116), Saúl, Griezmann, Torres. • The capital duo have met in 206 league, Spanish Cup and Spanish Super Cup games, with 103 Madrid wins, 51 for Atlético and 52 draws. Atlético have lost only one of their last 12 domestic matches against their local rivals since losing the 2014 UEFA Champions League final, recording five victories and six draws. • Both Liga fixtures in 2017/18 ended all square, a goalless game at Atlético on 18 November 2017 preceding a 1-1 draw at the Bernabéu on 8 April this year. Ronaldo gave Real Madrid a 53rd-minute lead, Griezmann replying within four minutes. Match background Real Madrid • Real Madrid qualified for the UEFA Super Cup for the third year in a row by making it three successive UEFA Champions League titles in 2017/18, beating Liverpool 3-1 in the Kyiv final with scoring once and Gareth Bale twice. • The Merengues' European record last season was W10 D2 L2 F35 A17. • Real Madrid have scored in their last 30 UEFA matches. • Real Madrid's record in 22 European matches against Spanish clubs is W12 D6 L4 F45 A21. That 2017 second-leg defeat by Atlético ended an eight-match, six-year unbeaten run against Liga opponents in European competition. • Madrid's shoot-out record in European competition is W2 L2: 5-3 v Atlético Madrid, 2015/16 UEFA Champions League final 1-3 v Bayern München, 2011/12 UEFA Champions League semi-final 3-1 v Juventus, 1986/87 European Cup second round

7 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

5-6 v Crvena zvezda, 1974/75 European Cup Winners' Cup quarter-final Atlético Madrid • Atlético lifted the UEFA Europa League for the third time in 2017/18, beating Marseille 3-0 in the Lyon final with Griezmann's two goals added to by a late third from captain Gabi. • 's side had moved into the UEFA Europa League after finishing third in their UEFA Champions League section – the first time since 2013/14 they had not reached the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals or better. All four of those campaigns ended in defeat by Real Madrid. • Atlético's European record in 2017/18 was W8 D5 L2 F25 A8. • Griezmann has scored five of Atlético's last eight European goals. • Atlético's record in UEFA penalty shoot-outs is W2 L4: 3-5 v Real Madrid, 2015/16 UEFA Champions League final 8-7 v PSV Eindhoven, 2015/16 UEFA Champions League round of 16 3-2 v Leverkusen, 2014/15 UEFA Champions League round of 16 1-3 v Villarreal, 2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup final 1-3 v Fiorentina, 1989/90 UEFA Cup first round 6-7 v Derby, 1974/75 UEFA Cup second round Coach and player links • New Real Madrid coach Julen Lopetegui was a goalkeeper at the club between 1985 and 1991, making his sole first- team appearance in a 3-3 draw away to Atlético at the end of the 1989/90 season. • That was one of 14 times Lopetegui came across Atlético in his playing days, with the record W5 D4 L5. • Lopetegui was coach of in 2008/09, drawing both games against Atlético's B team that season. He also encountered Spanish opposition while in charge of Porto in 2014/15, winning both games against Athletic Club in the UEFA Champions League group stage. • Simeone's record against Madrid in all competitions as a player for Sevilla, Atlético and Lazio was W1 D2 L8. He scored once, in Atlético's 4-2 defeat on 5 November 1994. • The Argentinian enjoys a much better record as a coach, having lost only two of his last 16 games against Madrid, with the 2016 UEFA Champions League final counted as a draw. Overall it is W8 D9 L8. • Real Madrid's August signing spent three years on loan at Atlético between 2011 and 2014, making 111 appearances. The Belgian was part of the Atlético side that won the UEFA Europa League in 2012, the Copa del Rey 12 months later – beating Real Madrid in the Bernabéu final – and the Liga title in 2013/14, when the Rojiblancos also reached the UEFA Champions League final, losing to their city rivals. • Antonio Adán was at Real Madrid between 1997 and 2013. However, he made only seven appearances for the first team before departing for Cagliari. • Raphaël Varane was in the France side that beat a Croatia team including Luka Modrić 4-2 in the FIFA World Cup final in Moscow on 15 July. Atlético pair Griezmann, who scored France's second goal, and Lucas Hernández were also in Les Bleus' line-up, with Thomas Lemar an unused substitute. • Juanfran came through Madrid's academy, making six outings for the first team in 2003/04 and 2004/05. • Isco, Nacho, and Koke were part of Spain's victorious 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship squad. • , Dani Ceballos, Rodri and Saúl Ñíguez were part of the Spain side that reached the final of the 2017 UEFA European Under-21 Championship. • International team-mates: Marcelo, Casemiro & Filipe Luís (Brazil); Raphaël Varane & Antoine Griezmann, Lucas Hernández, Thomas Lemar (France); Nacho, Isco, Dani Carvajal, Sergio Ramos, Marco Asensio, Lucas Vázquez & Diego Costa, Juanfran, Saúl Ñíguez, Koke (Spain); Marco Asensio & Rodri, Saúl Ñíguez (Spain U-21) • Griezmann has now scored four goals in his last eight appearances against Madrid, including most recently at the Bernabéu in a 1-1 draw in April. • Ramos has twice been dismissed against Atlético – in a 1-1 Liga draw on 1 October 2006 and during Madrid's 3-2 top-flight victory in November 2009. Latest news

8 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

Real Madrid • Summer transfers In: Vinícius Júnior (Flamengo), Andriy Lunin (Zorya Luhansk), Álvaro Odriozola (Real Sociedad), Thibaut Courtois (Chelsea) Out: Omar Mascarell (Schalke), Cristiano Ronaldo (Juventus), Achraf Hakimi (Dortmund, loan), Mateo Kovačić (Chelsea, loan) • Six current Real Madrid players are in contention for the 2017/18 UEFA Champions League positional awards, the three-man shortlist for each position having been announced on 9 August. Keylor Navas (goalkeepers), Marcelo, Sergio Ramos, Raphaël Varane (all defenders), and Luka Modrić (both midfielders) are all in contention, as is former Madrid forward Cristiano Ronaldo in the forwards category. Ramos, Modrić and Ronaldo all won their respective categories in 2017; this year's winners will be named – along with the UEFA Men's Player of the Year and UEFA Women's Player of the Year – during the UEFA Champions League group stage draw in Monaco on Thursday 30 August. Atlético Madrid • Summer transfers In: Nehuén Pérez (Argentinos Juniors), Rodri (Villarreal), Antonio Adán (Betis), Jonny Castro (Celta Vigo), Thomas Lemar (Monaco), Santiago Arias (PSV), Nikola Kalinić (Milan) Out: Fernando Torres (released), Gabi (al-Sadd), Axel Werner (Huesca, loan), Emiliano Velázquez (), Jonny Castro (Wolves, loan), Šime Vrsaljko (Internazionale Milano, loan), André Moreira (Aston Villa, loan), Luciano Vietto (Fulham, loan) • Atlético pair Diego Godín and Antoine Griezmann are both on the three-man shortlist for the 2017/18 UEFA Europa League player of the season, the winner for which will be announced during the UEFA Europa League group stage draw in Monaco on 31 August. Jan Oblak (fourth) and Koke (equal sixth) were also in the top ten.

9 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn Team facts

Real Madrid CF Formed: 1902 Nickname: Los Merengues (The Meringues) UEFA club competition honours (runners-up in brackets) • European Cup (13): 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, (1962), (1964), 1966, (1981), 1998, 2000, 2002, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018 • UEFA Cup (2): 1985, 1986 • UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: (1971), (1983) • UEFA Super Cup (4): (1998), (2000), 2002, 2014, 2016, 2017 • European/South American Cup (3): 1960, (1966), 1998, (2000), 2002 Domestic honours (most recent triumph in brackets) League title: 33 (2017) Spanish Cup: 19 (2014) Ten-year European record (UEFA Champions League unless indicated otherwise) 2017/18: winners 2016/17: winners 2015/16: winners 2014/15: semi-finals 2013/14: winners 2012/13: semi-finals 2011/12: semi-finals 2010/11: semi-finals 2009/10: round of 16 2008/09: round of 16 Records UEFA club competition • Biggest home win 9-0: Madrid v Odense 25/10/61, European Champion Clubs' Cup first round second leg • Biggest away win 0-8: Olympiakos Nicosia v Madrid 24/09/69, European Champion Clubs' Cup first round first leg • Heaviest home defeat 2-4: Madrid v Bayern München 29/02/00, UEFA Champions League second group stage 1-3: twice, most recently v Juventus 12/04/18, UEFA Champions League quarter-final second leg 0-2 on five occasions, most recently v Barcelona 27/04/11, UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg • Heaviest away defeat 5-0 twice, most recently v AC Milan 19/04/89, European Champion Clubs' Cup semi-final second leg UEFA Champions League (group stage to final only) • Biggest home win 8-0: Madrid v Malmö 08/12/15, group stage • Biggest away win 0-6: APOEL v Madrid 21/11/17, group stage • Heaviest home defeat 2-4: Madrid v Bayern München (see above) 1-3: Madrid v Juventus (see above) 0-2 on three occasions, most recently v Barcelona (see above)

10 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

• Heaviest away defeat 4-0: Liverpool v Madrid 10/11/09, round of 16 second leg

Club Atlético de Madrid Formed: 1903 Nickname: Los Colchoneros (The Mattress Makers) UEFA club competition honours (runners-up in brackets) • European Champion Clubs' Cup: (1974), (2014), (2016) • UEFA Europa League (3): 2010, 2012, 2018 • UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (1): 1962, (1963), (1986) • UEFA Super Cup (2): 2010, 2012 • UEFA Intertoto Cup (1): 2007, (2004) Domestic honours (most recent triumph in brackets) League title: 10 (2014) Spanish Cup: 10 (2013) Ten-year European record (UEFA Champions League unless indicated otherwise) 2017/18: UEFA Europa League winners (having transferred from UEFA Champions League group stage) 2016/17: semi-finals 2015/16: runners-up 2014/15: quarter-finals 2013/14: runners-up 2012/13: UEFA Europa League round of 32 2011/12: UEFA Europa League winners 2010/11: UEFA Europa League group stage 2009/10: UEFA Europa League winners (having transferred from UEFA Champions League group stage) 2008/09: round of 16 Records UEFA club competition • Biggest home win 8-0: Atlético v Drumcondra 17/09/58, European Champion Clubs' Cup preliminary round first leg • Biggest away win 0-5: Kayseri Erciyesspor v Atlético 04/10/07, UEFA Cup first round second leg • Heaviest home defeat 0-3: Atlético v Porto 08/12/09, UEFA Champions League group stage • Heaviest away defeat 5-1: Tottenham v Atlético 15/05/63, European Cup Winners' Cup final (played in Rotterdam) 4-0 twice, most recently Chelsea v Atlético 21/10/09, UEFA Champions League group stage UEFA Champions League (group stage to final only) • Biggest home win 5-0: Atlético v Malmö 22/10/14, group stage • Biggest away win 1-4: Widzew Łódź v Atlético 25/09/96, group stage 0-3 twice, most recently v Austria Wien 22/10/13, group stage • Heaviest home defeat 0-3: Atlético v Porto (see above) • Heaviest away defeat 4-0: Chelsea v Atlético (see above)

11 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

12 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn Squad list

Real Madrid CF Current All-time season League SCUP UEFA No. Player Nat. DoB Age D Pld Gls Pld Gls Pld Gls Goalkeepers 1 Keylor Navas CRC 15/12/1986 31 - - - 1 - 49 - 13 Kiko Casilla ESP 02/10/1986 31 - - - 1 - 6 - 26 Andriy Lunin UKR 11/02/1999 19 - - - - - 6 - 30 Luca Zidane FRA 13/05/1998 20 ------Defenders 2 Dani Carvajal ESP 11/01/1992 26 - - - 3 1 47 2 3 Jesús Vallejo ESP 05/01/1997 21 - - - - - 1 - 4 Sergio Ramos ESP 30/03/1986 32 - - - 3 1 123 13 5 Raphaël Varane FRA 25/04/1993 25 - - - 2 - 64 2 6 Nacho ESP 18/01/1990 28 - - - - - 27 2 12 Marcelo BRA 12/05/1988 30 - - - 3 - 92 8 19 Álvaro Odriozola ESP 14/12/1995 22 - - - - - 6 1 29 Sergio Reguilón ESP 16/12/1996 21 ------31 Javier Sanchez ESP 14/03/1997 21 ------32 López ESP 08/04/1999 19 ------33 Adri ESP 26/02/1999 19 ------Midfielders 8 Toni Kroos GER 04/01/1990 28 - - - 3 - 100 8 10 Luka Modrić CRO 09/09/1985 32 - - - 3 - 98 10 11 Gareth Bale WAL 16/07/1989 29 - - - 2 - 78 21 14 Casemiro BRA 23/02/1992 26 - - - 2 1 50 5 17 Lucas Vázquez ESP 01/07/1991 27 - - - 2 - 29 2 18 Marcos Llorente ESP 30/01/1995 23 - - - - - 1 - 20 Marco Asensio ESP 21/01/1996 22 - - - 2 1 22 5 22 Isco ESP 21/04/1992 26 - - - 3 1 66 8 24 Dani Ceballos ESP 07/08/1996 22 - - - - - 4 - 27 URU 22/07/1998 20 ------34 Jaime Seoane ESP 22/01/1997 21 ------Forwards 9 Karim Benzema FRA 19/12/1987 30 - - - 3 - 107 56 21 Borja Mayoral ESP 05/04/1997 21 - - - - - 4 1 28 Vinícius Júnior BRA 12/07/2000 18 ------35 Óscar ESP 28/06/1998 20 ------36 Franchu ARG 12/05/1998 20 ------37 Raúl De Tomás ESP 17/10/1994 23 ------Coach - Julen Lopetegui ESP 28/08/1966 51 - - - - - 17 -

13 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

Club Atlético de Madrid Current All-time season League SCUP UEFA No. Player Nat. DoB Age D Pld Gls Pld Gls Pld Gls Goalkeepers 1 Antonio Adán ESP 13/05/1987 31 - - - - - 8 - 13 Jan Oblak SVN 07/01/1993 25 - - - - - 44 - 31 Miguel San Román ESP 14/07/1997 21 ------37 Alex Dos Santos ESP 15/01/1999 19 ------Defenders 2 Diego Godín URU 16/02/1986 32 - - - 2 - 93 5 3 Filipe Luís BRA 09/08/1985 33 - - - 1 - 78 1 4 Santiago Arias COL 13/01/1992 26 - - - - - 23 1 15 Stefan Savić MNE 08/01/1991 27 - - - - - 46 - 20 Juanfran ESP 09/01/1985 33 - - - 1 - 82 2 21 Lucas Hernández FRA 14/02/1996 22 - - - - - 19 - 24 José María Giménez URU 20/01/1995 23 - - - - - 29 - 34 Aitor Puñal ESP 01/04/1999 19 ------35 Francisco Montero ESP 14/01/1999 19 ------36 Alberto Rodríguez ESP 10/09/1997 20 ------38 Carlos Isaac ESP 30/04/1998 20 ------39 Manny ESP 01/03/1998 20 ------Midfielders 5 Thomas Partey GHA 13/06/1993 25 - - - - - 25 1 6 Koke ESP 08/01/1992 26 - - - 1 - 79 5 8 Saúl Ñíguez ESP 21/11/1994 23 - - - - - 53 11 10 Ángel Correa ARG 09/03/1995 23 - - - - - 29 2 11 Thomas Lemar FRA 12/11/1995 22 - - - - - 24 2 14 Rodri ESP 22/06/1996 22 - - - - - 10 1 18 Gelson Martins POR 11/05/1995 23 - - - - - 26 4 23 Vitolo ESP 02/11/1989 28 - - - 3 - 56 10 30 Roberto Olabe ESP 05/05/1996 22 ------43 Toni Moya ESP 20/03/1998 20 ------44 Keidi Bare ALB 28/08/1997 20 ------Forwards 7 Antoine Griezmann FRA 21/03/1991 27 - - - - - 56 24 9 Nikola Kalinić CRO 05/01/1988 30 - - - - - 57 16 19 Diego Costa ESP 07/10/1988 29 - - - - - 42 16 32 Borja Garcés ESP 06/08/1999 19 ------40 Víctor Mollejo ESP 21/01/2001 17 ------47 Joaquín Muñoz ESP 10/03/1999 19 ------Coach - Diego Simeone ARG 28/04/1970 48 S - - 1 - 78 -

14 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn Head coach Julen Lopetegui Date of birth: 28 August 1966 Nationality: Spanish Playing career: Real Sociedad, Real Madrid Castilla, Las Palmas, Real Madrid, Logroñés, Barcelona, Rayo Vallecano Coaching career: Rayo Vallecano, Real Madrid Castilla, Spain Under-19s, Spain Under-20s, Spain Under-21s, Porto, Spain, Real Madrid • Lopetegui's promising goalkeeping performances for Real Sociedad's youth sides led to a move to Real Madrid. The Basque native progressed into the senior squad, but, starved of opportunities, switched to Logroñes, where he made 107 Spanish top-flight appearances over three seasons. • Those displays earned a move to Barcelona but again he found playing time limited, prompting a transfer to Rayo Vallecano, where he featured 112 times until retirement in 2002. He earned one senior international and was part of Spain's 1994 FIFA World Cup squad. • Started his coaching career in 2003/04, at second division Rayo, but was dismissed after ten games. After five years away from the bench he returned to active duty in 2008/09 with Real Madrid Castilla, ending the third-tier campaign in sixth place. • In 2010 Lopetegui joined the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) and led the U19s to the European title two years later before reaching the quarter-finals of the FIFA U-20 World Cup in 2013. He had assumed control of the U21s in August 2012 and guided the holders to the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship, winning the title in Israel. • On 6 May 2014, he returned to club duties with Porto but failed to win any silverware with the club and left his post in January 2016. Appointed 's successor as Spain coach in July that year and guided the side to the 2018 World Cup but departed on the eve of the finals to succeed Zinédine Zidane as Real Madrid coach. Diego Simeone Date of birth: 28 April 1970 Nationality: Argentinian Playing career: Vélez Sarsfield, Pisa, Sevilla, Atlético Madrid (twice), Internazionale Milano, Lazio, Racing Club Coaching career: Racing Club (twice), Estudiantes, River Plate, San Lorenzo, Catania, Atlético Madrid • Launched career as a combative midfielder with Vélez Sarsfield and was a full Argentinian international at 18, making debut in a July 1988 friendly against Australia; went on to play in three FIFA World Cups and retired as Argentina's most-capped player (106 appearances, 11 goals). Moved to Italy in 1990 to join Pisa; two years later he left for Sevilla, where he played under Argentina's 1986 World Cup-winning coach and – for one season – alongside . • Joined Atlético in 1994 and won the Spanish domestic double in his second season, his first major club honours to add to two Copa América titles (1991 and 1993) plus the 1992 FIFA Confederations Cup with Argentina. • Enjoyed further success after returning to Italy, winning the UEFA Cup with Inter, plus a Serie A and Coppa Italia double in his debut campaign with Lazio (1999/2000). After four years in Rome, he returned to Madrid for a second spell with Atlético before ending his playing career in Argentina with Racing Club. • Started coaching career with Racing Club and won Argentinian titles with Estudiantes (2006 Apertura) and River Plate (2008 Clausura); brief spells at San Lorenzo, Italian club Catania and Racing (again) preceded his appointment in December 2011 at Atlético. • Led Atlético to victory in the 2012 UEFA Europa League final against Athletic Club and to a Copa del Rey final triumph over Real Madrid in 2013. A year later, Atlético held off Barcelona and Madrid to win their first league title since 1996, although they lost to Madrid in the UEFA Champions League final. Took Atlético to another UEFA Champions League final in 2016, which they again lost to Madrid, but collected more silverware two years later with another UEFA Europa League triumph.

15 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn Match officials

Referee Szymon Marciniak (POL) Assistant referees Paweł Sokolnicki (POL) , Tomasz Listkiewicz (POL) Additional assistant referees Paweł Raczkowski (POL) , Tomasz Musiał (POL) Fourth official Ovidiu Haţegan (ROU) Reserve official Radosław Siejka (POL) UEFA Delegate João Morais (POR) UEFA Referee observer Uno Tutk (EST)

Referee UEFA Super Name Date of birth UEFA matches Cup matches Szymon Marciniak 07/01/1981 0 62

Szymon Marciniak Referee since: 2002 First division: 2009 FIFA badge: 2011

Tournaments: 2017 FIFA U-20 World Cup, UEFA EURO 2016, 2015 UEFA European Under-21 Championship

Finals 2015 UEFA European Under-21 Championship

UEFA Super Cup matches featuring teams from the two countries involved in this match No such matches refereed Other matches involving teams from either of the two countries involved in this match Stage Date Competition Home Away Result Venue reached 16/10/2012 U21 PO Denmark Spain 1-3 Aalborg 07/11/2013 UEL GS Sevilla FC FC Slovan Liberec 1-1 Seville 28/08/2014 UEL PO FC Krasnodar Real Sociedad de Fútbol 3-0 Krasnodar 27/11/2014 UEL GS Villarreal CF VfL Borussia Mönchengladbach 2-2 Villarreal 15/09/2015 UCL GS Galatasaray AŞ Club Atlético de Madrid 0-2 Istanbul 08/12/2015 UCL GS Sevilla FC Juventus 1-0 Seville 08/03/2016 UCL R16 Real Madrid CF AS Roma 2-0 Madrid 28/04/2016 UEL SF FC Shakhtar Donetsk Sevilla FC 2-2 Lviv 13/06/2016 EURO GS-FT Spain Czech Republic 1-0 Toulouse 28/09/2016 UCL GS Club Atlético de Madrid FC Bayern München 1-0 Madrid 07/12/2016 UCL GS Real Madrid CF 2-2 Madrid 14/02/2017 UCL R16 Paris Saint-Germain FC Barcelona 4-0 Paris 11/04/2017 UCL QF Juventus FC Barcelona 3-0 Turin 17/10/2017 UCL GS Real Madrid CF Tottenham Hotspur FC 1-1 Madrid

16 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn Fixtures and results

Real Madrid CF Date Competition Opponent Result Goalscorers 15/08/2018 SCUP Club Atlético de Madrid (H) 19/08/2018 League Getafe CF (H) 26/08/2018 League Girona FC (A) 01/09/2018 League CD Leganés (H) 15/09/2018 League Athletic Club (A) 23/09/2018 League RCD Espanyol (H) 26/09/2018 League Sevilla FC (A) 30/09/2018 League Club Atlético de Madrid (H) 07/10/2018 League Deportivo Alavés (A) 21/10/2018 League Levante UD (H) 28/10/2018 League FC Barcelona (A) 04/11/2018 League CF (H) 11/11/2018 League RC Celta de Vigo (A) 25/11/2018 League SD Eibar (A) 02/12/2018 League Valencia CF (H) 09/12/2018 League SD Huesca (A) 16/12/2018 League Rayo Vallecano de Madrid (H) 06/01/2019 League Real Sociedad de Fútbol (H) 13/01/2019 League Balompié (A) 20/01/2019 League Sevilla FC (H) 27/01/2019 League RCD Espanyol (A) 03/02/2019 League Deportivo Alavés (H) 10/02/2019 League Club Atlético de Madrid (A) 17/02/2019 League Girona FC (H) 24/02/2019 League Levante UD (A) 03/03/2019 League FC Barcelona (H) 10/03/2019 League Real Valladolid CF (A) 17/03/2019 League RC Celta de Vigo (H) 31/03/2019 League SD Huesca (H) 03/04/2019 League Valencia CF (A) 07/04/2019 League SD Eibar (H) 14/04/2019 League CD Leganés (A) 21/04/2019 League Athletic Club (H) 24/04/2019 League Getafe CF (A) 28/04/2019 League Rayo Vallecano de Madrid (A) 05/05/2019 League Villarreal CF (H) 12/05/2019 League Real Sociedad de Fútbol (A) 19/05/2019 League Real Betis Balompié (H)

Pos. Clubs P W D L GF GA Pts 1 Deportivo Alavés 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 Athletic Club 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 Club Atlético de Madrid 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

17 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

Pos. Clubs P W D L GF GA Pts 4 FC Barcelona 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 RC Celta de Vigo 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 SD Eibar 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 RCD Espanyol 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 Getafe CF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 Girona FC 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 SD Huesca 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 CD Leganés 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 Levante UD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 Rayo Vallecano de Madrid 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 Real Betis Balompié 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 15 Real Madrid CF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 Real Sociedad de Fútbol 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 17 Real Valladolid CF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 18 Sevilla FC 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 Valencia CF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 20 Villarreal CF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Club Atlético de Madrid Date Competition Opponent Result Goalscorers 15/08/2018 SCUP Real Madrid CF (A) 20/08/2018 League Valencia CF (A) 25/08/2018 League Rayo Vallecano de Madrid (H) 01/09/2018 League RC Celta de Vigo (A) 15/09/2018 League SD Eibar (H) 23/09/2018 League Getafe CF (A) 26/09/2018 League SD Huesca (H) 30/09/2018 League Real Madrid CF (A) 07/10/2018 League Real Betis Balompié (H) 21/10/2018 League Villarreal CF (A) 28/10/2018 League Real Sociedad de Fútbol (H) 04/11/2018 League CD Leganés (A) 11/11/2018 League Athletic Club (H) 25/11/2018 League FC Barcelona (H) 02/12/2018 League Girona FC (A) 09/12/2018 League Deportivo Alavés (H) 16/12/2018 League Real Valladolid CF (A) 22/12/2018 League RCD Espanyol (H) 06/01/2019 League Sevilla FC (A) 13/01/2019 League Levante UD (H) 20/01/2019 League SD Huesca (A) 27/01/2019 League Getafe CF (H) 03/02/2019 League Real Betis Balompié (A) 10/02/2019 League Real Madrid CF (H) 17/02/2019 League Rayo Vallecano de Madrid (A)

18 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

Club Atlético de Madrid 24/02/2019 League Villarreal CF (H) 03/03/2019 League Real Sociedad de Fútbol (A) 10/03/2019 League CD Leganés (H) 17/03/2019 League Athletic Club (A) 31/03/2019 League Deportivo Alavés (A) 03/04/2019 League Girona FC (H) 07/04/2019 League FC Barcelona (A) 14/04/2019 League RC Celta de Vigo (H) 21/04/2019 League SD Eibar (A) 24/04/2019 League Valencia CF (H) 28/04/2019 League Real Valladolid CF (H) 05/05/2019 League RCD Espanyol (A) 12/05/2019 League Sevilla FC (H) 19/05/2019 League Levante UD (A)

Pos. Clubs P W D L GF GA Pts 1 Deportivo Alavés 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 Athletic Club 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 Club Atlético de Madrid 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 FC Barcelona 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 RC Celta de Vigo 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 SD Eibar 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 RCD Espanyol 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 Getafe CF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 Girona FC 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 SD Huesca 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 CD Leganés 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 Levante UD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 Rayo Vallecano de Madrid 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 Real Betis Balompié 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 15 Real Madrid CF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 Real Sociedad de Fútbol 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 17 Real Valladolid CF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 18 Sevilla FC 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 Valencia CF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 20 Villarreal CF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

19 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn Competition facts

UEFA Super Cup: All-time records

• There have been 42 previous UEFA Super Cup finals, including 15 at Monaco's Stade Louis II after the showpiece moved to a one-off match in the principality in 1998. Since 2013, the fixture has been held in a different European city each year: Prague in 2013, Cardiff in 2014, Tbilisi in 2015, Trondheim in 2016 and Skopje in 2017. • Of the 42 previous editions, the team that won the European Cup have triumphed on 23 occasions, most recently Real Madrid in 2017. Since the UEFA Cup winners began taking part in 2000, following the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup's demise, seven of the 18 finals have been won by the side that lifted the UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League the preceding May. • Including 2018, Spain holds the record for the number of times their teams have participated in the competition with 27 entries (Barcelona 9, Real Madrid 7, Sevilla 5, Atlético Madrid 3, Valencia 2, Real Zaragoza 1). England have had 16 (Liverpool 5, Manchester United 4, Chelsea 3, Nottingham Forest 2, Arsenal 1, Aston Villa 1), three more than Italy (AC Milan 7, Juventus 2, Internazionale 1, Parma 1, Lazio 1, Sampdoria 1). • Spanish clubs have recorded the most victories with 14 (Barcelona 5, Real Madrid 4, Valencia 2, Atlético 2, Sevilla 1), five more than Italy and seven more than England. • Barcelona's 2015 triumph took them level with Milan on five wins. Real Madrid moved on to four in 2017, one more triumph than Liverpool. • Six finals have pitted teams from the same country. Milan beat Sampdoria 3-1 on aggregate in 1990 and lost 2-1 to Parma three years later before the all-Spanish affair between Barcelona and Sevilla in 2006 and Real Madrid's 2014 defeat of Sevilla. In 2015, Barcelona beat Sevilla in Tbilisi; Real Madrid beat Sevilla in Trondheim 12 months later. • Seven finals have been decided in extra time, the beneficiaries being Aston Villa (1982, 3-1 versus Barcelona), Parma (1993, 2-1 versus Milan), Galatasaray (2000, 2-1 golden goal victory versus Real Madrid), Liverpool (2005, 3-1 versus CSKA Moskva), Barcelona (twice: 2009, 1-0 versus Shakhtar Donetsk; 2015, 5-4 v Sevilla) and Real Madrid (2016, 3-2 v Sevilla). • The 2013 edition was the first to involve a penalty shoot-out, Bayern beating Chelsea 5-4 on penalties after a 2-2 draw in Prague. • Barcelona became the first side to score five times in a one-off final with 2015's 5-4 defeat of Sevilla, eclipsing Atlético's 4-1 success over Chelsea in 2012; Liverpool (2001, 2005), Real Madrid (2002, 2016), Sevilla (2006) and Milan (2007) all managed three goals. • Atlético's 2012 win (4-1) equalled Sevilla's 3-0 defeat of Barcelona in 2006 as the biggest margin of victory in a single-match final. • There have been four 1-0 results: Chelsea (1998), Lazio (1999) – in the first two one-off finals – Milan (2003) and Barcelona (2009) were the victors. • There has never been a UEFA Super Cup that finished scoreless after 120 minutes. • The fastest goal came in the 2015 decider when Éver Banega gave Sevilla a third-minute lead against Barcelona. • Radamel Falcao (2012, Atlético v Chelsea) and Terry McDermott (1977, Liverpool v Hamburg, second leg) are the only players to have scored three times in one UEFA Super Cup game. McDermott's hat-trick was the quicker, registered in a 17-minute spell either side of the interval. • The only own goal seen in a UEFA Super Cup final since it permanently became a one-off game in 1998 came from Feyenoord's Patrick Paauwe, 15 minutes into his team's 3-1 reverse to Real Madrid in 2002. • Manchester United midfielder Paul Scholes became the first player sent off in the history of the competition, against Zenit in 2008. Porto's Rolando and Fredy Guarín were both dismissed in 2011. Competition history The UEFA Super Cup was not staged in three seasons since its 1973 inception. In 1974, following political problems, Bayern of the Federal Republic of Germany did not play Magdeburg of the German Democratic Republic. Then, in 1981, Liverpool and Dinamo Tbilisi failed to find a date to contest the competition. Following the Heysel tragedy on 29 May 1985, Juventus and Everton did not play the 1985 UEFA Super Cup.

20 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn Legend

Statistics The statistics provided throughout this document are based on the all-time records of the competing clubs in UEFA club competition.

UEFA club competition: These are the official statistics considered valid for communicating official records in UEFA club competitions defined as the European Champion Clubs' Cup, the UEFA Champions League, the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, the UEFA Cup, the UEFA Europa League, the UEFA Super Cup (from the 1973 competition), the UEFA Intertoto Cup and the European/South American Cup.

Match officials Nat. - Nationality DoB - Date of birth UEFA: UEFA club competition (including qualifying matches)

2009/10 finals Ex. - extra time

Team facts Goals for/against: Goals totals include the outcome of disciplinary decisions (eg. match forfeits when a 3-0 result is determined). Goals totals do not include goals scored from the penalty mark during a penalty shoot-out after a tie ended in a draw. Competitions Competition stages Other abbreviations F: Final GS: Group stage (aet): After extra time pens: Penalties GS1: First group stage GS2: Second group stage No.: Number og: Own goal 3QR: Third qualifying round R1: First round ag: Match decided on away P: Penalty R2: Second round R3: Third round goals agg: Aggregate R4: Fourth round PR: Preliminary round Pld: Matches played AP: Appearances SF: Semi-finals QF: Quarter-finals Pos.: Position Comp.: Competition R16: round of 16 QR: Qualifying round Pts: Points D: Drawn R32: Round of 32 1QR: First qualifying round R: Sent off (straight red card) DoB: Date of birth 1st: first leg 2QR: Second qualifying Res.: Result ET: Extra Time round sg: Match decided by silver GA: Goals against 2nd: second leg FT: Final tournament goal t: Match decided by toss of a PO: Play-off ELITE: Elite round coin Rep: Replay 3rdPO: Third-place play-off GF: Goals for W: Won PO - FT: Play-off for Final GS-FT: Group stage – final gg: Match decided by golden Y: Booked Tournament tournament goal L: Lost Y/R: Sent off (two yellow Nat.: Nationality cards) N/A: Not applicable f: Match forfeited Statistics -: Denotes player substituted +: Denotes player introduced *: Denotes player sent off +/-: Denotes player introduced and substituted Squad list D: Disciplinary *: Misses next match if booked S: Suspended SCUP: Total appearances in the UEFA Super Cup UEFA: All-time total appearances in UEFA club competition including qualifying Disclaimer: Although UEFA has taken all reasonable care that the information contained within this document is accurate at the time of publication, no representation or guarantee (including liability towards third parties), expressed or implied, is made as to its accuracy, reliability or completeness. Therefore, UEFA assumes no liability for the use or interpretation of information contained herein. More information can be found in the competition regulations available on UEFA.com.

21 Real Madrid CF - Club Atlético de Madrid Wednesday 15 August 2018 - 21.00CET (22.00 local time) Match press kit A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn

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