Barcelona On a poor pitch made worse by the ground authorities scheduling an amateur match before the main event, and in persistent sleet so cold that players could not feel their feet, Barcelona beat a defensively sound
Basel representative eleven 2–1 with goals from
Enric Gensana and
Evaristo. In the home leg, Barcelona took a four-goal lead before winning the match 5–2 to take the tie 7–3 on aggregate. In the quarter-final, they faced
Inter Milan of Italy, whom Barcelona coach
Helenio Herrera likened to his own club: a great team with a rich history and excellent imported players. In the home leg, Barcelona won by four goals to nil. ''
ABC's'' reporter suggested that had Inter's goalkeeper
Enzo Matteucci not been on such good form the winning margin might have been even wider, and picked out the defence, especially
Rodri, and
wing-half Joan Segarra as being outstanding in blunting the attack of the Milan stars. The second leg was played in September 1959, by which time Barcelona, as reigning Spanish champions, were competing in the
European Cup as well as the Fairs Cup. Barcelona produced what
ABC reported as a "magnificent exhibition" to win the away leg 4–2. On a difficult surface in
Belgrade and playing into the wind, Barcelona's defence held its own against the local representative eleven–– effectively a Yugoslav national selection – who played with pace and toughness. Just before the half-time interval,
Suárez broke with pace, feeding
Eulogio Martínez, who played Evaristo in to score from close range with a powerful shot. In the second half, Kostic was brought down and the referee awarded a penalty, but
Antoni Ramallets pushed it out for a corner which led to nothing. This roused the Belgrade players, but Ramallets kept them at bay. In a rare counter-attack, Martínez appeared to be fouled in the penalty area but the referee gave nothing. Halfway through the period,
Bora Kostić scored a deserved equaliser. Star of the Barcelona team was
Ramón Alberto Villaverde, who was active in all areas of the pitch and picked out by
El Mundo Deportivo as the cornerstone of Barcelona's game-plan. Herrera saw the second leg, played some six weeks later, as the hardest match they would play that year, and hoped a replay would not be needed.
László Kubala opened the scoring after only five minutes with a free kick from just outside the penalty area, and Barcelona had the better of the first half, but in the 44th minute, a break down the right was finished by
Branislav Mihajlović from close range to tie the scores. It was Barcelona who began the second half playing hard, physical football. After 57 minutes, Evaristo avoided the attentions of two opponents to score Barcelona's second. When Martínez' cross shot went in, the Yugoslavs reacted badly, trying to attack the linesman, and
Lazar Tasić was sent off. Neither side played football during the last few minutes of the match.
Birmingham City Two weeks before Birmingham's opening match, away to a
Cologne representative team,
Arthur Turner, who had led Birmingham to the semi-final of the competition the previous season, resigned as joint manager, leaving
Pat Beasley in a
caretaker role. Watched by a contingent from a local
Royal Air Force fighter station, Birmingham fell two goals behind.
Dick Neal reduced the deficit just before half-time, Birmingham spent the interval persuading the referee to fully inflate the ball – the softer ball was perceived as better suited to the Germans' slower style of play – and had much the better of the second half.
Harry Hooper scored a fine individual goal to secure a draw. For the second leg, the German side was depleted by injury and work commitments – they were all part-time players – and Birmingham won comfortably with goals from
Bunny Larkin and
Brian Taylor. Birmingham went into the away leg of their semi-final against Belgian club
Union Saint-Gilloise under strict orders to respect the referee's whistle, and on a mission to "salvag[e] some shred of our Soccer reputation—so ruthlessly wrecked" by
Wolverhampton Wanderers' first-leg defeat to
East German team
Vorwärts Berlin and
Manchester United's 6–1 capitulation at home to Real Madrid.
Anderlecht manager
Bill Gormlie described Union Saint-Gilloise as "fit, fast and powerful", and thought Birmingham "will do well to go home with only a one-goal deficit." ==First leg==