UEFA Euro 2024 knockout stage - Wikipedia

UEFA Euro 2024 knockout stage

The knockout stage of UEFA Euro 2024 began on 29 June 2024 with the round of 16 and ended on 14 July 2024 with the final at Olympiastadion in Berlin, Germany.[1]

All times listed are Central European Summer Time. (UTC+2)

Format

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In the knockout stage, if a match was level at the end of normal playing time, extra time was played (two periods of 15 minutes each). If still tied after extra time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out.[2]

UEFA set out the following schedule for the round of 16:[2]

  • Match 1: Winner Group B vs 3rd Group A/D/E/F
  • Match 2: Winner Group A vs Runner-up Group C
  • Match 3: Winner Group F vs 3rd Group A/B/C
  • Match 4: Runner-up Group D vs Runner-up Group E
  • Match 5: Winner Group E vs 3rd Group A/B/C/D
  • Match 6: Winner Group D vs Runner-up Group F
  • Match 7: Winner Group C vs 3rd Group D/E/F
  • Match 8: Runner-up Group A vs Runner-up Group B

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

Combinations of matches in the round of 16

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The specific match-ups involving the third-placed teams depended on which four third-placed teams qualified for the round of 16:[2]

  Combination according to the four qualified teams
Third-placed teams
qualify from groups
1B
vs
1C
vs
1E
vs
1F
vs
A B C D 3A 3D 3B 3C
A B C E 3A 3E 3B 3C
A B C F 3A 3F 3B 3C
A B D E 3D 3E 3A 3B
A B D F 3D 3F 3A 3B
A B E F 3E 3F 3B 3A
A C D E 3E 3D 3C 3A
A C D F 3F 3D 3C 3A
A C E F 3E 3F 3C 3A
A D E F 3E 3F 3D 3A
B C D E 3E 3D 3B 3C
B C D F 3F 3D 3C 3B
B C E F 3F 3E 3C 3B
B D E F 3F 3E 3D 3B
C D E F 3F 3E 3D 3C

Qualified teams

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The top two placed teams from each of the six groups, along with the four best-placed third teams, qualified for the knockout stage.[2]

Group Winners Runners-up Third-placed teams
(best four qualify)
A   Germany    Switzerland
B   Spain   Italy
C   England   Denmark   Slovenia
D   Austria   France   Netherlands
E   Romania   Belgium   Slovakia
F   Portugal   Turkey   Georgia

Bracket

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Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
              
 
30 June – Cologne
 
 
  Spain4
 
5 July – Stuttgart
 
  Georgia1
 
  Spain (a.e.t.)2
 
29 June – Dortmund
 
  Germany1
 
  Germany2
 
9 July – Munich
 
  Denmark0
 
  Spain2
 
1 July – Frankfurt
 
  France1
 
  Portugal (p)0 (3)
 
5 July – Hamburg
 
  Slovenia0 (0)
 
  Portugal0 (3)
 
1 July – Düsseldorf
 
  France (p)0 (5)
 
  France1
 
14 July – Berlin
 
  Belgium0
 
  Spain2
 
2 July – Munich
 
  England1
 
  Romania0
 
6 July – Berlin
 
  Netherlands3
 
  Netherlands2
 
2 July – Leipzig
 
  Turkey1
 
  Austria1
 
10 July – Dortmund
 
  Turkey2
 
  Netherlands1
 
30 June – Gelsenkirchen
 
  England2
 
  England (a.e.t.)2
 
6 July – Düsseldorf
 
  Slovakia1
 
  England (p)1 (5)
 
29 June – Berlin
 
   Switzerland1 (3)
 
   Switzerland2
 
 
  Italy0
 

Round of 16

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Switzerland vs Italy

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Switzerland  2–0  Italy
Report
Attendance: 68,172[3]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Switzerland[4]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Italy[4]
GK 1 Yann Sommer
CB 22 Fabian Schär
CB 5 Manuel Akanji
CB 13 Ricardo Rodriguez
RM 20 Michel Aebischer   90+2'
CM 8 Remo Freuler
CM 10 Granit Xhaka (c)
LM 26 Fabian Rieder   71'
RF 17 Ruben Vargas   71'
CF 7 Breel Embolo   77'
LF 19 Dan Ndoye   77'
Substitutions:
MF 14 Steven Zuber   71'
DF 2 Leonidas Stergiou   71'
MF 16 Vincent Sierro   77'
FW 18 Kwadwo Duah   77'
MF 11 Renato Steffen   90+2'
Manager:
Murat Yakin
 
GK 1 Gianluigi Donnarumma (c)
RB 2 Giovanni Di Lorenzo
CB 17 Gianluca Mancini   57'
CB 23 Alessandro Bastoni
LB 13 Matteo Darmian   74'
CM 16 Bryan Cristante   74'
CM 21 Nicolò Fagioli   86'
CM 18 Nicolò Barella   35'   64'
RF 14 Federico Chiesa
CF 9 Gianluca Scamacca
LF 22 Stephan El Shaarawy   45'   46'
Substitutions:
FW 20 Mattia Zaccagni   46'
FW 19 Mateo Retegui   64'
DF 24 Andrea Cambiaso   74'
MF 10 Lorenzo Pellegrini   74'
MF 7 Davide Frattesi   86'
Manager:
Luciano Spalletti

Man of the Match:
Ruben Vargas (Switzerland)[5]

Assistant referees:[4]
Tomasz Listkiewicz (Poland)
Adam Kupsik (Poland)
Fourth official:
Facundo Tello (Argentina)
Reserve assistant referee:
Gabriel Chade (Argentina)
Video assistant referee:
Tomasz Kwiatkowski (Poland)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Bartosz Frankowski (Poland)
Bastian Dankert (Germany)

Germany vs Denmark

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This was a rematch of the UEFA Euro 1992 final, which Denmark won 2–0.[6][7]

In the 35th minute, the match was suspended due to adverse weather conditions (thunderstorms and heavy rain) in the vicinity of the stadium.[8] Play was suspended for about 25 minutes before resuming at 21:59.[9]

Germany  2–0  Denmark
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Germany[11]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Denmark[11]
GK 1 Manuel Neuer
RB 6 Joshua Kimmich
CB 2 Antonio Rüdiger
CB 15 Nico Schlotterbeck
LB 3 David Raum   81'
CM 23 Robert Andrich   64'
CM 8 Toni Kroos
RW 19 Leroy Sané   88'
AM 21 İlkay Gündoğan (c)   64'
LW 10 Jamal Musiala   81'
CF 7 Kai Havertz
Substitutions:
MF 25 Emre Can   64'
FW 9 Niclas Füllkrug   64'
DF 20 Benjamin Henrichs   81'
MF 17 Florian Wirtz   81'
DF 16 Waldemar Anton   88'
Manager:
Julian Nagelsmann   59'
 
GK 1 Kasper Schmeichel (c)
CB 2 Joachim Andersen   57'
CB 3 Jannik Vestergaard
CB 6 Andreas Christensen   81'
RM 18 Alexander Bah   81'
CM 8 Thomas Delaney   69'
CM 23 Pierre-Emile Højbjerg
LM 5 Joakim Mæhle   60'
AM 11 Andreas Skov Olsen   69'
AM 10 Christian Eriksen
CF 9 Rasmus Højlund   81'
Substitutions:
MF 15 Christian Nørgaard   69'
FW 20 Yussuf Poulsen   69'
FW 19 Jonas Wind   81'
MF 26 Jacob Bruun Larsen   81'
DF 17 Victor Kristiansen   81'
Manager:
Kasper Hjulmand   41'

Man of the Match:
Antonio Rüdiger (Germany)[5]

Assistant referees:[11]
Stuart Burt (England)
Dan Cook (England)
Fourth official:
Irfan Peljto (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Reserve assistant referee:
Senad Ibrišimbegović (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Video assistant referee:
Stuart Attwell (England)
Assistant video assistant referees:
David Coote (England)
Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)

England vs Slovakia

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England  2–1 (a.e.t.)  Slovakia
Report Schranz   25'
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
England[13]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Slovakia[13]
GK 1 Jordan Pickford
RB 2 Kyle Walker
CB 5 John Stones
CB 6 Marc Guéhi   3'
LB 12 Kieran Trippier   66'
CM 26 Kobbie Mainoo   7'   84'
CM 4 Declan Rice
RW 7 Bukayo Saka
AM 10 Jude Bellingham   17'   106'
LW 11 Phil Foden   90+4'
CF 9 Harry Kane (c)   106'
Substitutions:
MF 24 Cole Palmer   66'
FW 21 Eberechi Eze   84'
FW 17 Ivan Toney   90+4'
MF 16 Conor Gallagher   106'
DF 14 Ezri Konsa   106'
Manager:
Gareth Southgate
 
GK 1 Martin Dúbravka
RB 2 Peter Pekarík   77'   109'
CB 3 Denis Vavro   108'
CB 14 Milan Škriniar (c)   45+1'
LB 16 Dávid Hancko
CM 19 Juraj Kucka   13'   81'
CM 22 Stanislav Lobotka
CM 8 Ondrej Duda   81'
RF 26 Ivan Schranz   90+4'
CF 18 David Strelec   61'
LF 17 Lukáš Haraslín   61'
Substitutions:
MF 7 Tomáš Suslov   120+2'   61'
FW 9 Róbert Boženík   61'
MF 11 László Bénes   81'
MF 21 Matúš Bero   81'
DF 6 Norbert Gyömbér   114'   90+4'
FW 10 Ľubomír Tupta   109'
Manager:
  Francesco Calzona

Man of the Match:
Jude Bellingham (England)[5]

Assistant referees:[13]
Mustafa Emre Eyisoy (Turkey)
Kerem Ersoy (Turkey)
Fourth official:
Rade Obrenović (Slovenia)
Reserve assistant referee:
Jure Praprotnik (Slovenia)
Video assistant referee:
Marco Fritz (Germany)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Christian Dingert (Germany)
Tomasz Kwiatkowski (Poland)

Spain vs Georgia

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Spain  4–1  Georgia
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Spain[15]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Georgia[15]
GK 23 Unai Simón
RB 2 Dani Carvajal   81'
CB 3 Robin Le Normand
CB 14 Aymeric Laporte
LB 24 Marc Cucurella   66'
CM 20 Pedri   52'
CM 16 Rodri
CM 8 Fabián Ruiz   81'
RF 19 Lamine Yamal
CF 7 Álvaro Morata (c)   44'   66'
LF 17 Nico Williams
Substitutions:
FW 10 Dani Olmo   52'
DF 12 Álex Grimaldo   66'
FW 21 Mikel Oyarzabal   66'
FW 22 Jesús Navas   81'
MF 6 Mikel Merino   81'
Manager:
Luis de la Fuente
 
GK 25 Giorgi Mamardashvili
CB 15 Giorgi Gvelesiani   78'
CB 4 Guram Kashia (c)
CB 3 Lasha Dvali
RWB 2 Otar Kakabadze
LWB 14 Luka Lochoshvili   63'
CM 10 Giorgi Chakvetadze   63'
CM 17 Otar Kiteishvili   41'
CM 6 Giorgi Kochorashvili
CF 22 Georges Mikautadze   78'
CF 7 Khvicha Kvaratskhelia
Substitutions:
MF 18 Sandro Altunashvili   41'
MF 21 Giorgi Tsitaishvili   63'
MF 9 Zuriko Davitashvili   71'   63'
FW 8 Budu Zivzivadze   78'
MF 16 Nika Kvekveskiri   78'
Manager:
  Willy Sagnol

Man of the Match:
Rodri (Spain)[5]

Assistant referees:[15]
Cyril Mugnier (France)
Mehdi Rahmouni (France)
Fourth official:
Serdar Gözübüyük (Netherlands)
Reserve assistant referee:
Johan Balder (Netherlands)
Video assistant referee:
Jérôme Brisard (France)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Willy Delajod (France)
Paolo Valeri (Italy)

France vs Belgium

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France  1–0  Belgium
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
France[17]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Belgium[17]
GK 16 Mike Maignan
RB 5 Jules Koundé
CB 4 Dayot Upamecano
CB 17 William Saliba
LB 22 Théo Hernandez
CM 13 N'Golo Kanté
CM 8 Aurélien Tchouaméni   14'
CM 14 Adrien Rabiot   24'
AM 7 Antoine Griezmann   23'
CF 15 Marcus Thuram   62'
CF 10 Kylian Mbappé (c)
Substitutions:
FW 12 Randal Kolo Muani   62'
Manager:
Didier Deschamps
 
GK 1 Koen Casteels
RB 21 Timothy Castagne   88'
CB 4 Wout Faes
CB 5 Jan Vertonghen   76'
LB 3 Arthur Theate
CM 7 Kevin De Bruyne (c)
CM 24 Amadou Onana
CM 11 Yannick Carrasco   88'
RF 20 Loïs Openda   63'
CF 10 Romelu Lukaku
LF 22 Jérémy Doku
Substitutions:
MF 18 Orel Mangala   90+3'   63'
FW 14 Dodi Lukebakio   88'
FW 17 Charles De Ketelaere   88'
Manager:
  Domenico Tedesco   76'

Man of the Match:
Jules Koundé (France)[5]

Assistant referees:[17]
Mahbod Beigi (Sweden)
Andreas Söderkvist (Sweden)
Fourth official:
Donatas Rumšas (Lithuania)
Reserve assistant referee:
Aleksandr Radiuš (Lithuania)
Video assistant referee:
Pol van Boekel (Netherlands)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Bartosz Frankowski (Poland)
Rob Dieperink (Netherlands)

Portugal vs Slovenia

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Portugal  0–0 (a.e.t.)  Slovenia
Report
Penalties
3–0
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Portugal[19]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Slovenia[19]
GK 22 Diogo Costa
RB 20 João Cancelo   107'   117'
CB 4 Rúben Dias
CB 3 Pepe   117'
LB 19 Nuno Mendes
CM 8 Bruno Fernandes
CM 6 João Palhinha
CM 23 Vitinha   65'
RF 10 Bernardo Silva
CF 7 Cristiano Ronaldo (c)
LF 17 Rafael Leão   76'
Substitutions:
FW 21 Diogo Jota   65'
FW 26 Francisco Conceição   76'
DF 2 Nélson Semedo   117'
MF 18 Rúben Neves   117'
Manager:
  Roberto Martínez   111'
 
GK 1 Jan Oblak (c)
RB 2 Žan Karničnik   37'
CB 21 Vanja Drkušić   32'
CB 6 Jaka Bijol   106'
LB 3 Jure Balkovec   107'
RM 20 Petar Stojanović   87'
CM 22 Adam Gnezda Čerin
CM 10 Timi Max Elšnik   106'
LM 17 Jan Mlakar   74'
CF 9 Andraž Šporar   74'
CF 11 Benjamin Šeško
Substitutions:
MF 5 Jon Gorenc Stanković   74'
FW 19 Žan Celar   101'   74'
MF 7 Benjamin Verbič   87'
FW 26 Josip Iličić   106'
Manager:
Matjaž Kek   105+1'

Man of the Match:
Diogo Costa (Portugal)[5]

Assistant referees:[19]
Ciro Carbone (Italy)
Alessandro Giallatini (Italy)
Fourth official:
Espen Eskås (Norway)
Reserve assistant referee:
Jan Erik Engan (Norway)
Video assistant referee:
Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Paolo Valeri (Italy)
Marco Fritz (Germany)

Romania vs Netherlands

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Romania  0–3  Netherlands
Report
Attendance: 65,012[20]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Romania[21]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Netherlands[21]
GK 1 Florin Niță
RB 2 Andrei Rațiu
CB 3 Radu Drăgușin
CB 15 Andrei Burcă
LB 22 Vasile Mogoș   38'
DM 6 Marius Marin   67'   72'
CM 21 Nicolae Stanciu (c)   81'   88'
CM 18 Răzvan Marin
RW 20 Dennis Man
LW 10 Ianis Hagi   72'
CF 19 Denis Drăguș   72'
Substitutions:
DF 24 Bogdan Racovițan   38'
FW 13 Valentin Mihăilă   72'
FW 7 Denis Alibec   72'
MF 8 Alexandru Cicâldău   72'
MF 14 Darius Olaru   88'
Manager:
Edward Iordănescu
 
GK 1 Bart Verbruggen
RB 22 Denzel Dumfries   78'
CB 6 Stefan de Vrij
CB 4 Virgil van Dijk (c)
LB 5 Nathan Aké   69'
CM 24 Jerdy Schouten   69'
CM 7 Xavi Simons
CM 14 Tijjani Reijnders
RF 25 Steven Bergwijn   46'
CF 10 Memphis Depay   90+2'
LF 11 Cody Gakpo   84'
Substitutions:
FW 18 Donyell Malen   90+4'   46'
MF 16 Joey Veerman   69'
DF 15 Micky van de Ven   69'
FW 9 Wout Weghorst   84'
DF 17 Daley Blind   90+2'
Manager:
Ronald Koeman

Man of the Match:
Cody Gakpo (Netherlands)[5]

Assistant referees:[21]
Stefan Lupp (Germany)
Marco Achmüller (Germany)
Fourth official:
Daniel Siebert (Germany)
Reserve assistant referee:
Jan Seidel (Germany)
Video assistant referee:
Bastian Dankert (Germany)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Christian Dingert (Germany)
Jérôme Brisard (France)

Austria vs Turkey

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Austria  1–2  Turkey
Report
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Austria[23]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Turkey[23]
GK 13 Patrick Pentz
RB 5 Stefan Posch
CB 4 Kevin Danso
CB 15 Philipp Lienhart   52'   64'
LB 16 Phillipp Mwene   46'
CM 6 Nicolas Seiwald
CM 9 Marcel Sabitzer
RW 20 Konrad Laimer   64'
AM 19 Christoph Baumgartner
LW 18 Romano Schmid   38'   46'
CF 7 Marko Arnautović (c)
Substitutions:
MF 8 Alexander Prass   46'
FW 11 Michael Gregoritsch   46'
DF 2 Maximilian Wöber   64'
MF 10 Florian Grillitsch   64'
Manager:
  Ralf Rangnick
 
GK 1 Mert Günok
RB 18 Mert Müldür
CB 14 Abdülkerim Bardakcı
CB 3 Merih Demiral
LB 20 Ferdi Kadıoğlu
CM 16 İsmail Yüksek   42'   58'
CM 22 Kaan Ayhan (c)
RW 21 Barış Alper Yılmaz
AM 6 Orkun Kökçü   11'   83'
LW 19 Kenan Yıldız   78'
CF 8 Arda Güler   78'
Substitutions:
MF 15 Salih Özcan   58'
MF 5 Okay Yokuşlu   78'
FW 7 Kerem Aktürkoğlu   78'
FW 17 İrfan Kahveci   83'
Manager:
  Vincenzo Montella

Man of the Match:
Merih Demiral (Turkey)[5]

Assistant referees:[23]
Paulo Soares (Portugal)
Pedro Ribeiro (Portugal)
Fourth official:
Mykola Balakin (Ukraine)
Reserve assistant referee:
Oleksandr Berkut (Ukraine)
Video assistant referee:
Tiago Martins (Portugal)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Juan Martínez Munuera (Spain)
Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)

Quarter-finals

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Spain vs Germany

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The sides previously met in the UEFA Euro 2008 final, which Spain won 1–0.[24]

This was German midfielder Toni Kroos' last professional football match, as he had announced that he would retire after the Euros.[25]

Spain  2–1 (a.e.t.)  Germany
Report
Attendance: 54,000[26]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Spain[27]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Germany[27]
GK 23 Unai Simón   82'
RB 2 Dani Carvajal   100'   120+6'
CB 3 Robin Le Normand   29'   46'
CB 14 Aymeric Laporte
LB 24 Marc Cucurella
CM 16 Rodri   110'
CM 8 Fabián Ruiz   120'   102'
RW 19 Lamine Yamal   63'
AM 20 Pedri   8'
LW 17 Nico Williams   80'
CF 7 Álvaro Morata (c)   80'
Substitutions:
FW 10 Dani Olmo   8'
DF 4 Nacho   46'
FW 11 Ferran Torres   74'   63'
MF 6 Mikel Merino   80'
FW 21 Mikel Oyarzabal   80'
FW 9 Joselu   102'
Manager:
Luis de la Fuente
 
GK 1 Manuel Neuer
RB 6 Joshua Kimmich
CB 2 Antonio Rüdiger   13'
CB 4 Jonathan Tah   80'
LB 3 David Raum   28'   57'
CM 25 Emre Can   46'
CM 8 Toni Kroos   67'
RW 10 Jamal Musiala
AM 21 İlkay Gündoğan (c)   57'
LW 19 Leroy Sané   46'
CF 7 Kai Havertz   91'
Substitutions:
MF 23 Robert Andrich   56'   46'
MF 17 Florian Wirtz   94'   46'
DF 18 Maximilian Mittelstädt   73'   57'
FW 9 Niclas Füllkrug   57'
FW 13 Thomas Müller   80'
DF 16 Waldemar Anton   91'
Other disciplinary actions:
MF 15 Nico Schlotterbeck   89'
FW 26 Deniz Undav   113'
Manager:
Julian Nagelsmann

Man of the Match:
Dani Olmo (Spain)[5]

Assistant referees:[27]
Gary Beswick (England)
Adam Nunn (England)
Fourth official:
Ivan Kružliak (Slovakia)
Reserve assistant referee:
Jan Pozor (Slovakia)
Video assistant referee:
Stuart Attwell (England)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Bartosz Frankowski (Poland)
Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)

Portugal vs France

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The sides previously met in the UEFA Euro 2020, where Portugal and France ended a 2-2 draw.[28]

Portugal  0–0 (a.e.t.)  France
Report
Penalties
3–5
Attendance: 47,789[29]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Portugal[30]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
France[30]
GK 22 Diogo Costa
RB 20 João Cancelo   74'
CB 3 Pepe
CB 4 Rúben Dias
LB 19 Nuno Mendes
CM 23 Vitinha   119'
CM 6 João Palhinha   79'   90+2'
CM 8 Bruno Fernandes   74'
RF 10 Bernardo Silva
CF 7 Cristiano Ronaldo (c)
LF 17 Rafael Leão   106'
Substitutions:
DF 2 Nélson Semedo   74'
FW 26 Francisco Conceição   74'
MF 18 Rúben Neves   90+2'
FW 11 João Félix   106'
MF 16 Matheus Nunes   119'
Manager:
  Roberto Martínez
 
GK 16 Mike Maignan
RB 5 Jules Koundé
CB 4 Dayot Upamecano
CB 17 William Saliba   84'
LB 22 Théo Hernandez
CM 13 N'Golo Kanté
CM 8 Aurélien Tchouaméni
CM 6 Eduardo Camavinga   91'
AM 7 Antoine Griezmann   67'
CF 12 Randal Kolo Muani   86'
CF 10 Kylian Mbappé (c)   106'
Substitutions:
FW 11 Ousmane Dembélé   67'
FW 15 Marcus Thuram   86'
MF 19 Youssouf Fofana   91'
FW 25 Bradley Barcola   106'
Manager:
Didier Deschamps

Man of the Match:
Ousmane Dembélé (France)[5]

Assistant referees:[30]
Stuart Burt (England)
Dan Cook (England)
Fourth official:
Szymon Marciniak (Poland)
Reserve assistant referee:
Tomasz Listkiewicz (Poland)
Video assistant referee:
Pol van Boekel (Netherlands)
Assistant video assistant referees:
David Coote (England)
Tomasz Kwiatkowski (Poland)

England vs Switzerland

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England  1–1 (a.e.t.)   Switzerland
Report
Penalties
5–3
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
England[32]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Switzerland[32]
GK 1 Jordan Pickford
CB 2 Kyle Walker
CB 5 John Stones
CB 14 Ezri Konsa   78'
RWB 12 Kieran Trippier   78'
LWB 7 Bukayo Saka
CM 26 Kobbie Mainoo   78'
CM 4 Declan Rice
AM 10 Jude Bellingham
AM 11 Phil Foden   115'
CF 9 Harry Kane (c)   67'   109'
Substitutions:
DF 3 Luke Shaw   78'
MF 24 Cole Palmer   78'
FW 21 Eberechi Eze   78'
FW 17 Ivan Toney   109'
DF 8 Trent Alexander-Arnold   115'
Manager:
Gareth Southgate
 
GK 1 Yann Sommer
CB 22 Fabian Schär   32'
CB 5 Manuel Akanji
CB 13 Ricardo Rodriguez
RM 26 Fabian Rieder   63'
CM 8 Remo Freuler   118'
CM 10 Granit Xhaka (c)
LM 20 Michel Aebischer   118'
RF 19 Dan Ndoye   98'
CF 7 Breel Embolo   109'
LF 17 Ruben Vargas   63'
Substitutions:
DF 3 Silvan Widmer   85'   63'
MF 14 Steven Zuber   63'
MF 6 Denis Zakaria   98'
MF 23 Xherdan Shaqiri   109'
MF 16 Vincent Sierro   118'
FW 25 Zeki Amdouni   118'
Manager:
Murat Yakin

Man of the Match:
Bukayo Saka (England)[5]

Assistant referees:[32]
Ciro Carbone (Italy)
Alessandro Giallatini (Italy)
Fourth official:
Daniel Siebert (Germany)
Reserve assistant referee:
Rafael Foltyn (Germany)
Video assistant referee:
Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Paolo Valeri (Italy)
Bastian Dankert (Germany)

Netherlands vs Turkey

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Netherlands  2–1  Turkey
Report
Attendance: 70,091[33]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Netherlands[34]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Turkey[34]
GK 1 Bart Verbruggen
RB 22 Denzel Dumfries
CB 6 Stefan de Vrij
CB 4 Virgil van Dijk (c)   64'
LB 5 Nathan Aké   54'   73'
CM 24 Jerdy Schouten
CM 7 Xavi Simons   30'   87'
CM 14 Tijjani Reijnders   73'
RF 25 Steven Bergwijn   46'
CF 10 Memphis Depay   87'
LF 11 Cody Gakpo
Substitutions:
FW 9 Wout Weghorst   90+6'   46'
MF 16 Joey Veerman   73'
DF 15 Micky van de Ven   73'
DF 12 Jeremie Frimpong   87'
FW 21 Joshua Zirkzee   87'
Manager:
Ronald Koeman
 
GK 1 Mert Günok
CB 22 Kaan Ayhan   89'
CB 4 Samet Akaydin   82'
CB 14 Abdülkerim Bardakcı
RWB 18 Mert Müldür   82'
LWB 20 Ferdi Kadıoğlu
RM 21 Barış Alper Yılmaz
CM 15 Salih Özcan   77'
CM 10 Hakan Çalhanoğlu (c)
LM 19 Kenan Yıldız   77'
CF 8 Arda Güler
Substitutions:
MF 5 Okay Yokuşlu   77'
FW 7 Kerem Aktürkoğlu   77'
DF 2 Zeki Çelik   82'
FW 9 Cenk Tosun   90+3'   82'
FW 24 Semih Kılıçsoy   89'
Other disciplinary actions:
FW 26 Bertuğ Yıldırım   90+6'
Manager:
  Vincenzo Montella   90+5'

Man of the Match:
Stefan de Vrij (Netherlands)[5]

Assistant referees:[34]
Nicolas Danos (France)
Benjamin Pagès (France)
Fourth official:
Felix Zwayer (Germany)
Reserve assistant referee:
Marco Achmüller (Germany)
Video assistant referee:
Jérôme Brisard (France)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Willy Delajod (France)
Marco Fritz (Germany)

Semi-finals

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Spain vs France

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The sides previously met in the UEFA Euro 1984 final, where hosts France prevailed 2–0, the most recent team to win the Euros on home soil. They also played each other in the 2021 UEFA Nations League final, which France won 2–1.[35]

Spain's Lamine Yamal, aged 16, became the youngest player to score in the UEFA European Championship final tournament. Yamal broke the record set by Johan Vonlanthen, then aged 18, in 2004.[36]

Spain  2–1  France
Report
Attendance: 62,042[37]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Spain[38]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
France[38]
GK 23 Unai Simón
RB 22 Jesús Navas   14'   58'
CB 4 Nacho
CB 14 Aymeric Laporte
LB 24 Marc Cucurella
CM 16 Rodri
CM 8 Fabián Ruiz
RW 19 Lamine Yamal   90+1'   90+4'
AM 10 Dani Olmo   76'
LW 17 Nico Williams   90+3'
CF 7 Álvaro Morata (c)   76'
Substitutions:
DF 5 Daniel Vivian   58'
FW 21 Mikel Oyarzabal   76'
MF 6 Mikel Merino   76'
MF 18 Martín Zubimendi   90+3'
FW 11 Ferran Torres   90+4'
Manager:
Luis de la Fuente
 
GK 16 Mike Maignan
RB 5 Jules Koundé
CB 4 Dayot Upamecano
CB 17 William Saliba
LB 22 Théo Hernandez
CM 13 N'Golo Kanté   62'
CM 8 Aurélien Tchouaméni   60'
CM 14 Adrien Rabiot   62'
RF 11 Ousmane Dembélé   79'
CF 12 Randal Kolo Muani   62'
LF 10 Kylian Mbappé (c)
Substitutions:
MF 6 Eduardo Camavinga   89'   62'
MF 7 Antoine Griezmann   62'
FW 25 Bradley Barcola   62'
FW 9 Olivier Giroud   79'
Manager:
Didier Deschamps

Man of the Match:
Lamine Yamal (Spain)[5]

Assistant referees:[38]
Tomaž Klančnik (Slovenia)
Andraž Kovačič (Slovenia)
Fourth official:
Ivan Kružliak (Slovakia)
Reserve assistant referee:
Branislav Hancko (Slovakia)
Video assistant referee:
Nejc Kajtazovič (Slovenia)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Paolo Valeri (Italy)
Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)

Netherlands vs England

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This was the first meeting between the sides in a World Cup or European Championship since 1996, which England won 4–1.[39]

Netherlands  1–2  England
Report
Attendance: 60,926[40]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Netherlands[41]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
England[41]
GK 1 Bart Verbruggen
RB 22 Denzel Dumfries   17'   90+3'
CB 6 Stefan de Vrij
CB 4 Virgil van Dijk (c)   87'
LB 5 Nathan Aké
CM 24 Jerdy Schouten
CM 7 Xavi Simons   90+1'   90+3'
CM 14 Tijjani Reijnders
RF 18 Donyell Malen   46'
CF 10 Memphis Depay   35'
LF 11 Cody Gakpo
Substitutions:
MF 16 Joey Veerman   35'
FW 9 Wout Weghorst   46'
FW 19 Brian Brobbey   90+3'
FW 21 Joshua Zirkzee   90+3'
Manager:
Ronald Koeman
 
GK 1 Jordan Pickford
CB 2 Kyle Walker
CB 5 John Stones
CB 6 Marc Guéhi
RM 7 Bukayo Saka   86'   90+3'
CM 26 Kobbie Mainoo   90+3'
CM 4 Declan Rice
LM 12 Kieran Trippier   90+4'   46'
AM 11 Phil Foden   81'
AM 10 Jude Bellingham   72'
CF 9 Harry Kane (c)   81'
Substitutions:
DF 3 Luke Shaw   46'
MF 24 Cole Palmer   81'
FW 19 Ollie Watkins   81'
DF 14 Ezri Konsa   90+3'
MF 16 Conor Gallagher   90+3'
Manager:
Gareth Southgate

Man of the Match:
Ollie Watkins (England)[5]

Assistant referees:[41]
Stefan Lupp (Germany)
Marco Achmüller (Germany)
Fourth official:
Daniel Siebert (Germany)
Reserve assistant referee:
Rafael Foltyn (Germany)
Video assistant referee:
Bastian Dankert (Germany)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Christian Dingert (Germany)
Marco Fritz (Germany)

Final

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Spain  2–1  England
Report
Attendance: 65,600[42]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Spain[43]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
England[43]
GK 23 Unai Simón
RB 2 Dani Carvajal
CB 3 Robin Le Normand   83'
CB 14 Aymeric Laporte
LB 24 Marc Cucurella
CM 16 Rodri   46'
CM 8 Fabián Ruiz
RW 19 Lamine Yamal   89'
AM 10 Dani Olmo   31'
LW 17 Nico Williams
CF 7 Álvaro Morata (c)   68'
Substitutions:
MF 18 Martín Zubimendi   46'
FW 21 Mikel Oyarzabal   68'
DF 4 Nacho   83'
MF 6 Mikel Merino   89'
Manager:
Luis de la Fuente
 
GK 1 Jordan Pickford
CB 2 Kyle Walker
CB 5 John Stones   53'
CB 6 Marc Guéhi
RM 7 Bukayo Saka
CM 26 Kobbie Mainoo   70'
CM 4 Declan Rice
LM 3 Luke Shaw
AM 11 Phil Foden   89'
AM 10 Jude Bellingham
CF 9 Harry Kane (c)   25'   61'
Substitutions:
FW 19 Ollie Watkins   90+1'   61'
MF 24 Cole Palmer   70'
FW 17 Ivan Toney   89'
Manager:
Gareth Southgate

Man of the Match:
Nico Williams (Spain)[5]

Assistant referees:[44]
Cyril Mugnier (France)
Mehdi Rahmouni (France)
Fourth official:
Szymon Marciniak (Poland)
Reserve assistant referee:
Tomasz Listkiewicz (Poland)
Video assistant referee:
Jérôme Brisard (France)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Willy Delajod (France)
Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)

References

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  2. ^ a b c d "Regulations of the UEFA European Football Championship 2022–24". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 3 May 2024. Archived from the original on 22 March 2024. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
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  8. ^ Tobin, Sam (29 June 2024). "Germany v Denmark resumes after thunderstorm, hail". Reuters. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
  9. ^ Ames, Nick (29 June 2024). "Germany v Denmark suspended at Euro 2024 due to lightning storm". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
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  20. ^ "Full Time Report – Romania v Netherlands" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 2 July 2024. Retrieved 2 July 2024.
  21. ^ a b c "Tactical Line-ups – Romania v Netherlands" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 2 July 2024. Retrieved 2 July 2024.
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  23. ^ a b c "Tactical Line-ups – Austria v Türkiye" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 2 July 2024. Retrieved 2 July 2024.
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  26. ^ "Full Time Report – Spain v Germany" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 5 July 2024. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
  27. ^ a b c "Tactical Line-ups – Spain v Germany" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 5 July 2024. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
  28. ^ "Portugal national football team: record v France". 11v11.com. Retrieved 1 July 2024.
  29. ^ "Full Time Report – Portugal v France" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 5 July 2024. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
  30. ^ a b c "Tactical Line-ups – Portugal v France" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 5 July 2024. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
  31. ^ "Full Time Report – England v Switzerland" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 6 July 2024. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
  32. ^ a b c "Tactical Line-ups – England v Switzerland" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 6 July 2024. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
  33. ^ "Full Time Report – Netherlands v Türkiye" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 6 July 2024. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
  34. ^ a b c "Tactical Line-ups – Netherlands v Türkiye" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 6 July 2024. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
  35. ^ "Spain national football team: record v France". 11v11.com. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
  36. ^ "EURO's youngest scorers: Lamine Yamal, Vonlanthen, Rooney, Renato Sanches, Stojković, Arda Güler". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 9 July 2024. Retrieved 9 July 2024.
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  38. ^ a b c "Tactical Line-ups – Spain v France" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 9 July 2024. Retrieved 9 July 2024.
  39. ^ "England national football team: record v Netherlands". 11v11.com. Retrieved 9 July 2024.
  40. ^ "Full Time Report – Netherlands v England" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 10 July 2024. Retrieved 10 July 2024.
  41. ^ a b c "Tactical Line-ups – Netherlands v England" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 10 July 2024. Retrieved 10 July 2024.
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  43. ^ a b "Tactical Line-ups – Spain v England" (PDF). UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 14 July 2024. Retrieved 14 July 2024.
  44. ^ "François Letexier to referee UEFA EURO 2024 final". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 11 July 2024. Retrieved 11 July 2024.
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