Venue The match was held at
Københavns Idrætspark located at
Øster Allé in the
Østerbro district of
Copenhagen and scheduled to take place on
Ascension Day, Thursday 7 May 1964, which by now had become the traditional stadium and date for the cup final. The stadium had been the host stadium for the previous nine cup finals, and before 1953, the final of the regional cup tournament,
KBUs Pokalturnering, took place at the venue. It was referred to as the
national stadium for the
Denmark national football team, the primary venue for the
KBU representative team and several Copenhagen-based teams had their league and cup matches scheduled there, including
exhibition games. At the beginning of the 1964
season calendar, more than 80 association football games were planned to be take place at the stadium. The problematic condition of the exhibition football field became a topic in the days leading up to the final and the organizers were criticized for not ensuring that the most optimal external conditions for playing football were present at big matches. It was described as being lumpy, bulky and only having sparse
grass in the corners due to its extensive usage by the
Danish FA (DBU), that were scheduling too many football matches in a short period of time. Circa two weeks prior to the final, the football field was exposed to
freezing temperatures and in the intervening time a total of seven matches over the course of nine days had been played at the stadium, including two league matches involving Esbjerg fB. Since being aware of the problematic football pitch and the unpredictable leaps made by the ball — compared to a well cared grass pitch — Esbjerg fB decided to move their last two training sessions to a dirt field in
Esbjerg to get more accustomed to the conditions at the host stadium. At this point in time, the city of Copenhagen lacked
additional sufficiently large stadiums, that could relieve the pressure on the country's premier football arena. While the nearby
Østerbro Stadium had been rebuilt to also accommodate association football matches and act as a reserve venue for Københavns Idrætspark, it did not prove to be popular with neither the clubs nor the audience, discouraging the Danish FA from scheduling many
top-tier and second-tier matches at the stadium. The arguments for not moving the games was mostly founded in economic reasons.
Analysis Based on the two team's previous merits in the cup tournament and their present league standings, the last three season's reigning
Danish league champions Esbjerg fB were regarded as favorites to win the cup title against
Danish 2nd Division club
Odense KFUM by various newspapers. Both teams were located in second place in their respective leagues at this point, having only lost one game each in the spring season. Esbjerg fB had twice before (in
1957 and
1962) reached the cup final, losing on both occasions and at the same time not scoring any goals. In contrast, this season's final was Odense KFUM's first appearance and their first season in which they had been among the final eight remaining teams in the competition. The two sides had previously never met each other in the domestic cup competition and only twice before in a competitive league match, which was during the third-tier's
1939–40 season. KFUM became the third team, competing in a league below the Danish 1st Division, to quality for the final, and the third
Odense-based consecutive team to play in the final, after neighboring clubs
B 1909 (in
1962) and
B 1913 (in
1963). Esbjerg fB's
football kit would be their normal home colours consisting of blue and white vertical striped shirts with a blue
collar and black shirt numbers on the back, dark blue coloured shorts and socks. The line-up for cup final would a continuation of those used in Esbjerg fB's previous two cup matches in 1964 against B 1909 and
Akademisk BK and the previous three league matches against
Kjøbenhavns BK, B 1913 and
Brønshøj BK. Compared to the first two cup matches against
BK Fremad Valby and
Vorup Frederiksberg BK, goalkeeper Verner Beck (2
caps), forward
Eigild Frandsen (2 caps) and forward Finn Nielsen (1 cap) has been replaced by goalkeeper
Erik Gaardhøje and forward
Bjarne Kikkenborg and
defender Hans Jørgen Christiansen, while forwards Knud Clausen (1 cap) and Jørgen Peter Hansen (2 caps) had been used in the first two league games of the season. The Esbjerg fB squad featured eight active or former
Danish senior national team players. Midfielder
Jens Petersen of Esbjerg fB was named
Danish Football Player of the Year in 1963. Esbjerg fB fielded two footballers,
centre-half back John Madsen and left innerwing
Egon Jensen, who had been in both of the club's previous two cup finals. With the exception of forward and
playmaker Carl Emil Christiansen, who shortly before the 1962 cup final broke his arm and was replaced by E. Frandsen, and
H. J. Christiansen, the remaining squad had all participated in the club's last cup final in 1962. The average age on match day was 23.82 years, with Madsen () being the oldest player and Kikkenborg () being the youngest. Knud Petersen (5 goals) was the club's highest scoring player in the
1963–64 cup tournament with C. E. Christiansen (3 goals) in second place.
Carl Bertelsen became the club's top goalscorer in the 1963 season, scoring 18 league goals, while C. E. Christiansen had been a shared top goalscorer in the
1962 Danish 1st Division (24 goals). After the first 10 competitive matches (league, regional and national cup) of the 1964 season, Bertelsen was listed as the Esbjerg fB player having scored the most goals (7), while C. E. Christiansen had scored the second highest number of goals (4). For the club's most high-profile match to date, the players of Odense KFUM would be wearing their usual light green-coloured shirts with a white neck stripe and the club's green
YMCA triangle placed on their left chest, white
shirt numbers on their backs, dark green shorts with thin white stripes on the sides/lower section and white socks. The club finished their 1963 season in fifth place in the second tier. Odense KFUM's starting XI featured one Danish senior national team player (
Helge Jørgensen), who had been the top goalscorer three consecutive seasons; in the
third-tier league in
1958 (26 goals; shared title),
1959 (26 goals) and
1960 (28 goals). At this point in time, Freddy Hansen had scored 4 goals and H. Jørgensen 7 goals in the first 6 league matches, two goals behind
Per Bartram of
Odense BK leading the second-tier's top goalscorer chart in the present season. The exact same eleven players in the Odense KFUM line-up for the cup's showpiece match was also fielded in the preceding away league games against
Hvidovre IF and
Ikast FS, and in the last cup match against
B 1913. The football team's core was built around the two brothers, forward and playmaker Helge Jørgensen and goalkeeper Tage Jørgensen, including winger Niels Erik Kildemoes. On match day, the players on the Odense KFUM squad were between 19 years (Henning Larsen, Kildemoes and F. Hansen) and 30 years old (Tage Jørgensen), with an average age of 23.09 years. H. Jørgensen (204), T. Jørgensen (177), Jørgen Nielsen (140), Jørgen Larsen (105) and Svend Erik Petersen (52) were the most capped players on the first senior squad of Odense KFUM. Both teams' selections for the final were made public on 5 May 1964.
Organization Arrangements was made for 60 of Esbjerg fB's managers and their ladies to travel from
Esbjerg to
Copenhagen, and back, on 7 May using buses. The Odense KFUM players and managers, with their ladies, departed from
Odense on match day at 08:00 CET to
Copenhagen in two team buses – bringing their own packed lunches just as for any other away fixture. The local newspaper
Fyens Stiftstidende and
DSB arranged for an extra train with inexpensive
tickets (
DKK 29) to transport the fans of the Odense-based club on a round-trip from Odense to Copenhagen on the day of the cup final. A similar one-day roundtrip to the capital with train (DKK 45) was arranged by
Statsbanernes Rejsebureau for the fans of Esbjerg fB, but it was cancelled due to lack of interest. The cup game would be attended by the mayor of Odense,
Holger Larsen, and the deputy mayor of Esbjerg,
Henning Rasmussen. Onsite
ticket sales to seatings began at 10:00 CET from the booths outside the
grandstand at Per Henrik Lings Allé (at the time, no pre-ordering of tickets existed), the gates opened at 12:00 CET, entertainment by the
Stævnet brass band,
Stævnets orkester, started playing at 12:30 CET, and the match was scheduled to begin at 13:30 local time (
UTC+1:00). Ticket prices varied between DKK 2 and 7 depending on it being a seat at the grandstand (nicknamed
Den dyre langside) in the north section (DKK 6 and 7), access to the south stand known as ''B.93's langside
(nicknamed Den billige langside'') next to
B.93's football pitch (DKK 5), the west end stand with standing areas referred to as
Cementen next to
Øster Allé (DKK 5) or the east end stand with standing areas next to the
hockey pitch (
Hockeybanen) and
Østerbro Stadium (DKK 4) – children and
privates paid DKK 2. The match was not broadcast live or displaced on national television, but had live coverage on the
Danmarks Radio's radio broadcast known as
Program 1 in the time slot between 13:20 and 15:15 CET – at the time an
agreement between Danmarks Radio and the
Danish FA did not exist. An estimated number of circa 2 million listeners joined in on the live radio transmission by the news media
Pressens Radioavis. Approximately 12–13 minutes of match highlights from the cup final would be shown the same evening on Danmarks Radio's primary
news broadcast, named
Aktuelt, at 22:20–22:45 CET by the
Danish TV channel's department of sports,
TV-Sport. The match was
refereed by
Carl W. Hansen (of
Slagelse; affiliated with the
Zealand FA), who had been
FIFA registered since 1963 and was supervising top-tier Danish league and cup matches since the 1950s. This became his second cup final, having previously been a lines man in the 1959 cup final replay. The semi-final match in late April 1964 between
Akademisk BK versus Esbjerg fB had been refereed by C. W. Hansen. He was assisted by the two
linesmen, Hans Asmussen and
Ejner Espersen (of
Albertslund), both from the local
Copenhagen FA. ==Match==