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Euro 2008 - Part 1
May 28, 2008 | 9:04AM | report this
Over the next ten days the blog will be dedicated to the 2008 European Championships. Part 1 covers some of the history of the tournament and an outline of the groups, game-days, officials and some odds and ends. From there is will be a preview of two teams per day and on day ten will come the predictions.

History
The idea of holding a European Championship came, like many other good sports ideas, from a Frenchman.

Henri Delaunay, who was head of the French FA, proposed a tournament for all European counties even before the first World Cup was held in 1930. However, it took until the formation of UEFA in Basle, Switzerland in June 1954 for the notion to take root.

Delaunay was appointed as UEFA’s first General Secretary but died in 1955. In recognition of his leadership and vision the European Championship trophy was named after him.

The tournament started out as the European Nations Cup in 1960 and consisted of group games with the winners moving on to a knock out round of eight. The winners at the quarter final stage would then play semi-finals and a final in the country of one of the final four.

This format continued until 1980 when all eight group winners competed in two groups with the group winners playing for the trophy and the two group runners up playing for bronze. Four years later in France a cross over semi final round was added and the format was maintained when West Germany hosted in 1988 and Sweden in 1992.

When England held the finals in 1996 the number of qualifiers expanded to sixteen countries and from that point onwards the competition became a cash cow for UEFA. It is now arguably the third most watched sporting event in the world after the FIFA World Cup and the Summer Olympics.

Past Finals
1960 USSR 2-1 Yugoslavia

1964 Spain 2-1 USSR

1968 Italy 1-1 Yugoslavia
Replay Italy 2-0 Yugoslavia (extra time)

1972 West Germany 3-0 USSR

1976 Czechoslovakia 2-2 West Germany (Czechoslovakia on 5-3 on penalties)

1980 West Germany 2-1 Belgium

1984 France 2-0 Spain

1988 Netherlands 2-0 USSR

1992 Denmark 2-0 Germany

1996 Germany 2-1 Czech Republic (on a golden goal)

2000 France 2-1 Italy (on a golden goal)

2004 Greece 1-0 Portugal


Top Goalscorers
1960 Ivanov (Soviet Union) and Jerkovic (Yugoslavia) 2 each.

1964 Pereda (Spain) and Novak (Hungary) 2 each.

1968 Drazij (Yugoslavia) 2.

1972 Gerd Muller (West Germany) 4.

1976 Dieter Muller (West Germany) 4.

1980 Allofs (West Germany) 3.

1984 Platini (France) 9.

1988 Van Basten (Netherlands) 5.

1992 Bergkamp (Netherlands), Brolin (Sweden), Larsen (Denmark), Riedle (Germany) 3 each.

1996 Shearer (England) 5.

2000 Kluivert (Netherlands), Milosevic (Yugoslavia) 6 each.

2004 Baros (Czech Republic) 5.


The Groups and Games Days

Group A
Switzerland, Czech Republic, Portugal and Turkey – June 7, 11, and 15.

Group B
Austria, Croatia, Germany and Poland – June 8, 12 and 16.

Group C
Romania, France, Italy and Netherlands – June 9, 13 and 17.

Group D
Spain, Russia, Greece and Sweden – June 10, 14 and 18.

Quarter Finals

Winner A vs. Runner-Up B – June 19, Basle

Winner B vs. Runner-Up A – June 20, Vienna.

Winner C vs. Runner-Up D – June 21, Basel.

Winner D vs. Runner-Up C – June 22, Vienna.

Semi- Finals
Winner A or Runner-Up B vs. Winner B or Runner-Up A – June 25, Basel.
Winner C or Runner-Up D vs. Winner D or Runner-Up C – June 26, Vienna.

Final
June 29, Vienna.


The Stadiums
St. Jakob-Park, Basel, Capacity 42,500.

Letzigrund Stadion, Zurich, Capacity 30,000.

Stade de Geneve, Geneva, Capacity 30,000.

Wankdorf Stadion, Bern, Capacity 32,000.


Stadion Tivoli, Innsbruck, Capacity 30,000.

Worthersee Stadion, Klagenfurt, Capacity 30,000.

Wals-Siezenheim Stadion, Salzburg, Capacity 30,000.

Ernst-Happel Stadion, Vienna, Capacity 50,000.


The Officials
UEFA has assigned 12 referees and 24 assistants (plus eight fourth officials) to officiate the games. Each referee trio is made up of a referee and two assistant referees from the same country. The trios have worked together as teams over the last year.

Referee - Konrad Plautz (Austria); Assistants Egon Bereuter & Markus Mayr.

Referee - Kyros Vassaras (Greece); Assistants Dimitrios Bozatzidis & Dimitrios Saraidaris.

Referee - Lubos Michel (Slovakia); Assistants Roman Slysko & Martin Balko.

Referee - Frank De Bleeckere (Belgium); Assistants Peter Hermans & Alex Verstraeten.

Referee - Roberto Rosetti (Italy); Assistants Alessandro Griselli & Paolo Calcagno.

Referee - Manuel Mejuto Gonzalez (Spain); Assistants Juan Carlos Yuste Jimenez & Jesus Calvo Guadamuro.

Referee - Howard Webb (England); Assistants Darren Cann & Michael Mullarkey.

Referee - Pieter Vink (Netherlands); Assistants Adriaan Inia & Hans Ten Hoove.

Referee - Peter Frojdfeldt (Sweden); Assistants Stefan Wittberg & Henrik Andren.

Referee - Herbert Fandel (Germany); Assistants Carsten Kadach & Volker Wezel.

Referee - Tom Henning Ovrebo (Norway); Assistants Geir Age Holen & Jan Petter Randen.

Referee - Massimo Busacca (Switzerland); Assistants Matthias Arnet & Stephane Cuhat.


Returnees
The Netherlands, France, Portugal, Spain, Czech Republic, Germany, Sweden, Russia, Switzerland, Croatia, Italy and Greece all appeared at the 2004 finals in Portugal. Missing from the 2004 line-up are Denmark, England, Bulgaria and Latvia.

Five coaches Luiz Felipe Scolari (Portugal), Lars Lagerback (Sweden), Karel Bruckner (Czech Republic), Kobi Kuhn (Switzerland) and Otto Rehhagel (Greece) return from 2004. Portugal, the Czech Republic and Greece all appeared in the last four in 2004.



Tomorrow - Portugal and the Czech Republic.

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ABOUT ME


BobbyMcMahon
I am the soccer analyst for the Fox Soccer Report and appear twice a week - every Monday and Friday at 10:00 EST. I have also been a regular contributor to the Fox Soccer Channel website since the summer of 2004. Over the last twenty years I have contributed to various radio and television programs throughout North America as well writing about the game for newspapers, magazines and websites. Thank you to all who take time to visit this blog and especially to those of you who post your comments and thoughts. PS - If you have questions please post them on the regular Monday blog. I am unable to answer e mails posted to the inbox on this site. And one more thing. If you have questions or complaints or compliments about programming please contact Fox Soccer Channel or Fox Sports World Canada directly. I have no control over what the stations televise.
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