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UEFA Euro 1996

The 1996 UEFA European Football Championship, commonly referred to as Euro 96, was the 10th UEFA European Championship, a quadrennial football tournament contested by European nations and organised by UEFA. It took place in England from 8 to 30 June 1996. It was the first European Championship to feature 16 finalists, following UEFA's decision to expand the tournament from eight teams.

UEFA Euro 96
England '96
Tournament details
Host countryEngland
Dates8–30 June
Teams16
Venue(s)8 (in 8 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Germany (3rd title)
Runners-up Czech Republic
Tournament statistics
Matches played31
Goals scored64 (2.06 per match)
Attendance1,275,857 (41,157 per match)
Top scorer(s) Alan Shearer (5 goals)
Best player(s) Matthias Sammer
1992
2000

Matches were staged in eight cities and, although not all games were sold out, the tournament holds the European Championship's second-highest aggregate attendance (1,276,000) and average per game (41,158) for the 16-team format,[1] surpassed only in 2012.[2]

The tournament was the first European Championship where three points were awarded for a win during the qualification and finals group stages, as opposed to the old system of two points for a win, reflecting the growing use of this system in domestic leagues throughout the world during the previous decade.

Germany won the tournament, beating the Czech Republic 2–1 in the final with a golden goal from Oliver Bierhoff during extra time; this was the first major competition to be decided using this method. This was also Germany's first major title won as a unified nation, adding to the two European Championship titles won by West Germany prior to reunification.

Bid process Edit

At the time of the bidding process, it had not yet been confirmed that 16 teams would be participating. Instead, the bids were largely prepared as if hosting an eight-team tournament, meaning only four venues were due to be required.[3] All candidates had to submit their plans by 10 December 1991.[4]

The hosting of the event was contested by five bids: Austria, England, Greece, the Netherlands and Portugal. The English bid was selected by the UEFA Executive Committee at a meeting in Lisbon on 5 May 1992.[5] In the year preceding the decision, the English FA had dropped plans to also bid for the 1998 World Cup in order to gain the support of other UEFA members who were planning to bid for that event.[5]

Summary Edit

Group matches Edit

The hosts, England, drew 1–1 with Switzerland in the opening match of Group A when Alan Shearer's 23rd-minute goal was cancelled out by a late Kubilay Türkyilmaz penalty kick.[6] England defeated rivals Scotland 2–0 in their next game, and then produced one of their finest performances ever with a 4–1 win over the Netherlands.[7] Patrick Kluivert's late goal for the Netherlands secured his team second place in the group and ensured that Scotland would exit another major competition on tie-breaking criteria.[8]

 
A Group A game between Scotland and the Netherlands at Villa Park

Group B had Western European France and Spain, along with Balkan World Cup participants Romania and Bulgaria. France and Spain dominated the group,[9][10] with France avenging Bulgaria for the 1994 qualification debacle,[11] and World Cup quarter-finalists Romania going home,[12] with no points and only one goal scored.

Groups C and D saw the Czech Republic and Croatia, whose national teams had only recently come into existence, qualify for the knockout stage. The Czechs lost to Germany, the eventual group winners, in their opener, but then defeated Italy and drew with Russia.[13][14] Italy's defeat meant they had to beat Germany in their final game to progress, but the World Cup finalists could only manage a 0–0 draw and were eliminated.[15] In Group D, Croatia qualified for the quarter-finals, with wins over Turkey (1–0) and Denmark (3–0).[16] The loss to the Croats ultimately sent the Danes, the surprise champions of 1992, home. Turkey became the first team since the introduction of a group stage to be eliminated without gaining a point or scoring a goal.

The other three quarter-finalists were Portugal (whose "Golden Generation" was competing at its first major tournament), Spain, and a France team featuring a young Zinedine Zidane.

Quarter-finals and semi-finals Edit

The knockout stage was characterised by negative, defensive play; as a result, only nine goals were scored in the seven games and four of the matches were decided on penalties. The first quarter-final between the hosts and Spain ended goalless, after Spain had two goals disallowed and two claims for a penalty denied.[17] The English progressed 4–2 on spot kicks.[18] France and Netherlands also played out a 0–0 draw, with France winning the penalty shootout 5–4.[19] Jürgen Klinsmann opened the scoring for Germany in their match against Croatia. A goal from Davor Šuker evened the score after 51 minutes, before Matthias Sammer of Germany scored eight minutes later, and the game ended 2–1 to Germany.[20] Czech Republic progressed after beating Portugal 1–0.[21][22]

 
The view of Wembley Stadium from Wembley Way before the semi-final between Germany and England

The first semi-final, featuring France and Czech Republic, resulted in another 0–0 draw and penalties. Reynald Pedros was the one player to miss in the shootout, as Czech Republic won the penalty shoot-out 6–5.[23] The other semi-final was a repeat of the 1990 World Cup semi-final between Germany and England. Alan Shearer headed in after three minutes to give his side the lead, but Stefan Kuntz evened the score less than 15 minutes later, and the score remained 1–1 after 90 minutes. In extra time, Paul Gascoigne came very close to scoring a golden goal, but fractionally missed a cross from Shearer in front of the empty goal, Darren Anderton hit the post, and Kuntz had a goal disallowed for pushing. Neither team was able to find a second goal. In penalties, both sides scored their first five kicks, but in the sixth round, Gareth Southgate had his penalty saved, allowing Andreas Möller to score the winning goal.[24]

Final match Edit

The final saw the Czech Republic hoping to repeat Euro 1976 when Czechoslovakia defeated West Germany; the Germans were aiming to win their third European Championship. Patrik Berger scored from a penalty in 59th minute to put the Czechs ahead. German substitute Oliver Bierhoff scored in the 73rd minute to make it 1–1. Five minutes into extra time, Bierhoff's shot was mishandled by Czech goalkeeper Kouba and the ball ended up in the back of the net for the first golden goal in the history of the competition.[25] Germany were European champions again, but for the first time as a unified country.

Qualification Edit

On 30 November 1992, UEFA formally decided to expand the tournament to sixteen teams.[26] UEFA cited the increased number of international teams following the recent break up of the Soviet Union and of Yugoslavia – rising from 33 UEFA members in 1988 to 48 by 1994 – as a driving factor behind the expansion.[27] Forty-seven teams ultimately entered to compete for the fifteen remaining places in the finals, alongside hosts England.[28]

The draw for the qualifying competition took place in Manchester on 22 January 1994.[29] The teams were divided into eight groups, each containing either six or five teams. The qualifying process began in April 1994 and concluded in December 1995. At the conclusion of the qualifying group stage in November 1995, the eight group winners qualified automatically, along with the six highest-ranked second-placed teams. The remaining two second-placed teams, the Netherlands and the Republic of Ireland, contested a one-off play-off match in England to decide the final qualifier.

Qualified teams Edit

With the extended format, three teams were able to qualify for their first European Championship: Bulgaria, Switzerland and Turkey. Croatia, the Czech Republic and Russia competed for the first time in their own right since the dissolution of Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union (though the Russian team is considered by FIFA to be the direct descendant of the Soviet Union and CIS teams that had appeared in six past tournaments and the Czech team is the descendant of the Czechoslovakia team). Seven of the eight participants at the previous tournament in 1992 were again present, with only Sweden – despite also having finished third in the World Cup two years earlier – missing out. Italy qualified after missing out Euro 1992 and Romania and Portugal after 12 years.

As of 2020, this was the last time that Sweden failed to qualify for the European Championship finals.

The following sixteen teams qualified for the finals:

Team Qualified as Qualified on Previous appearances in tournament[A]
  England Host 5 May 1992 4 (1968, 1980, 1988, 1992)
  Spain Group 2 winner 11 October 1995 4 (1964, 1980, 1984, 1988)
  Russia[B] Group 8 winner 11 October 1995 6 (1960, 1964, 1968, 1972, 1988, 1992)
   Switzerland Group 3 winner 15 November 1995 0 (debut)
  Croatia Group 4 winner 15 November 1995 0 (debut)
  Scotland 4th best runner-up 15 November 1995 1 (1992)
  Bulgaria 2nd best runner-up 15 November 1995 0 (debut)
  Germany[C] Group 7 winner 15 November 1995 6 (1972, 1976, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992)
  Romania Group 1 winner 15 November 1995 1 (1984)
  Turkey 3rd best runner-up 15 November 1995 0 (debut)
  Denmark 5th best runner-up 15 November 1995 4 (1964, 1984, 1988, 1992)
  Czech Republic[D] Group 5 winner 15 November 1995 3 (1960, 1976, 1980)
  Italy 1st best runner-up 15 November 1995 3 (1968, 1980, 1988)
  France 6th best runner-up 15 November 1995 3 (1960, 1984, 1992)
  Portugal Group 6 winner 15 November 1995 1 (1984)
  Netherlands Play-off winner 13 December 1995 4 (1976, 1980, 1988, 1992)
  1. ^ Bold indicates champion for that year. Italic indicates host for that year.
  2. ^ From 1960 to 1988, Russia competed as the Soviet Union, and in 1992 as CIS.
  3. ^ From 1972 to 1988, Germany competed as West Germany.
  4. ^ From 1960 to 1980, the Czech Republic competed as Czechoslovakia.

Final draw Edit

The draw for the final tournament took place on 17 December 1995 at the International Convention Centre in Birmingham.[30] Only four teams were seeded: England (as hosts), Denmark (as holders), Spain and Germany (as the two highest ranked teams). The remaining twelve teams were all unseeded and could be drawn in any group.[30]

Pot 1: Seeded teams Pot 2: Unseeded teams
  England (hosts)[a]   Bulgaria   Italy   Russia
  Denmark (holders)[b]   Croatia   Netherlands   Scotland
  Germany   Czech Republic   Portugal    Switzerland
  Spain   France   Romania   Turkey
  Automatically selected as a top-seeded team into pot 1, irrespective of their ranking position.
  1. ^ Hosts England were automatically assigned to group position A1.
  2. ^ Defending champions Denmark were automatically assigned to Pot 1, and could be drawn into group position B1, C1 or D1.

Draw procedure:[30]

  1. The unseeded teams were first drawn one by one without being revealed from Pot 2, and placed consecutively into four group bowls labelled I to IV. The teams drawn first, fifth and ninth were put into the Group I bowl; second, sixth and tenth were put into the Group II bowl; third, seventh and eleventh were put into the Group III bowl; and fourth, eighth and twelfth were put into the Group IV bowl.
  2. The team drawn first from each group bowl was placed into position 4 in their group; the team drawn second in position 3; and the team drawn third in position 2.
  3. Finally, the four top-seeded teams were drawn from the separate Pot 1 bowl, and placed consecutively into position 1 of each group bowl.
  4. While it was decreed in advance ahead of the draw, that England's group would be Group A (irrespective of their drawn group label), the remaining three groups then consecutively had the three remaining letters (B, C and D) drawn from yet another bowl to decide the letter name of their group, which also determined what venues they would play at.

The balls were drawn by UEFA figures Gerhard Aigner and Lennart Johansson.[30]

The draw resulted in the following groups:[31]

Group A
Pos Team
A1   England
A2    Switzerland
A3   Netherlands
A4   Scotland
Wembley and Villa Park
Group B
Pos Team
B1   Spain
B2   Bulgaria
B3   Romania
B4   France
Elland Road and St James Park
Group C
Pos Team
C1   Germany
C2   Czech Republic
C3   Italy
C4   Russia
Old Trafford and Anfield
Group D
Pos Team
D1   Denmark
D2   Portugal
D3   Turkey
D4   Croatia
Hillsborough and City Ground

Venues Edit

Since the implementation of the Taylor Report in 1990, following the 1989 Hillsborough stadium disaster, England now had enough all-seater stadia of sufficient capacity to hold an expanded tournament due to the necessary stadium refurbishment by its leading clubs. The stadium capacities listed in the table are for the time of the tournament.

London Manchester
Wembley Stadium Old Trafford
Capacity: 76,567 Capacity: 55,000
   
Liverpool Birmingham
Anfield Villa Park
Capacity: 42,730 Capacity: 40,310
   
Leeds Sheffield Nottingham Newcastle
Elland Road Hillsborough City Ground St James' Park
Capacity: 40,204 Capacity: 39,859 Capacity: 30,539 Capacity: 36,649
       

Squads Edit

Each national team had to submit a squad of 22 players, three of whom must be goalkeepers.

Finals format Edit

To accommodate the expansion from an 8-team finals tournament to 16 teams, the format was changed from that used in 1992 with the addition of two extra groups in the group stage, and an extra round in the knockout phases. The four groups (A to D) still contained four teams each, with the top two from each group still going through to the knockout phase. 8 teams then went into the new quarter-finals, ahead of the usual semi-finals and final, with 8 teams going out at the group stage. The format is exactly the one which was applied to the 1958, 1962, 1966 and 1970 World Cups, except for the absence of a third place play-off.

Match ball Edit

A custom version of the Adidas Questra, the Questra Europa, was the official match ball of the championships. The design of the ball included a reworking of the England badge, and was the first coloured ball in a major football tournament.[32]

Match officials Edit

Match officials are listed in the two collapsed tables below.

Country Referee Assistants Fourth official Matches refereed
  Austria Gerd Grabher Egon Bereuter Manfred Zeiszer Günter Benkö Netherlands 1–4 England
  Belarus Vadim Zhuk Yuri Dupanov Aleh Chykun Kazimir Znaydinsky France 1–1 Spain
  Belgium Guy Goethals Marc Van den Broeck Stany Op de Beeck Michel Piraux Italy 0–0 Germany
  Bulgaria Atanas Uzunov Ivan Borissov Lekov Iordan Iordanov Stefan Ormandjiev Switzerland 0–0 Netherlands
  Czech Republic Václav Krondl Milan Brabec Otakar Draštík Jiří Ulrich Scotland 1–0 Switzerland
  Denmark Peter Mikkelsen Jens Larsen Henning Knudsen Knud Erik Fisker Bulgaria 1–0 Romania
Kim Milton Nielsen Carl-Johan Christensen Meyer Torben Siersen Lars Gerner Russia 0–3 Germany
  England David Elleray Anthony Bates Peter Walton Stephen Lodge Germany 2–0 Czech Republic
Dermot Gallagher Phil Joslin Mark Warren Paul Durkin France 3–1 Bulgaria
  France Marc Batta Pierre Ufrasi Jacques Mas Alain Sars Croatia 3–0 Denmark
Spain 0–0 England (Quarter-final)
  Germany Bernd Heynemann Hans Wolf Harald Sather Hartmut Strampe Croatia 0–3 Portugal
Hellmut Krug Klaus Plettenberg Egbert Engler Hermann Albrecht Romania 0–1 France
Czech Republic 1–0 Portugal
  Hungary Sándor Puhl László Hamar Imre Bozóky Sándor Piller Portugal 1–0 Turkey
Germany 1–1 England (Semi-final)
  Italy Piero Ceccarini Enrico Preziosi Fabrizio Zanforlin Alfredo Trentalange Spain 1–1 Bulgaria
Pierluigi Pairetto Donato Nicoletti Tullio Manfredini Marcello Nicchi Scotland 0–2 England
Czech Republic 1–2 Germany (Final)
  Netherlands Mario van der Ende Jan Dolstra Berend Talens René Temmink Denmark 1–1 Portugal
  Russia Nikolai Levnikov Serguei Foursa Sergei Frantsuzov Sergei Khusainov Turkey 0–3 Denmark
  Scotland Leslie Mottram Robert Orr John Fleming Hugh Dallas Italy 2–1 Russia
France 0–0 Czech Republic (Semi-final)
  Spain Manuel Díaz Vega Joaquín Olmos González Fernando Tresaco Gracia José María García-Aranda England 1–1 Switzerland
Antonio López Nieto Victoriano Giráldez Carrasco Manuel López Fernández Juan Ansuátegui Roca Czech Republic 2–1 Italy
France 0–0 Netherlands (Quarter-final)
  Sweden Anders Frisk Mikael Nilsson Sten Samuelsson Morgan Norman Russia 3–3 Czech Republic
Leif Sundell Kenneth Petersson Mikael Hansson Karl-Erik Nilsson Netherlands 0–0 Scotland
Germany 2–1 Croatia (Quarter-final)
  Switzerland Serge Muhmenthaler Ernst Felder Martin Freiburghaus Urs Meier Turkey 0–1 Croatia
  Turkey Ahmet Çakar Akif Uğurdur Turgay Güdü Oğuz Sarvan Romania 1–2 Spain

Group stage Edit

 
Finishing positions of the participating teams

The teams finishing in the top two positions in each of the four groups progress to the quarter-finals, while the bottom two teams in each group were eliminated from the tournament. For the first time at a European Championship three points were awarded for a win, with one for a draw and a none for a defeat.

All times are local, BST (UTC+1).

Tiebreakers Edit

For the first time in the history of the European Championship, the position of teams tied on points was decided by their head-to-head record, and not goal difference.[33] If two or more teams finished level on points after completion of the group matches, the following tie-breakers were used to determine the final ranking:

  1. Higher number of points obtained in the matches played between the teams in question;
  2. Superior goal difference resulting from the matches played between the teams in question (if more than two teams finish equal on points);
  3. Higher number of goals scored in the matches played between the teams in question (if more than two teams finish equal on points);
  4. If, after having applied criteria 1 to 3 to more than two teams, two teams still have an equal ranking, criteria 1 to 3 are reapplied exclusively to the matches between the two teams in question to determine the final rankings of the two teams. If this procedure does not lead to a decision, criteria 5 to 9 apply in the order given;
  5. Superior goal difference in all group matches;
  6. Higher number of goals scored in all group matches;
  7. Position using UEFA's national team coefficient ranking system calculated using average points per game from: the Euro 1992 qualifying stage and final tournament, the 1994 World Cup qualifying stage and final tournament and the Euro 1996 qualifying stage.
  8. Fair play conduct of the teams (final tournament);
  9. Drawing of lots.

Group A Edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   England (H) 3 2 1 0 7 2 +5 7 Advance to knockout stage
2   Netherlands 3 1 1 1 3 4 −1 4[a]
3   Scotland 3 1 1 1 1 2 −1 4[a]
4    Switzerland 3 0 1 2 1 4 −3 1
Source:
(H) Hosts
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Tied on head-to-head result (Netherlands 0–0 Scotland) and overall goal difference (−1). Overall goals for was used as the tiebreaker.
England  1–1   Switzerland
  • Shearer   23'
Report
Attendance: 76,567
Netherlands  0–0  Scotland
Report
Attendance: 34,363
Referee: Leif Sundell (Sweden)

Switzerland  0–2  Netherlands
Report
Attendance: 36,800
Scotland  0–2  England
Report
Attendance: 76,864

Scotland  1–0   Switzerland
Report
Attendance: 34,926
Netherlands  1–4  England
Report
Attendance: 76,798

Group B Edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   France 3 2 1 0 5 2 +3 7 Advance to knockout stage
2   Spain 3 1 2 0 4 3 +1 5
3   Bulgaria 3 1 1 1 3 4 −1 4
4   Romania 3 0 0 3 1 4 −3 0
Source:
Spain  1–1  Bulgaria
Report
Attendance: 24,006
Romania  0–1  France
Report
Attendance: 26,323

Bulgaria  1–0  Romania
Report
Attendance: 19,107
France  1–1  Spain
Report
Attendance: 35,626
Referee: Vadim Zhuk (Belarus)

France  3–1  Bulgaria
Report
Romania  1–2  Spain
Report
Attendance: 32,719
Referee: Ahmet Çakar (Turkey)

Group C Edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Germany 3 2 1 0 5 0 +5 7 Advance to knockout stage
2   Czech Republic 3 1 1 1 5 6 −1 4[a]
3   Italy 3 1 1 1 3 3 0 4[a]
4   Russia 3 0 1 2 4 8 −4 1
Source:
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Head-to-head result: Czech Republic 2–1 Italy.
Germany  2–0  Czech Republic
Report
Attendance: 37,300
Italy  2–1  Russia
Report
Attendance: 35,120

Czech Republic  2–1  Italy
Report
Attendance: 37,320
Russia  0–3  Germany
Report
Attendance: 50,760

Russia  3–3  Czech Republic
Report
Attendance: 21,128
Referee: Anders Frisk (Sweden)
Italy  0–0  Germany
Report
Attendance: 53,740

Group D Edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Portugal 3 2 1 0 5 1 +4 7 Advance to knockout stage
2   Croatia 3 2 0 1 4 3 +1 6
3   Denmark 3 1 1 1 4 4 0 4
4   Turkey 3 0 0 3 0 5 −5 0
Source:
Denmark  1–1  Portugal
Report
Turkey  0–1  Croatia
Report

Portugal  1–0  Turkey
Report
Attendance: 22,670
Croatia  3–0  Denmark
Report
Attendance: 33,671
Referee: Marc Batta (France)

Croatia  0–3  Portugal
Report
Attendance: 20,484
Turkey  0–3  Denmark
Report
Attendance: 28,951

Knockout stage Edit

The knockout stage was a single-elimination tournament with each round eliminating the losers. Any game that was undecided by the end of the regular 90 minutes, was followed by up to thirty minutes of extra time. For the first time in a major football competition, the golden goal system was applied, whereby the first team to score during the extra time would become the winner. If no goal was scored there would be a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner. For the first time the final was won by a golden goal.

As with every tournament since UEFA Euro 1984, there was no third place play-off.

All times are local, BST (UTC+1).

Bracket Edit

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
22 June – Liverpool
 
 
  France (p)0 (5)
 
26 June – Manchester
 
  Netherlands0 (4)
 
  France0 (5)
 
23 June – Birmingham
 
  Czech Republic (p)0 (6)
 
  Czech Republic1
 
30 June – London
 
  Portugal0
 
  Czech Republic1
 
23 June – Manchester
 
  Germany (g.g.)2
 
  Germany2
 
26 June – London
 
  Croatia1
 
  Germany (p)1 (6)
 
22 June – London
 
  England1 (5)
 
  Spain0 (2)
 
 
  England (p)0 (4)
 

Quarter-finals Edit

Spain  0–0 (a.e.t.)  England
Report
Penalties
2–4
Attendance: 75,440[18]
Referee: Marc Batta (France)

Attendance: 37,465[19]

Germany  2–1  Croatia
Report
Attendance: 43,412[20]
Referee: Leif Sundell (Sweden)

Czech Republic  1–0  Portugal
Report
Attendance: 26,832[34]

Semi-finals Edit

Attendance: 43,877[23]

Germany  1–1 (a.e.t.)  England
Report
Penalties
6–5
Attendance: 75,862[24]

Final Edit

Czech Republic  1–2 (a.e.t.)  Germany
Report
Attendance: 73,611

Statistics Edit

Goalscorers Edit

There were 64 goals scored in 31 matches, for an average of 2.06 goals per match.

5 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

Awards Edit

Team of the Tournament[35][36]
Golden Boot

Alan Shearer was awarded the Golden Boot award, after scoring five goals in the group stage and in the semi-finals against Germany.

UEFA Player of the Tournament

Marketing Edit

Slogan and theme songs Edit

The competition slogan was Football Comes Home reflecting that the sport's rules were first standardised in the United Kingdom. UEFA President Lennart Johansson had said that the organisation had felt it was time to bring the event "back to the motherland of football".[29]

The slogan was incorporated into the competition's most popular song: "Three Lions" recorded by comedians David Baddiel and Frank Skinner with Britpop band the Lightning Seeds. Baddiel and Skinner were then strongly connected with football owing to their BBC show Fantasy Football League.[37] Released as a single, the song topped the UK Singles Chart for a total of two weeks.[38] It was promoted by a video featuring the England squad.[37]

The song was prominently sung by England fans during all their games, and was also chanted by the German team upon parading the trophy in Berlin after the tournament. It was even referenced by future Prime Minister Tony Blair in an address at the 1996 Labour Party Conference with the line: "Seventeen years of hurt, never stopped us dreaming, Labour's coming home".[39]

"Three Lions" was the official song of the England team, and is the song most strongly connected with the tournament, however the official song of the tournament was "We're in This Together" by Simply Red. The song was performed at the tournament's opening ceremony.[40]

Merchandise and mascots Edit

The British Royal Mint issued a commemorative £2 coin in 1996, which featured a representation of a football, "1996" in the centre, and 16 small rings representing the 16 competing teams. Further special coins were only issued in the Isle of Man and Gibraltar.[41]

The official mascot, 'Goaliath', was designed in a similar fashion to the original World Cup mascot from the 1966 World Cup. Goaliath comprised a lion, the image on the English team crest, dressed in an England football strip and football boots whilst holding a football under his right arm.[42]

Sponsorship Edit

Controversies Edit

Terrorist attack Edit

A terrorist attack took place in Manchester on 15 June, one day before the group stage match between Germany and Russia was due to take place in the same city.[45] The detonation of a van bomb in the city centre injured 212 people and caused an estimated £700 million worth of damage. Four days after the blast, the Provisional Irish Republican Army issued a statement in which it claimed responsibility, but regretted causing injury to civilians.[46]

The Manchester bombing was the first and so far only major terrorist attack in the host city of an ongoing UEFA European Championship. The scheduled match at Old Trafford on the day following the bombing went ahead as planned after the stadium had been heavily guarded overnight and carefully searched; the game, in which Germany defeated Russia 3–0, was watched by a near capacity crowd of 50,700.

Empty seats Edit

The aggregate attendance of 1,276,000 and average attendance of 41,158 per game were the highest for the European Championship (in its 16-team format) until the 2012 tournament.[2] However, these numbers were based on the number of tickets sold rather than the number of spectators in the ground, which was often significantly lower. The large number of empty seats in most of the games not involving England was blamed on a number of factors: a lack of travelling fans from most of the other nations concerned, a lack of interest among locals for games not involving England, kick-offs before 5:00 pm that made it hard for children at school and adults at work to attend, steep ticket prices, and UEFA's policy of only selling tickets in blocks (where each block consisted of a set from each of three price bands).[47]

Disorder Edit

After England's defeat to Germany in the semi-finals, a large-scale riot took place in Trafalgar Square and the surrounding area. Further outbreaks of trouble occurred in the streets of several other towns. The police and German-made cars were targeted, with damage also caused to various other properties.[48] A Russian student was stabbed in Brighton after attackers mistook him for being German.[49]

Despite this outbreak, the tournament overall was free of hooliganism, helping rehabilitate England's reputation after their fans' conduct during the previous decades.[48] UEFA's awarding of the tournament to England was in itself a further step in bringing the country back fully into the international fold, coming soon after their decision in 1990 to re-admit English clubs back into UEFA competitions after the indefinite ban issued to them following the Heysel Stadium disaster in 1985.[50][51]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Gallagher suffered an injury in the 28th minute and was replaced by fourth official Paul Durkin (England).

References Edit

  1. ^ Bevan, Chris (17 May 2012). "Euro 1996: When football came home". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation.
  2. ^ a b "Euro 2012 Shatters Attendance Record". Sports Business Daily. 3 July 2012. Retrieved 21 June 2014.
  3. ^ White, Clive (9 June 1992). "England wait ends in 1996". The Times. London.
  4. ^ Jones, Stuart (4 December 1991). "Rivals to be given extra time". The Times. London.
  5. ^ a b Jones, Stuart (5 May 1992). "England will host 1996 Championship". The Times. London.
  6. ^ Ridley, Ian (9 June 1996). "Shearer bliss, sheer agony". The Independent. Independent Print. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  7. ^ Moore, Glenn (19 June 1996). "England's night of rapture". The Independent. Independent Print. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  8. ^ "Kluivert's late strike sinks Scotland". The Independent. Independent Print. 19 June 1996. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  9. ^ Hodgson, Guy (11 June 1996). "Dugarry makes the difference". The Independent. Independent Print. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  10. ^ Hodgson, Guy (17 June 1996). "Euro '96: Clemente short of firepower". The Independent. Independent Print. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  11. ^ Hodgson, Guy (19 June 1996). "France banish the ghost of Bulgaria to reach last eight". The Independent. Independent Print. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  12. ^ Culley, Jon (19 June 1996). "Spanish eyes are smiling for Amor". The Independent. Independent Print. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  13. ^ Hodgson, Guy (15 June 1996). "Italians left on the brink of disaster". The Independent. Independent Print. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  14. ^ Shaw, Phil (20 June 1996). "Smicer strike takes Czechs through". The Independent. Independent Print. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
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uefa, euro, 1996, 1996, uefa, european, football, championship, commonly, referred, euro, 10th, uefa, european, championship, quadrennial, football, tournament, contested, european, nations, organised, uefa, took, place, england, from, june, 1996, first, europ. The 1996 UEFA European Football Championship commonly referred to as Euro 96 was the 10th UEFA European Championship a quadrennial football tournament contested by European nations and organised by UEFA It took place in England from 8 to 30 June 1996 It was the first European Championship to feature 16 finalists following UEFA s decision to expand the tournament from eight teams UEFA Euro 96England 96Tournament detailsHost countryEnglandDates8 30 JuneTeams16Venue s 8 in 8 host cities Final positionsChampions Germany 3rd title Runners up Czech RepublicTournament statisticsMatches played31Goals scored64 2 06 per match Attendance1 275 857 41 157 per match Top scorer s Alan Shearer 5 goals Best player s Matthias Sammer 19922000 Matches were staged in eight cities and although not all games were sold out the tournament holds the European Championship s second highest aggregate attendance 1 276 000 and average per game 41 158 for the 16 team format 1 surpassed only in 2012 2 The tournament was the first European Championship where three points were awarded for a win during the qualification and finals group stages as opposed to the old system of two points for a win reflecting the growing use of this system in domestic leagues throughout the world during the previous decade Germany won the tournament beating the Czech Republic 2 1 in the final with a golden goal from Oliver Bierhoff during extra time this was the first major competition to be decided using this method This was also Germany s first major title won as a unified nation adding to the two European Championship titles won by West Germany prior to reunification Contents 1 Bid process 2 Summary 2 1 Group matches 2 2 Quarter finals and semi finals 2 3 Final match 3 Qualification 3 1 Qualified teams 3 2 Final draw 4 Venues 5 Squads 6 Finals format 7 Match ball 8 Match officials 9 Group stage 9 1 Tiebreakers 9 2 Group A 9 3 Group B 9 4 Group C 9 5 Group D 10 Knockout stage 10 1 Bracket 10 2 Quarter finals 10 3 Semi finals 10 4 Final 11 Statistics 11 1 Goalscorers 11 2 Awards 12 Marketing 12 1 Slogan and theme songs 12 2 Merchandise and mascots 12 3 Sponsorship 13 Controversies 13 1 Terrorist attack 13 2 Empty seats 13 3 Disorder 14 Notes 15 References 16 External linksBid process EditAt the time of the bidding process it had not yet been confirmed that 16 teams would be participating Instead the bids were largely prepared as if hosting an eight team tournament meaning only four venues were due to be required 3 All candidates had to submit their plans by 10 December 1991 4 The hosting of the event was contested by five bids Austria England Greece the Netherlands and Portugal The English bid was selected by the UEFA Executive Committee at a meeting in Lisbon on 5 May 1992 5 In the year preceding the decision the English FA had dropped plans to also bid for the 1998 World Cup in order to gain the support of other UEFA members who were planning to bid for that event 5 Summary EditGroup matches Edit The hosts England drew 1 1 with Switzerland in the opening match of Group A when Alan Shearer s 23rd minute goal was cancelled out by a late Kubilay Turkyilmaz penalty kick 6 England defeated rivals Scotland 2 0 in their next game and then produced one of their finest performances ever with a 4 1 win over the Netherlands 7 Patrick Kluivert s late goal for the Netherlands secured his team second place in the group and ensured that Scotland would exit another major competition on tie breaking criteria 8 nbsp A Group A game between Scotland and the Netherlands at Villa ParkGroup B had Western European France and Spain along with Balkan World Cup participants Romania and Bulgaria France and Spain dominated the group 9 10 with France avenging Bulgaria for the 1994 qualification debacle 11 and World Cup quarter finalists Romania going home 12 with no points and only one goal scored Groups C and D saw the Czech Republic and Croatia whose national teams had only recently come into existence qualify for the knockout stage The Czechs lost to Germany the eventual group winners in their opener but then defeated Italy and drew with Russia 13 14 Italy s defeat meant they had to beat Germany in their final game to progress but the World Cup finalists could only manage a 0 0 draw and were eliminated 15 In Group D Croatia qualified for the quarter finals with wins over Turkey 1 0 and Denmark 3 0 16 The loss to the Croats ultimately sent the Danes the surprise champions of 1992 home Turkey became the first team since the introduction of a group stage to be eliminated without gaining a point or scoring a goal The other three quarter finalists were Portugal whose Golden Generation was competing at its first major tournament Spain and a France team featuring a young Zinedine Zidane Quarter finals and semi finals Edit The knockout stage was characterised by negative defensive play as a result only nine goals were scored in the seven games and four of the matches were decided on penalties The first quarter final between the hosts and Spain ended goalless after Spain had two goals disallowed and two claims for a penalty denied 17 The English progressed 4 2 on spot kicks 18 France and Netherlands also played out a 0 0 draw with France winning the penalty shootout 5 4 19 Jurgen Klinsmann opened the scoring for Germany in their match against Croatia A goal from Davor Suker evened the score after 51 minutes before Matthias Sammer of Germany scored eight minutes later and the game ended 2 1 to Germany 20 Czech Republic progressed after beating Portugal 1 0 21 22 nbsp The view of Wembley Stadium from Wembley Way before the semi final between Germany and EnglandThe first semi final featuring France and Czech Republic resulted in another 0 0 draw and penalties Reynald Pedros was the one player to miss in the shootout as Czech Republic won the penalty shoot out 6 5 23 The other semi final was a repeat of the 1990 World Cup semi final between Germany and England Alan Shearer headed in after three minutes to give his side the lead but Stefan Kuntz evened the score less than 15 minutes later and the score remained 1 1 after 90 minutes In extra time Paul Gascoigne came very close to scoring a golden goal but fractionally missed a cross from Shearer in front of the empty goal Darren Anderton hit the post and Kuntz had a goal disallowed for pushing Neither team was able to find a second goal In penalties both sides scored their first five kicks but in the sixth round Gareth Southgate had his penalty saved allowing Andreas Moller to score the winning goal 24 Final match Edit The final saw the Czech Republic hoping to repeat Euro 1976 when Czechoslovakia defeated West Germany the Germans were aiming to win their third European Championship Patrik Berger scored from a penalty in 59th minute to put the Czechs ahead German substitute Oliver Bierhoff scored in the 73rd minute to make it 1 1 Five minutes into extra time Bierhoff s shot was mishandled by Czech goalkeeper Kouba and the ball ended up in the back of the net for the first golden goal in the history of the competition 25 Germany were European champions again but for the first time as a unified country Qualification EditMain article UEFA Euro 1996 qualifying On 30 November 1992 UEFA formally decided to expand the tournament to sixteen teams 26 UEFA cited the increased number of international teams following the recent break up of the Soviet Union and of Yugoslavia rising from 33 UEFA members in 1988 to 48 by 1994 as a driving factor behind the expansion 27 Forty seven teams ultimately entered to compete for the fifteen remaining places in the finals alongside hosts England 28 The draw for the qualifying competition took place in Manchester on 22 January 1994 29 The teams were divided into eight groups each containing either six or five teams The qualifying process began in April 1994 and concluded in December 1995 At the conclusion of the qualifying group stage in November 1995 the eight group winners qualified automatically along with the six highest ranked second placed teams The remaining two second placed teams the Netherlands and the Republic of Ireland contested a one off play off match in England to decide the final qualifier Qualified teams Edit With the extended format three teams were able to qualify for their first European Championship Bulgaria Switzerland and Turkey Croatia the Czech Republic and Russia competed for the first time in their own right since the dissolution of Yugoslavia Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union though the Russian team is considered by FIFA to be the direct descendant of the Soviet Union and CIS teams that had appeared in six past tournaments and the Czech team is the descendant of the Czechoslovakia team Seven of the eight participants at the previous tournament in 1992 were again present with only Sweden despite also having finished third in the World Cup two years earlier missing out Italy qualified after missing out Euro 1992 and Romania and Portugal after 12 years As of 2020 this was the last time that Sweden failed to qualify for the European Championship finals The following sixteen teams qualified for the finals Team Qualified as Qualified on Previous appearances in tournament A nbsp England Host 5 May 1992 4 1968 1980 1988 1992 nbsp Spain Group 2 winner 11 October 1995 4 1964 1980 1984 1988 nbsp Russia B Group 8 winner 11 October 1995 6 1960 1964 1968 1972 1988 1992 nbsp Switzerland Group 3 winner 15 November 1995 0 debut nbsp Croatia Group 4 winner 15 November 1995 0 debut nbsp Scotland 4th best runner up 15 November 1995 1 1992 nbsp Bulgaria 2nd best runner up 15 November 1995 0 debut nbsp Germany C Group 7 winner 15 November 1995 6 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 nbsp Romania Group 1 winner 15 November 1995 1 1984 nbsp Turkey 3rd best runner up 15 November 1995 0 debut nbsp Denmark 5th best runner up 15 November 1995 4 1964 1984 1988 1992 nbsp Czech Republic D Group 5 winner 15 November 1995 3 1960 1976 1980 nbsp Italy 1st best runner up 15 November 1995 3 1968 1980 1988 nbsp France 6th best runner up 15 November 1995 3 1960 1984 1992 nbsp Portugal Group 6 winner 15 November 1995 1 1984 nbsp Netherlands Play off winner 13 December 1995 4 1976 1980 1988 1992 Bold indicates champion for that year Italic indicates host for that year From 1960 to 1988 Russia competed as the Soviet Union and in 1992 as CIS From 1972 to 1988 Germany competed as West Germany From 1960 to 1980 the Czech Republic competed as Czechoslovakia Final draw Edit The draw for the final tournament took place on 17 December 1995 at the International Convention Centre in Birmingham 30 Only four teams were seeded England as hosts Denmark as holders Spain and Germany as the two highest ranked teams The remaining twelve teams were all unseeded and could be drawn in any group 30 Pot 1 Seeded teams Pot 2 Unseeded teams nbsp England hosts a nbsp Bulgaria nbsp Italy nbsp Russia nbsp Denmark holders b nbsp Croatia nbsp Netherlands nbsp Scotland nbsp Germany nbsp Czech Republic nbsp Portugal nbsp Switzerland nbsp Spain nbsp France nbsp Romania nbsp Turkey Automatically selected as a top seeded team into pot 1 irrespective of their ranking position Hosts England were automatically assigned to group position A1 Defending champions Denmark were automatically assigned to Pot 1 and could be drawn into group position B1 C1 or D1 Draw procedure 30 The unseeded teams were first drawn one by one without being revealed from Pot 2 and placed consecutively into four group bowls labelled I to IV The teams drawn first fifth and ninth were put into the Group I bowl second sixth and tenth were put into the Group II bowl third seventh and eleventh were put into the Group III bowl and fourth eighth and twelfth were put into the Group IV bowl The team drawn first from each group bowl was placed into position 4 in their group the team drawn second in position 3 and the team drawn third in position 2 Finally the four top seeded teams were drawn from the separate Pot 1 bowl and placed consecutively into position 1 of each group bowl While it was decreed in advance ahead of the draw that England s group would be Group A irrespective of their drawn group label the remaining three groups then consecutively had the three remaining letters B C and D drawn from yet another bowl to decide the letter name of their group which also determined what venues they would play at The balls were drawn by UEFA figures Gerhard Aigner and Lennart Johansson 30 The draw resulted in the following groups 31 Group A Pos TeamA1 nbsp EnglandA2 nbsp SwitzerlandA3 nbsp NetherlandsA4 nbsp ScotlandWembley and Villa Park Group B Pos TeamB1 nbsp SpainB2 nbsp BulgariaB3 nbsp RomaniaB4 nbsp FranceElland Road and St James Park Group C Pos TeamC1 nbsp GermanyC2 nbsp Czech RepublicC3 nbsp ItalyC4 nbsp RussiaOld Trafford and Anfield Group D Pos TeamD1 nbsp DenmarkD2 nbsp PortugalD3 nbsp TurkeyD4 nbsp CroatiaHillsborough and City GroundVenues EditSince the implementation of the Taylor Report in 1990 following the 1989 Hillsborough stadium disaster England now had enough all seater stadia of sufficient capacity to hold an expanded tournament due to the necessary stadium refurbishment by its leading clubs The stadium capacities listed in the table are for the time of the tournament nbsp nbsp London nbsp Manchester nbsp Liverpool nbsp Birmingham nbsp Leeds nbsp Sheffield nbsp Nottingham nbsp Newcastle London ManchesterWembley Stadium Old TraffordCapacity 76 567 Capacity 55 000 nbsp nbsp Liverpool BirminghamAnfield Villa ParkCapacity 42 730 Capacity 40 310 nbsp nbsp Leeds Sheffield Nottingham NewcastleElland Road Hillsborough City Ground St James ParkCapacity 40 204 Capacity 39 859 Capacity 30 539 Capacity 36 649 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Squads EditMain article UEFA Euro 1996 squads Each national team had to submit a squad of 22 players three of whom must be goalkeepers Finals format EditTo accommodate the expansion from an 8 team finals tournament to 16 teams the format was changed from that used in 1992 with the addition of two extra groups in the group stage and an extra round in the knockout phases The four groups A to D still contained four teams each with the top two from each group still going through to the knockout phase 8 teams then went into the new quarter finals ahead of the usual semi finals and final with 8 teams going out at the group stage The format is exactly the one which was applied to the 1958 1962 1966 and 1970 World Cups except for the absence of a third place play off Match ball EditMain article Adidas Questra A custom version of the Adidas Questra the Questra Europa was the official match ball of the championships The design of the ball included a reworking of the England badge and was the first coloured ball in a major football tournament 32 Match officials EditMatch officials are listed in the two collapsed tables below Country Referee Assistants Fourth official Matches refereed nbsp Austria Gerd Grabher Egon Bereuter Manfred Zeiszer Gunter Benko Netherlands 1 4 England nbsp Belarus Vadim Zhuk Yuri Dupanov Aleh Chykun Kazimir Znaydinsky France 1 1 Spain nbsp Belgium Guy Goethals Marc Van den Broeck Stany Op de Beeck Michel Piraux Italy 0 0 Germany nbsp Bulgaria Atanas Uzunov Ivan Borissov Lekov Iordan Iordanov Stefan Ormandjiev Switzerland 0 0 Netherlands nbsp Czech Republic Vaclav Krondl Milan Brabec Otakar Drastik Jiri Ulrich Scotland 1 0 Switzerland nbsp Denmark Peter Mikkelsen Jens Larsen Henning Knudsen Knud Erik Fisker Bulgaria 1 0 RomaniaKim Milton Nielsen Carl Johan Christensen Meyer Torben Siersen Lars Gerner Russia 0 3 Germany nbsp England David Elleray Anthony Bates Peter Walton Stephen Lodge Germany 2 0 Czech RepublicDermot Gallagher Phil Joslin Mark Warren Paul Durkin France 3 1 Bulgaria nbsp France Marc Batta Pierre Ufrasi Jacques Mas Alain Sars Croatia 3 0 DenmarkSpain 0 0 England Quarter final nbsp Germany Bernd Heynemann Hans Wolf Harald Sather Hartmut Strampe Croatia 0 3 PortugalHellmut Krug Klaus Plettenberg Egbert Engler Hermann Albrecht Romania 0 1 FranceCzech Republic 1 0 Portugal nbsp Hungary Sandor Puhl Laszlo Hamar Imre Bozoky Sandor Piller Portugal 1 0 TurkeyGermany 1 1 England Semi final nbsp Italy Piero Ceccarini Enrico Preziosi Fabrizio Zanforlin Alfredo Trentalange Spain 1 1 BulgariaPierluigi Pairetto Donato Nicoletti Tullio Manfredini Marcello Nicchi Scotland 0 2 EnglandCzech Republic 1 2 Germany Final nbsp Netherlands Mario van der Ende Jan Dolstra Berend Talens Rene Temmink Denmark 1 1 Portugal nbsp Russia Nikolai Levnikov Serguei Foursa Sergei Frantsuzov Sergei Khusainov Turkey 0 3 Denmark nbsp Scotland Leslie Mottram Robert Orr John Fleming Hugh Dallas Italy 2 1 RussiaFrance 0 0 Czech Republic Semi final nbsp Spain Manuel Diaz Vega Joaquin Olmos Gonzalez Fernando Tresaco Gracia Jose Maria Garcia Aranda England 1 1 SwitzerlandAntonio Lopez Nieto Victoriano Giraldez Carrasco Manuel Lopez Fernandez Juan Ansuategui Roca Czech Republic 2 1 ItalyFrance 0 0 Netherlands Quarter final nbsp Sweden Anders Frisk Mikael Nilsson Sten Samuelsson Morgan Norman Russia 3 3 Czech RepublicLeif Sundell Kenneth Petersson Mikael Hansson Karl Erik Nilsson Netherlands 0 0 ScotlandGermany 2 1 Croatia Quarter final nbsp Switzerland Serge Muhmenthaler Ernst Felder Martin Freiburghaus Urs Meier Turkey 0 1 Croatia nbsp Turkey Ahmet Cakar Akif Ugurdur Turgay Gudu Oguz Sarvan Romania 1 2 SpainGroup stage Edit nbsp Finishing positions of the participating teamsThe teams finishing in the top two positions in each of the four groups progress to the quarter finals while the bottom two teams in each group were eliminated from the tournament For the first time at a European Championship three points were awarded for a win with one for a draw and a none for a defeat All times are local BST UTC 1 Tiebreakers Edit For the first time in the history of the European Championship the position of teams tied on points was decided by their head to head record and not goal difference 33 If two or more teams finished level on points after completion of the group matches the following tie breakers were used to determine the final ranking Higher number of points obtained in the matches played between the teams in question Superior goal difference resulting from the matches played between the teams in question if more than two teams finish equal on points Higher number of goals scored in the matches played between the teams in question if more than two teams finish equal on points If after having applied criteria 1 to 3 to more than two teams two teams still have an equal ranking criteria 1 to 3 are reapplied exclusively to the matches between the two teams in question to determine the final rankings of the two teams If this procedure does not lead to a decision criteria 5 to 9 apply in the order given Superior goal difference in all group matches Higher number of goals scored in all group matches Position using UEFA s national team coefficient ranking system calculated using average points per game from the Euro 1992 qualifying stage and final tournament the 1994 World Cup qualifying stage and final tournament and the Euro 1996 qualifying stage Fair play conduct of the teams final tournament Drawing of lots Group A Edit Main article UEFA Euro 1996 Group A Pos Teamvte Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification1 nbsp England H 3 2 1 0 7 2 5 7 Advance to knockout stage2 nbsp Netherlands 3 1 1 1 3 4 1 4 a 3 nbsp Scotland 3 1 1 1 1 2 1 4 a 4 nbsp Switzerland 3 0 1 2 1 4 3 1Source UEFA H HostsNotes a b Tied on head to head result Netherlands 0 0 Scotland and overall goal difference 1 Overall goals for was used as the tiebreaker 8 June 1996 1996 06 08 15 00England nbsp 1 1 nbsp SwitzerlandShearer nbsp 23 Report Turkyilmaz nbsp 83 pen Wembley Stadium LondonAttendance 76 567Referee Manuel Diaz Vega Spain 10 June 1996 1996 06 10 16 30Netherlands nbsp 0 0 nbsp ScotlandReportVilla Park BirminghamAttendance 34 363Referee Leif Sundell Sweden 13 June 1996 1996 06 13 19 30Switzerland nbsp 0 2 nbsp NetherlandsReport Cruyff nbsp 66 Bergkamp nbsp 79 Villa Park BirminghamAttendance 36 800Referee Atanas Uzunov Bulgaria 15 June 1996 1996 06 15 15 00Scotland nbsp 0 2 nbsp EnglandReport Shearer nbsp 53 Gascoigne nbsp 79 Wembley Stadium LondonAttendance 76 864Referee Pierluigi Pairetto Italy 18 June 1996 1996 06 18 19 30Scotland nbsp 1 0 nbsp SwitzerlandMcCoist nbsp 36 ReportVilla Park BirminghamAttendance 34 926Referee Vaclav Krondl Czech Republic 18 June 1996 1996 06 18 19 30Netherlands nbsp 1 4 nbsp EnglandKluivert nbsp 78 Report Shearer nbsp 23 pen 57 Sheringham nbsp 51 62 Wembley Stadium LondonAttendance 76 798Referee Gerd Grabher Austria Group B Edit Main article UEFA Euro 1996 Group B Pos Teamvte Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification1 nbsp France 3 2 1 0 5 2 3 7 Advance to knockout stage2 nbsp Spain 3 1 2 0 4 3 1 53 nbsp Bulgaria 3 1 1 1 3 4 1 44 nbsp Romania 3 0 0 3 1 4 3 0Source UEFA 9 June 1996 1996 06 09 14 30Spain nbsp 1 1 nbsp BulgariaAlfonso nbsp 74 Report Stoichkov nbsp 65 pen Elland Road LeedsAttendance 24 006Referee Piero Ceccarini Italy 10 June 1996 1996 06 10 19 30Romania nbsp 0 1 nbsp FranceReport Dugarry nbsp 25 St James Park NewcastleAttendance 26 323Referee Hellmut Krug Germany 13 June 1996 1996 06 13 16 30Bulgaria nbsp 1 0 nbsp RomaniaStoichkov nbsp 3 ReportSt James Park NewcastleAttendance 19 107Referee Peter Mikkelsen Denmark 15 June 1996 1996 06 15 18 00France nbsp 1 1 nbsp SpainDjorkaeff nbsp 48 Report Caminero nbsp 85 Elland Road LeedsAttendance 35 626Referee Vadim Zhuk Belarus 18 June 1996 1996 06 18 16 30France nbsp 3 1 nbsp BulgariaBlanc nbsp 21 Penev nbsp 63 o g Loko nbsp 90 Report Stoichkov nbsp 69 St James Park NewcastleAttendance 26 976Referee Dermot Gallagher England note 1 18 June 1996 1996 06 18 16 30Romania nbsp 1 2 nbsp SpainRăducioiu nbsp 29 Report Manjarin nbsp 11 Amor nbsp 84 Elland Road LeedsAttendance 32 719Referee Ahmet Cakar Turkey Group C Edit Main article UEFA Euro 1996 Group C Pos Teamvte Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification1 nbsp Germany 3 2 1 0 5 0 5 7 Advance to knockout stage2 nbsp Czech Republic 3 1 1 1 5 6 1 4 a 3 nbsp Italy 3 1 1 1 3 3 0 4 a 4 nbsp Russia 3 0 1 2 4 8 4 1Source UEFANotes a b Head to head result Czech Republic 2 1 Italy 9 June 1996 1996 06 09 17 00Germany nbsp 2 0 nbsp Czech RepublicZiege nbsp 26 Moller nbsp 32 ReportOld Trafford ManchesterAttendance 37 300Referee David Elleray England 11 June 1996 1996 06 11 16 30Italy nbsp 2 1 nbsp RussiaCasiraghi nbsp 5 52 Report Tsymbalar nbsp 21 Anfield LiverpoolAttendance 35 120Referee Leslie Mottram Scotland 14 June 1996 1996 06 14 19 30Czech Republic nbsp 2 1 nbsp ItalyNedved nbsp 5 Bejbl nbsp 35 Report Chiesa nbsp 18 Anfield LiverpoolAttendance 37 320Referee Antonio Lopez Nieto Spain 16 June 1996 1996 06 16 15 00Russia nbsp 0 3 nbsp GermanyReport Sammer nbsp 56 Klinsmann nbsp 77 90 Old Trafford ManchesterAttendance 50 760Referee Kim Milton Nielsen Denmark 19 June 1996 1996 06 19 19 30Russia nbsp 3 3 nbsp Czech RepublicMostovoi nbsp 49 Tetradze nbsp 54 Beschastnykh nbsp 85 Report Suchoparek nbsp 5 Kuka nbsp 19 Smicer nbsp 88 Anfield LiverpoolAttendance 21 128Referee Anders Frisk Sweden 19 June 1996 1996 06 19 19 30Italy nbsp 0 0 nbsp GermanyReportOld Trafford ManchesterAttendance 53 740Referee Guy Goethals Belgium Group D Edit Main article UEFA Euro 1996 Group D Pos Teamvte Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification1 nbsp Portugal 3 2 1 0 5 1 4 7 Advance to knockout stage2 nbsp Croatia 3 2 0 1 4 3 1 63 nbsp Denmark 3 1 1 1 4 4 0 44 nbsp Turkey 3 0 0 3 0 5 5 0Source UEFA 9 June 1996 1996 06 09 19 30Denmark nbsp 1 1 nbsp PortugalB Laudrup nbsp 22 Report Sa Pinto nbsp 53 Hillsborough SheffieldAttendance 34 993Referee Mario van der Ende Netherlands 11 June 1996 1996 06 11 19 30Turkey nbsp 0 1 nbsp CroatiaReport Vlaovic nbsp 86 City Ground NottinghamAttendance 22 460Referee Serge Muhmenthaler Switzerland 14 June 1996 1996 06 14 16 30Portugal nbsp 1 0 nbsp TurkeyCouto nbsp 66 ReportCity Ground NottinghamAttendance 22 670Referee Sandor Puhl Hungary 16 June 1996 1996 06 16 18 00Croatia nbsp 3 0 nbsp DenmarkSuker nbsp 54 pen 90 Boban nbsp 81 ReportHillsborough SheffieldAttendance 33 671Referee Marc Batta France 19 June 1996 1996 06 19 16 30Croatia nbsp 0 3 nbsp PortugalReport Figo nbsp 4 Joao Pinto nbsp 33 Domingos nbsp 82 City Ground NottinghamAttendance 20 484Referee Bernd Heynemann Germany 19 June 1996 1996 06 19 16 30Turkey nbsp 0 3 nbsp DenmarkReport B Laudrup nbsp 50 84 A Nielsen nbsp 69 Hillsborough SheffieldAttendance 28 951Referee Nikolai Levnikov Russia Knockout stage EditMain article UEFA Euro 1996 knockout stage The knockout stage was a single elimination tournament with each round eliminating the losers Any game that was undecided by the end of the regular 90 minutes was followed by up to thirty minutes of extra time For the first time in a major football competition the golden goal system was applied whereby the first team to score during the extra time would become the winner If no goal was scored there would be a penalty shoot out to determine the winner For the first time the final was won by a golden goal As with every tournament since UEFA Euro 1984 there was no third place play off All times are local BST UTC 1 Bracket Edit Quarter finalsSemi finalsFinal 22 June Liverpool nbsp France p 0 5 26 June Manchester nbsp Netherlands0 4 nbsp France0 5 23 June Birmingham nbsp Czech Republic p 0 6 nbsp Czech Republic1 30 June London nbsp Portugal0 nbsp Czech Republic1 23 June Manchester nbsp Germany g g 2 nbsp Germany2 26 June London nbsp Croatia1 nbsp Germany p 1 6 22 June London nbsp England1 5 nbsp Spain0 2 nbsp England p 0 4 Quarter finals Edit 22 June 1996 1996 06 22 15 00Spain nbsp 0 0 a e t nbsp EnglandReportPenaltiesHierro nbsp Amor nbsp Belsue nbsp Nadal nbsp 2 4 nbsp Shearer nbsp Platt nbsp Pearce nbsp GascoigneWembley Stadium LondonAttendance 75 440 18 Referee Marc Batta France 22 June 1996 1996 06 22 18 30France nbsp 0 0 a e t nbsp NetherlandsReportPenaltiesZidane nbsp Djorkaeff nbsp Lizarazu nbsp Guerin nbsp Blanc nbsp 5 4 nbsp De Kock nbsp De Boer nbsp Kluivert nbsp Seedorf nbsp BlindAnfield LiverpoolAttendance 37 465 19 Referee Antonio Lopez Nieto Spain 23 June 1996 1996 06 23 15 00Germany nbsp 2 1 nbsp CroatiaKlinsmann nbsp 20 pen Sammer nbsp 59 Report Suker nbsp 51 Old Trafford ManchesterAttendance 43 412 20 Referee Leif Sundell Sweden 23 June 1996 1996 06 23 18 30Czech Republic nbsp 1 0 nbsp PortugalPoborsky nbsp 53 ReportVilla Park BirminghamAttendance 26 832 34 Referee Hellmut Krug Germany Semi finals Edit 26 June 1996 1996 06 26 16 00France nbsp 0 0 a e t nbsp Czech RepublicReportPenaltiesZidane nbsp Djorkaeff nbsp Lizarazu nbsp Guerin nbsp Blanc nbsp Pedros nbsp 5 6 nbsp Kubik nbsp Nedved nbsp Berger nbsp Poborsky nbsp Rada nbsp KadlecOld Trafford ManchesterAttendance 43 877 23 Referee Leslie Mottram Scotland 26 June 1996 1996 06 26 19 30Germany nbsp 1 1 a e t nbsp EnglandKuntz nbsp 16 Report Shearer nbsp 3 PenaltiesHassler nbsp Strunz nbsp Reuter nbsp Ziege nbsp Kuntz nbsp Moller nbsp 6 5 nbsp Shearer nbsp Platt nbsp Pearce nbsp Gascoigne nbsp Sheringham nbsp SouthgateWembley Stadium LondonAttendance 75 862 24 Referee Sandor Puhl Hungary Final Edit Main article UEFA Euro 1996 final 30 June 1996 1996 06 30 19 00Czech Republic nbsp 1 2 a e t nbsp GermanyBerger nbsp 59 pen Report Bierhoff nbsp 73 nbsp 95 Wembley Stadium LondonAttendance 73 611Referee Pierluigi Pairetto Italy Statistics EditMain article UEFA Euro 1996 statistics Goalscorers Edit There were 64 goals scored in 31 matches for an average of 2 06 goals per match 5 goals nbsp Alan Shearer 3 goals nbsp Hristo Stoichkov nbsp Davor Suker nbsp Brian Laudrup nbsp Jurgen Klinsmann 2 goals nbsp Teddy Sheringham nbsp Oliver Bierhoff nbsp Matthias Sammer nbsp Pierluigi Casiraghi 1 goal nbsp Zvonimir Boban nbsp Goran Vlaovic nbsp Radek Bejbl nbsp Patrik Berger nbsp Pavel Kuka nbsp Pavel Nedved nbsp Karel Poborsky nbsp Vladimir Smicer nbsp Jan Suchoparek nbsp Allan Nielsen nbsp Paul Gascoigne nbsp Laurent Blanc nbsp Youri Djorkaeff nbsp Christophe Dugarry nbsp Patrice Loko nbsp Stefan Kuntz nbsp Andreas Moller nbsp Christian Ziege nbsp Enrico Chiesa nbsp Dennis Bergkamp nbsp Jordi Cruyff nbsp Patrick Kluivert nbsp Fernando Couto nbsp Domingos nbsp Luis Figo nbsp Joao Pinto nbsp Sa Pinto nbsp Florin Răducioiu nbsp Vladimir Beschastnykh nbsp Aleksandr Mostovoi nbsp Omari Tetradze nbsp Ilya Tsymbalar nbsp Ally McCoist nbsp Alfonso nbsp Guillermo Amor nbsp Jose Luis Caminero nbsp Javier Manjarin nbsp Kubilay Turkyilmaz 1 own goal nbsp Lyuboslav Penev against France Awards Edit Team of the Tournament 35 36 Goalkeepers Defenders Midfielders Forwards nbsp David Seaman nbsp Andreas Kopke nbsp Radoslav Latal nbsp Laurent Blanc nbsp Marcel Desailly nbsp Matthias Sammer nbsp Paolo Maldini nbsp Karel Poborsky nbsp Paul Gascoigne nbsp Steve McManaman nbsp Didier Deschamps nbsp Dieter Eilts nbsp Rui Costa nbsp Hristo Stoichkov nbsp Davor Suker nbsp Pavel Kuka nbsp Alan Shearer nbsp Youri DjorkaeffGolden BootAlan Shearer was awarded the Golden Boot award after scoring five goals in the group stage and in the semi finals against Germany nbsp Alan Shearer 5 goals 36 UEFA Player of the Tournament nbsp Matthias Sammer 36 Marketing EditSlogan and theme songs Edit The competition slogan was Football Comes Home reflecting that the sport s rules were first standardised in the United Kingdom UEFA President Lennart Johansson had said that the organisation had felt it was time to bring the event back to the motherland of football 29 The slogan was incorporated into the competition s most popular song Three Lions recorded by comedians David Baddiel and Frank Skinner with Britpop band the Lightning Seeds Baddiel and Skinner were then strongly connected with football owing to their BBC show Fantasy Football League 37 Released as a single the song topped the UK Singles Chart for a total of two weeks 38 It was promoted by a video featuring the England squad 37 The song was prominently sung by England fans during all their games and was also chanted by the German team upon parading the trophy in Berlin after the tournament It was even referenced by future Prime Minister Tony Blair in an address at the 1996 Labour Party Conference with the line Seventeen years of hurt never stopped us dreaming Labour s coming home 39 Three Lions was the official song of the England team and is the song most strongly connected with the tournament however the official song of the tournament was We re in This Together by Simply Red The song was performed at the tournament s opening ceremony 40 Merchandise and mascots Edit The British Royal Mint issued a commemorative 2 coin in 1996 which featured a representation of a football 1996 in the centre and 16 small rings representing the 16 competing teams Further special coins were only issued in the Isle of Man and Gibraltar 41 The official mascot Goaliath was designed in a similar fashion to the original World Cup mascot from the 1966 World Cup Goaliath comprised a lion the image on the English team crest dressed in an England football strip and football boots whilst holding a football under his right arm 42 Sponsorship Edit Event sponsorsCanon 43 44 Carlsberg 43 44 Coca Cola 43 44 Fujifilm 43 44 JVC 43 44 MasterCard 43 44 McDonald s 43 44 Philips 43 44 Snickers 43 44 Vauxhall Motors 43 44 Umbro 43 44 Controversies EditTerrorist attack Edit A terrorist attack took place in Manchester on 15 June one day before the group stage match between Germany and Russia was due to take place in the same city 45 The detonation of a van bomb in the city centre injured 212 people and caused an estimated 700 million worth of damage Four days after the blast the Provisional Irish Republican Army issued a statement in which it claimed responsibility but regretted causing injury to civilians 46 The Manchester bombing was the first and so far only major terrorist attack in the host city of an ongoing UEFA European Championship The scheduled match at Old Trafford on the day following the bombing went ahead as planned after the stadium had been heavily guarded overnight and carefully searched the game in which Germany defeated Russia 3 0 was watched by a near capacity crowd of 50 700 Empty seats Edit The aggregate attendance of 1 276 000 and average attendance of 41 158 per game were the highest for the European Championship in its 16 team format until the 2012 tournament 2 However these numbers were based on the number of tickets sold rather than the number of spectators in the ground which was often significantly lower The large number of empty seats in most of the games not involving England was blamed on a number of factors a lack of travelling fans from most of the other nations concerned a lack of interest among locals for games not involving England kick offs before 5 00 pm that made it hard for children at school and adults at work to attend steep ticket prices and UEFA s policy of only selling tickets in blocks where each block consisted of a set from each of three price bands 47 Disorder Edit After England s defeat to Germany in the semi finals a large scale riot took place in Trafalgar Square and the surrounding area Further outbreaks of trouble occurred in the streets of several other towns The police and German made cars were targeted with damage also caused to various other properties 48 A Russian student was stabbed in Brighton after attackers mistook him for being German 49 Despite this outbreak the tournament overall was free of hooliganism helping rehabilitate England s reputation after their fans conduct during the previous decades 48 UEFA s awarding of the tournament to England was in itself a further step in bringing the country back fully into the international fold coming soon after their decision in 1990 to re admit English clubs back into UEFA competitions after the indefinite ban issued to them following the Heysel Stadium disaster in 1985 50 51 Notes Edit Gallagher suffered an injury in the 28th minute and was replaced by fourth official Paul Durkin England References Edit Bevan Chris 17 May 2012 Euro 1996 When football came home BBC Sport British Broadcasting Corporation a b Euro 2012 Shatters Attendance Record Sports Business Daily 3 July 2012 Retrieved 21 June 2014 White Clive 9 June 1992 England wait ends in 1996 The Times London Jones Stuart 4 December 1991 Rivals to be given extra time The Times London a b Jones Stuart 5 May 1992 England will host 1996 Championship The Times London Ridley Ian 9 June 1996 Shearer bliss sheer agony The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 Moore Glenn 19 June 1996 England s night of rapture The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 Kluivert s late strike sinks Scotland The Independent Independent Print 19 June 1996 Retrieved 21 June 2012 Hodgson Guy 11 June 1996 Dugarry makes the difference The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 Hodgson Guy 17 June 1996 Euro 96 Clemente short of firepower The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 Hodgson Guy 19 June 1996 France banish the ghost of Bulgaria to reach last eight The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 Culley Jon 19 June 1996 Spanish eyes are smiling for Amor The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 Hodgson Guy 15 June 1996 Italians left on the brink of disaster The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 Shaw Phil 20 June 1996 Smicer strike takes Czechs through The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 Moore Glenn 20 June 1996 Passion play not enough to save Italy The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 Shaw Phil 17 June 1996 Euro 96 Suker sinks Denmark The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 Brewin John 1 May 2008 Euro 96 ESPNSoccernet Retrieved 10 June 2012 a b Moore Glenn 24 June 1996 Fortune favours brave England The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 20 June 2012 a b Turnbull Simon 24 June 1996 Fitful France advance The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 20 June 2012 a b Shaw Phil 24 June 1996 Croatia punished by Sammer The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 20 June 2012 Culley Jon 24 June 1996 Poborsky piques Portugal The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 20 June 2012 Metcalf Rupert 25 June 1996 Poborsky rides Euro express The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 19 June 2012 a b Shaw Phil 27 June 1996 France are sent home by Kadlec The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 21 June 2012 a b Moore Glenn 27 June 1996 Shoot out breaks England hearts The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 20 June 2012 Jones Ken 1 July 1996 Vogts triumph over adversity The Independent Independent Print Limited Retrieved 19 June 2012 Jones Stuart 1 December 1992 UEFA has change of heart The Times London Jones Stuart 13 November 1992 Championship field likely to be doubled The Times London Hughes Rob 22 January 1994 Manchester s grief puts draw under cloud The Times London a b Hughes Rob 24 January 1994 Comfort for England in playing host to Europe The Times London a b c d England may draw Scotland The Independent 16 December 1995 Lot Oranje last voor fans Oranje draw burden for fans De Stem in Dutch Breda 18 December 1995 Retrieved 20 November 2017 The Official UEFA European Championship 1996 Tournament Match ball SoccerBallWorld com 22 January 2004 1996 Football comes home UEFA 5 October 2003 Archived from the original on 17 November 2006 Retrieved 20 November 2020 Culley Jon 24 June 1996 Poborsky piques Portugal The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 20 June 2012 All Star Macca Sunday Mirror The Free Library 30 June 1996 Retrieved 13 July 2012 a b c UEFA Euro 2008 Information PDF UEFA p 88 Archived PDF from the original on 27 November 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2008 a b Rampton James 17 May 1996 Song for Euro 96 ready for airplay The Independent Independent Print Retrieved 15 July 2012 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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