1960 European Nations' Cup
UEFA Championnat Européen du Football France 1960 | |
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UEFA Euro 1960 official logo | |
Tournament details | |
Host country | France |
Dates | 6 July – 10 July |
Teams | 4 |
Venue(s) | 2 (in 2 host cities) |
Final positions | |
Champions | Soviet Union (1st title) |
Runners-up | Yugoslavia |
Third place | Czechoslovakia |
Fourth place | France |
Tournament statistics | |
Matches played | 4 |
Goals scored | 17 (4.25 per match) |
Attendance | 78,958 (19,740 per match) |
Top scorer(s) |
Viktor Ponedelnik Milan Galić Dražan Jerković Valentin Ivanov François Heutte (2 goals each) |
The 1960 UEFA European Nations' Cup was the first European Football Championship, held every four years and endorsed by UEFA. The final tournament was held in France. It was won by the Soviet Union, who beat Yugoslavia 2–1 in Paris after extra time.
The tournament was a knockout competition; just 17 teams entered with some notable absences, West Germany, Italy and England among them. The teams would play home-and-away matches until the semi-finals; the final four teams would move on to the final tournament, whose host was selected after the teams became known.
Spain, still under Francisco Franco's far-right dictatorship, refused to travel to the Soviet Union, the main supporter of the Second Spanish Republic in the Spanish Civil War, and withdrew from the tournament, so the final four had three communist countries: USSR, Czechoslovakia, and SFR Yugoslavia, to go with hosts France. In the semi-finals, the Soviets made easy work of the Czechoslovaks in Marseille, beating them 3–0. The other match saw a nine-goal thriller as Yugoslavia came on top 5–4, coming back from a two-goal deficit twice. Czechoslovakia beat the demoralized French 2–0 for third place.
In the final, Yugoslavia scored first, but the Soviet Union, led by legendary goalkeeper Lev Yashin, equalized in the 49th minute. After 90 minutes the score was 1–1, and Viktor Ponedelnik scored with seven minutes left in extra time to give the Soviets the inaugural European Championship.[1]
Venues
Paris | |
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Parc des Princes | |
Capacity: 40,000 | |
Marseille | |
Stade Vélodrome | |
Capacity: 40,000 | |
Qualifying
Qualified teams
Country | Qualified as1 | Date of qualification | Previous appearances |
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Czechoslovakia | Quarter-finals winner | 29 May 1960 | 0 (debut) |
France (hosts) | Quarter-finals winner | 27 March 1960 | 0 (debut) |
Soviet Union | Bye | 0 (debut) | |
Yugoslavia | Quarter-finals winner | 22 May 1960 | 0 (debut) |
- 1Soviet Union qualified after Spain refused to travel to the country.
Final tournament
Semi-finals | Final | ||||||
6 July – Marseille | |||||||
Czechoslovakia | 0 | ||||||
Soviet Union | 3 | ||||||
10 July – Paris | |||||||
Soviet Union (a.e.t.) | 2 | ||||||
Yugoslavia | 1 | ||||||
Third place | |||||||
6 July – Paris | 9 July – Marseille | ||||||
France | 4 | Czechoslovakia | 2 | ||||
Yugoslavia | 5 | France | 0 |
Semi-finals
6 July 1960 20:00 |
France | 4–5 | Yugoslavia |
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Vincent 12' Heutte 43', 62' Wisnieski 53' |
Report | Galić 11' Žanetić 55' Knez 75' Jerković 78', 79' |
Third place play-off
Final
10 July 1960 21:30 |
Soviet Union | 2 – 1 (a.e.t.) | Yugoslavia |
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Metreveli 49' Ponedelnik 113' |
Report | Galić 43' |
Statistics
Goalscorers
With two goals, Valentin Ivanov, Viktor Ponedelnik, Milan Galić, Dražan Jerković, François Heutte are the top scorers in the tournament. In total, there were 17 goals scored by 12 different players in 4 games, for an average of 4.25 goals per game. None of the goals is credited as own goal.
- 2 goals
- 1 goal
- Tomislav Knez
- Ante Žanetić
- Vlastimil Bubník
- Ladislav Pavlovič
- Jean Vincent
- Maryan Wisnieski
- Slava Metreveli
Fastest goal
- 11 minutes: Milan Galić (Yugoslavia vs France)
Awards
- UEFA Team of the Tournament[2]
Goalkeeper | Defenders | Midfielders | Forwards |
Lev Yashin | Vladimir Durković | Igor Netto | Slava Metreveli |
Ladislav Novák | Josef Masopust | Milan Galić | |
Valentin Ivanov | Viktor Ponedielnik | ||
Dragoslav Šekularac | |||
Bora Kostić |
References
- ↑ Rostance, Tom (2012-05-21). "BBC Sport - Euro 1960: Lev Yashin leads Soviets to glory in France". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-06-17.
- ↑ "1960 team of the tournament". Union of European Football Associations. 1 February 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2012.
External links
- 1960 Nations Cup Review with images and video from the tournament
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