Match summary
Bayern entertained their Brazilian visitors for the first leg of the Intercontinental Cup on 23 November 1976 . The ground staff chose to tackle a thick layer of snow blanketing the Olympic stadium pitch with jets of water, but the unwise measure only made matters worse and the playing surface almost literally resembled an ice rink. Despite the arctic conditions, a 20,000 crowd made their way to the ground only to witness Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte turn in the livelier display. The home rearguard held firm before Gerd Müller claimed a typical poacher's goal to launch Bayern on the road to victory. The prolific goalscorer converted Uli Hoeness' lay-off for the opener ten minutes from time, before Jupp Kapellmann doubled the advantage two minutes later.

Munich travelled to Brazil for the return three days before Christmas. Jet-lagged and after only four hours in bed, the German team stepped out into the incredible atmosphere generated by a 117,000 crowd seeking to defend their aggregate lead. Keeper Sepp Maier and libero Franz Beckenbauer were in outstanding form and the Bavarians came away with a trophy-winning goalless draw.

Key player
To this day, the bars of Munich resound to lively debate over the relative merits of Franz Beckenbauer and Gerd Müller, the one a consummate strategist, the other an utterly ruthless goalscorer. The "Kaiser", the embodiment of the long-lost art of the all-seeing, visionary libero position, was the single most important influence on Bayern's playing philosophy in this era, but he could never have assembled such an illustrious medal collection without Müller's extraordinary striking prowess, neatly summed up in the finish which put the Reds a goal up in the first leg. Uli Hoeness' lay-off appeared a shade too long on the slippery turf, but Müller stretched and somehow reached the ball with his left foot. However, knowing he was almost certain to lose his footing on the Olympic stadium ice, he somehow pulled off the amazing feat of dragging the ball behind him, spinning and finding the bottom corner with his right foot. Müller managed all this in a single movement, for otherwise he would have lost his balance and missed the chance.

Coach
The German footballing public knew Dettmar Cramer as "Napoleon". Franz Beckenbauer reverently addressed him as the "Professor", a mark of respect the Kaiser still uses today. Cramer led Bayern to European Champions Cup success on two occasions before the victory over Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte, and thus rates as one of the most successful coaches in the club's history. Cramer, who coached in an astonishing 90 different countries before and after his time in Bavaria and holds the German Federal Order of Merit and two honorary professorships, claimed to have learned one over-arching truth during a richly diverse career: "I've learnt no-one can tell whether somebody's a good or bad person just because he's black, white, yellow, red or green."


1st leg
FC Bayern Munich 2-0 Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte (H-T: 1-0)
Goals:
Gerd Müller, Jupp Kapellmann
Venue: Munich
Stadium: Olympiastadion
23 November 1976
Bayern:
Sepp Maier , Björn Andersson, Franz Beckenbauer, Georg Schwarzenbeck, Udo Horsmann, Bernd Dürnberger, Conny Torstensson, Jupp Kapellmann, Uli Hoeness, Gerd Müller, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge.
Cruzeiro:
Raul - Moraes, Ozires, Nelinho, Piazza, Vanderlei, Eduardo, Ze Carlos, Palinha, Jairzinho, Joãozinho (Dirceu Lopes).
2nd leg
Cruzeiro Belo Horizonte 0-0 FC Bayern Munich
Venue:
Belo Horizonte
Stadium: Mineirão
21 December 1976
Cruzeiro:
Raul - Nelinho, Moraes, Piazza (Eduardo), Ozires, Ze Carlos, Vanderlei, Dirceu Lopes (Ofarlan), Jairzinho, Palinha, Joãozinho.
Bayern:
Sepp Maier, Björn Andersson, Georg Schwarzenbeck, Franz Beckenbauer, Udo Horsmann, Jupp Kapellmann, Conny Torstensson, Weiss, Uli Hoeness, Gerd Müller, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (Alfred Arbinger 85).