The 2003 Finnish Cup (Finnish: Suomen Cup) was the 49th season of the main annual association football cup competition in Finland. It was organised as a single-elimination knock–out tournament and participation in the competition was voluntary. A total of 338 teams registered for the competition. The final was held at the Finnair Stadium, Helsinki on 1 November 2003 with HJK defeating AC Allianssi by 2–1, (after extra time), before an attendance of 3,682 spectators.[1]
^"Suomen Cupin finaalit 1955-2009". suomencup.fi. Retrieved 28 February 2003.
The 2003FinnishCup (Finnish: Suomen Cup) was the 49th season of the main annual association football cup competition in Finland. It was organised as...
The FinnishCup (Finnish: Suomen cup; Swedish: Finlandscup) is Finland's main national cup competition in football. This yearly competition is open for...
The 2002 FinnishCup (Finnish: Suomen Cup) was the 48th season of the main annual association football cup competition in Finland. It was organised as...
the Finnish championship six times, the FinnishCup four times and the Finnish League Cup once. The club is placed fourth in the all-time Finnish Premier...
colloquially known as Inter, is a Finnish football club based in Turku that competes in the Veikkausliiga, the top flight of Finnish Football. Founded in 1990...
The 2004 FinnishCup (Finnish: Suomen Cup) was the 50th season of the main annual association football cup competition in Finland. It was organised as...
Veikkausliiga. It is one of the most successful clubs in Finland, with nine Finnish championships and 12 FinnishCup wins. Haka has historically had close ties with...
The Finnish Basketball Cup (Finnish: Koripallon Suomen Cup) is the highest level national domestic basketball cup competition of Finland. It is the second...
Championships 2016 final Finland-Canada, 69% Finnish people watched that game in TV MTV3-channel. The Finnish national team has won the World Championship...
Allianssi Vantaa as runners-up of the 2003FinnishCup qualified for the first qualifying round of the 2004–05 UEFA Cup. RoPS Rovaniemi - KooTeePee Kotka...
(Report) (in Finnish). Business Finland, Visit Finland. 2019. Retrieved 2 April 2020. Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment. "Finnish tourism in numbers"...
the Month: March 2004 Includes FinnishCup, FA Cup, DFB-Pokal Includes Finnish League Cup, Football League Cup / EFL Cup, Ligapokal Appearance(s) in UEFA...
IFK Mariehamn is a Finnish football club based in Mariehamn, the capital of the Åland Islands. It plays in the Finnish Premier Division (Veikkausliiga)...
League Cup Includes Finnish League Cup As of 17 June 2013 As of 15 November 2011. Win Draw Loss HJK Helsinki Veikkausliiga: 2002, 2003FinnishCup: 2003...
Veikkausliiga (Finnish: [ˈʋei̯kːɑusˌliːɡɑ]) is the premier division of Finnish football, the highest tier of the Finnish football league structure, comprising...
of women's football in Finland. Nicknamed "Tepsi", the club was founded in 1922. TPS have won 8 League titles and 3 FinnishCups. They play their home...
Heikki Marttinen. Litmanen did not win any medals in the Finnish league, but he did win the FinnishCup with MyPa in July 1992 in a 2–0 win over FF Jaro in...
commonly referred to as VPS, is a Finnish football club, based in Vaasa. It currently plays in the first tier of Finnish football (Veikkausliiga). The club's...
as Finland's biggest club, HJK is the most successful Finnish club in terms of championship titles with 33. The club has also won 14 FinnishCups and...
place in Tampere, Finland, but was cancelled as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The international headquarters of the Homeless World Cup is located at...
rakastajat" (in Finnish). Retrieved 4 January 2013. Objectùm-Sexuality Internationale, the organization which she founded Ylioppilaslehti: Finnish interview...