UEFA EURO 2004

(Redirected from 2004 UEFA European Football Championship)

The 'UEFA Euro 2004' (or just 'Euro 2004') was the twelfth edition of UEFA's quadriennial European Football Championship and was held in Portugal, for the first time, between June 12 and July 4, 2004. Like in the previous two editions, in England and Netherlands/Belgium, sixteen teams contested the final tournament after going through a qualification round which began in 2002. The tournament took place in ten venues located in eight cities — Aveiro, Braga, Coimbra, Guimarães, Faro/Loulé, Leiria, Lisbon and Porto.
During the tournament there were several surprises: the German, Italian and Spanish national football teams were knocked out during the group stage; the title-holders France were eliminated in the quarterfinals by unfancied Greece, and the Portuguese hosts managed a winning streak towards the final, following their opening defeat, by beating Spain, England and The Netherlands along the way. For the first time, the final featured the same teams as the opening match, with the hosts losing both of them also for the first time. Portugal was beaten by Greece on both occasions. Greece's triumph was even more outstanding considering that in their only other appearance, back in 1980, they did not win a single game.
During the opening ceremony, the Portuguese portrayed a ship, symbolizing the voyages of the Portuguese explorers, sailing through a sea which gave place to the flags of all competing countries.[1] Such was the enthusiasm that overtook the Greek fans that the ship became the symbol of the Greek victory, as Greeks chanted for the "Pirate Ship" (πειÏατικό), as the Greek National Team was instantly named.[2]

Contents
Qualifying
Teams
Mascot
Venues
Match officials
First round
Notes
Group A
Group B
Group C
Group D
Knockout stages
Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Final
Result
Statistics
Top scoring players
Top scoring teams
Fastest goal
Awards
See also
References
External links

Qualifying


Main articles: UEFA Euro 2004 qualifying

Qualification for the tournament took place from September 2002 to November 2003. Fifty teams were divided into ten groups of five and each team played two matches against each other, on a home-and-away basis. The first-placed teams from each group qualified automatically and the runners-up took part in a two-match play-off to select the remaining five teams that would join the host nation in the final tournament.

Teams


The sixteen teams that participated in the final tournament were:


Bulgaria

Croatia

Czech Republic

Denmark

England

France

Germany

Greece


Italy

Latvia

Netherlands

Portugal (host)

Russia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

UEFA Euro 2004 finalists.


Mascot


''Kinas''.

The official mascot of this EuroCup was Kinas, a boy wearing Portugal's uniform.

Venues


'Estádio Municipal de Braga'
Location: Braga
Capacity: '30,000'
Club: SC Braga
'Estádio D. Afonso Henriques'
Location: Guimarães
Capacity: '30,000'
Club: Vitória SC
Estádio Municipal de Braga
Estádio Municipal de Guimarães
'Estádio do Dragão'
Location: Porto
Capacity: '52,000'
Club: FC Porto
'Estádio do Bessa Século XXI'
Location: Porto
Capacity: '30,000'
Club: Boavista FC
Estádio do Dragão
Estádio Bessa XXI
'Estádio Municipal de Aveiro'
Location: Aveiro
Capacity: '30,000'
Club: Beira-Mar
'Estádio Cidade de Coimbra'
Location: Coimbra
Capacity: '30,000'
Club: Académica
'Estádio Dr. Magalhães Pessoa'
Location: Leiria
Capacity: '30,000'
Club: UD Leiria
Estádio Municipal de Aveiro
Estádio Cidade de Coimbra
Estádio Dr. Magalhães Pessoa
'Estádio da Luz'
Location: Lisbon
Capacity: '65,000'
Club: SL Benfica
'Estádio José Alvalade'
Location: Lisbon
Capacity: '52,000'
Club: Sporting CP
'Estádio Algarve'
Location: Faro/Loulé
Capacity: '30,000'
Club: N/D
Estádio da Luz
Estádio José Alvalade XXI
Estádio do Algarve

Match officials


Twelve referees were selected for the tournament:[3]


Kim Milton Nielsen

Mike Riley

Gilles Veissière

Markus Merk


Pierluigi Collina

Terje Hauge

Lucílio Batista

Valentin Ivanov


Ľuboš Micheľ

Manuel Mejuto González

Anders Frisk

Urs Meier

First round


Notes


★ Tie-breakers [4]


★ For teams which finish level on points, the following tie-breakers are used:

★ # greater number of points in the matches between the teams in question;

★ # greater goal difference in matches between the teams in question;

★ # greater number of goals scored in matches between the teams in question;

★ # greater goal difference in all group games;

★ # greater number of goals scored in all group games;

★ # higher coefficient derived from EURO 2004 and 2002 World Cup qualifiers (points obtained divided by number of matches played);

★ # fair play conduct in EURO 2004;

★ # drawing of lots.
Group A

Main articles: 2004 UEFA European Football Championship - Group A

TeamPtsPldWDLGFGAGD
'6'320142+2
'4'3111440
'4'3111220
'3'310224−2

Group B

Main articles: 2004 UEFA European Football Championship - Group B

TeamPtsPldWDLGFGAGD
'7'321074+3
'6'320184+4
'2'302146−2
'1'301216−5

Group C

Main articles: 2004 UEFA European Football Championship - Group C

TeamPtsPldWDLGFGAGD
'5'312083+5
'5'312042+2
'5'312032+1
'0'300319−8

Group D

Main articles: 2004 UEFA European Football Championship - Group D

TeamPtsPldWDLGFGAGD
'9'330074+3
'4'311164+2
'2'302123−1
'1'301215−4

Knockout stages


Main articles: 2004 European Football Championship knockout stage

The knockout stage was a single-elimination tournament involving the eight teams that qualified from the group stage of the tournament. There were three rounds of matches, with each round eliminating half of the teams entering that round. The successive rounds were: Quarter-finals, Semi-finals, Final. For each game in the knockout stage, a draw was followed by up to thirty minutes of extra time (two fifteen minute halves); if a team scored in the first half of extra time and were still leading after 15 minutes extra time, the team leading would win on a silver goal, if no player scored in the first half of extra time, the full half-hour would be played. If scores were still level after 30 minutes extra time there would be a penalty shootout (at least five penalties each, and more if necessary) to determine who progressed to the next round. Scores after extra time are indicated by (AET), and penalty shoot outs are indicated by (PSO).
Quarter-finals

----
----
----
Semi-finals

----
Final

Result


Euro 2004 Champions
Greece

'Greece'
'First title'

Statistics


Top scoring players

Euro 2004 Top Scorers [5]
;5 goals
Milan Baroš;4 goals
Ruud van Nistelrooy
Wayne Rooney;3 goals
Jon Dahl Tomasson
Frank Lampard
Zinedine Zidane
Angelos Charisteas
Henrik Larsson;2 goals
Marek Heinz
Jan Koller
Thierry Henry
Antonio Cassano
Cristiano Ronaldo
Maniche
Rui Costa
Zlatan Ibrahimović
;1 goal
Martin Petrov
Dado Prso
Igor Tudor
Milan Rapaić
Niko Kovac
Vladimír Šmicer
Jesper Grønkjær
Michael Owen
Paul Scholes
Steven Gerrard
David Trézéguet
Michael Ballack
Torsten Frings
Angelos Basinas
Giorgos Karagounis
Traianos Dellas
Zisis Vryzas
Simone Perrotta
Maris Verpakovskis
Roy Makaay
;1 goal (continued)
Wilfred Bouma
Hélder Postiga
Nuno Gomes
Fernando Morientes
Juan Carlos Valeron
Fredrik Ljungberg
Marcus Allbäck
Mattias Jonson
Dmitri Bulykin
Dmitri Kirichenko
Johann Vonlanthen;Own goals
Igor Tudor (vs. France)
Jorge Andrade (vs. Netherlands)

Top scoring teams

;10 goals
Czech Republic
★ ;8 goals

★ ;7 goals


★ ;4 goals

;3 goals
★ ;2 goals


★ ;1 goal



Fastest goal

'2 Minutes' : Dmitri Kirichenko (Russia vs Greece)
Awards

;UEFA Team of the Tournament
'Goalkeepers' 'Defenders' 'Midfielders' 'Forwards'
Petr Čech Sol Campbell Michael Ballack Milan Baroš
Antonios Nikopolidis Ashley Cole Theodoros Zagorakis Angelos Charisteas
Traianos Dellas Pavel Nedvěd Henrik Larsson
Olof Mellberg Maniche Wayne Rooney
Ricardo Carvalho Steven Gerrard Jon Dahl Tomasson
Yourkas Seitaridis Zinedine Zidane Ruud van Nistelrooy
Gianluca Zambrotta Luís Figo Cristiano Ronaldo

;Golden Boot

Milan Baroš
;UEFA Player of the Tournament

Theodoros Zagorakis

See also



2004 UEFA European Football Championship squads

UEFA Euro 2004 Qualifying

References



1. Euro 2004 Build-up in Pictures
2. Greek national team - see nickname
3. UEFA Euro 2004 referees
4. Euro 2004 Tiebreakers - Explained
5. Euro 2004 Top Scorers - Stan James

External links



Official results archive

BBC coverage

Photo Gallery of Lisbon during Euro 2004

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves