This article details men's professional football club records and statistics (individual and collective) in Europe.
The records and stats look across all European clubs competing in the highest divisions and levels of European professional football, allowing for cross-competition comparison. Therefore, the coverage only considers for domestic competitions the top-division of the national league and its cups (national cup, league cup, super cup); for continental competitions, all UEFA club competitions including – although recognized but not organized by UEFA – the Fairs Cup as the predecessor to the UEFA Cup;[1][2] and additionally, on an intercontinental scale, both the FIFA Club World Cup and its defunct predecessor, the Intercontinental Cup, which was endorsed by UEFA (Europe) and CONMEBOL (South America).
All competitions for men's european football clubs
Only the period starting from the implementation of the modern offside rule in 1925 is considered for this list. Under the revised offside rule introduced in 1925, a player would be deemed offside unless there were two opposing players (including the goalkeeper) positioned ahead of them.
Abbreviations
NL
≙
National League
NC
≙
National Cup
LC
≙
League Cup
SC
≙
Super Cup
UCL
≙
European Cup / UEFA Champions League
UEL
≙
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League
UCWC
≙
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup
UECL
≙
UEFA Europa Conference League
USC
≙
UEFA Super Cup
FC
≙
Fairs Cup
IC
≙
Intercontinental Cup
FCWC
≙
FIFA Club World Cup
Key
Number of goals scored in a national club competition
Number of goals scored in a European club competition
Number of goals scored in an intercontinental / worldwide club competition
^Henrik Larsson also scored a goal in the first qualifying round of the UEFA Cup in 2000–01. Including the UEFA club competition qualifying rounds, Larsson scored 53 goals in the 2000–01 season.
References
^"Origins of the UEFA Cup"(PDF). UEFA direct. No. 85. Nyon: Union des Associations Européennes de Football. May 2009. pp. 10–11. Archived(PDF) from the original on 31 July 2021.
^Stokkermans, Karel (14 January 2016). "Consecutive National Championships". Trivia on Winning Domestic Championships. RSSSF. Retrieved 29 November 2017.