2011 UEFA European Under-19 Championship

2011 UEFA European Under-19 Championship
Tournament details
Host country Romania
Dates 20 July–1 August
Teams 8 (from 1 confederation)
Final positions
Champions Spain Spain (8th title)
Runners-up Czech Republic Czech Republic
Tournament statistics
Matches played 15
Goals scored 46 (3.07 per match)
Top scorer(s) Spain Álvaro Morata (6 goals)
Best player Spain Álex Fernández [1]

The 2011 UEFA European Under-19 Championship was the tenth edition of UEFA's European Under-19 Championship since it was renamed from the original under-18 event, in 2001. The tournament took place in Romania from 20 July to 1 August 2011. France were the title holders, but failed to qualify for the finals. Spain won the tournament.[2]

Qualification

Main articles: Qualifying round and Elite round

Qualification for the final tournament was played over two stages:

The final tournament of the Championship was preceded by two qualification stages: a qualifying round and an Elite round. During these rounds, 52 national teams competed to determine the seven teams that would join the already qualified host nation Romania.

The qualifying round was played between 28 September and 30 October 2010. The 52 teams were divided into 13 groups of four teams, with each group being contested as a mini-tournament hosted by one of the group's teams. After all matches were played, the 13 group winners and 13 group runners-up advanced to the Elite round. Alongside the 26 winner and runner-up teams, the two best third-placed teams also qualified.

The following teams qualified for the tournament

Squads

For the complete list of players, see 2011 UEFA European Under-19 Championship squads

Venues

The tournament venues will all be located in Ilfov County, near the capital Bucharest, at already existing stadiums in four locations (one town and three communes).

Location Stadium Capacity Notes
Berceni Stadionul Berceni 2,600 Three group matches[3]
Buftea Stadionul Buftea 800 Three group matches[4]
Chiajna Stadionul Concordia 3,700 Three group games, a semifinal and the final[5]
Mogoşoaia Stadionul Mogoşoaia 1,000 Three group matches and a semifinal[6]

Group stage

The draw was held in Bucharest on 8 June 2011, when hosts Romania and the seven elite-round qualifiers divided into two groups of four.[7][8]

Each group winner and runner-up advanced to the semi-finals.

Tie-break criteria for teams even on points:

All times are Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3)

Legend
Advanced to semifinals

Group A

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Czech Republic 330062+49
 Republic of Ireland 31113304
 Greece 310223–13
 Romania 301214–31

20 July 2011
21:00
Greece  1 – 2  Republic of Ireland
Katidis  5' Report O'Connor  2', 51'
Stadionul Buftea, Buftea
Attendance: 310
Referee: Pawel Gil (Poland)

20 July 2011
21:00
Romania  1 – 3  Czech Republic
Stanciu  30' Report Přikryl  44'
Jeleček  61' (pen.)
Jánoš  85'

23 July 2011
19:00
Czech Republic  2 – 1  Republic of Ireland
Brabec  69'
Lácha  71'
Report O'Sullivan  10'
Stadionul Mogoşoaia, Mogoşoaia
Attendance: 337
Referee: Tamás Bognar (Hungary)

23 July 2011
21:00
Romania  0 – 1  Greece
Report Fortounis  37'
Stadionul Berceni, Berceni
Attendance: 2,550
Referee: Stuart Attwell (England)

26 July 2011
19:00
Czech Republic  1 – 0  Greece
Přikryl  70' Report

26 July 2011
19:00
Republic of Ireland  0 – 0  Romania
Report

Group B

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Spain 320184+46
 Serbia 311135–24
 Turkey 311143+14
 Belgium 302136–32

20 July 2011
19:00
Serbia  2 – 0  Turkey
Jojić  57'
Trujić  89'
Report

21 July 2011
18:00
Spain  4 – 1  Belgium
Sarabia  15' (pen.)
Alcácer  65'
Muñiz  90+1'
Morata  90+3'
Report Cuvelier  46'

The match was scheduled to be played on July 20, but was abandoned after 15 minutes, due to adverse weather conditions while Spain was leading 1–0 after a goal from Álvaro Morata. It was replayed on 21 July at 18:00 local time.[9]


23 July 2011
19:00
Turkey  1 – 1  Belgium
Ali  77' Report Vervaeke  90'

23 July 2011
21:00
Serbia  0 – 4  Spain
Report Morata  13', 22', 75'
Juanmi  15'
Stadionul Concordia, Chiajna
Attendance: 818
Referee: Pawel Gil (Poland)

26 July 2011
21:00
Turkey  3 – 0  Spain
Ramalho  31' (o.g.)
Çörekçi  51'
Gómez  56' (o.g.)
Report
Stadionul Concordia, Chiajna
Attendance: 1,887
Referee: Tamás Bognar (Hungary)

26 July 2011
21:00
Belgium  1 – 1  Serbia
Vermijl  73' Report Mrkela  6'
Stadionul Buftea, Buftea
Attendance: 172
Referee: Clément Turpin (France)

Knockout stage

Bracket

Semi-finals Final
29 July Mogoşoaia
  Czech Republic 4  
  Serbia 2  
 
1 August Chiajna
      Czech Republic 2
    Spain 3
29 July Chiajna
  Spain 5
  Republic of Ireland 0  

Semifinals

29 July 2011
18:45
Czech Republic  4 – 2  Serbia
Přikryl  6'
Kalas  16'
Jeleček  19' (pen.)
Skalák  90+2'
Report Despotović  23', 28'

29 July 2011
20:45
Spain  5 – 0  Republic of Ireland
Deulofeu  27'
Sarabia  40'
Juanmi  46'
Morata  79', 90+1' (pen.)
Report

Final

1 August 2011
20:00
Czech Republic  2 – 3 (a.e.t.)  Spain
Krejčí  52'
Lácha  97'
Report Aurtenetxe  85'
Alcácer  108', 115'
Czech Republic
Czech Republic
GK 1 Tomáš Koubek
DF 2 Jakub Brabec (c)  69'
MF 4 Adam Jánoš
DF 5 Tomáš Kalas
DF 6 Pavel Kadeřábek
FW 9 Jiří Skalák  66'  79'
DF 12 Tomáš Jeleček
MF 13 Ladislav Krejčí
FW 14 Tomáš Přikryl  102'
MF 17 Martin Hála
DF 18 Roman Polom  36'
Substitutes
GK 16 Jakub Zapletal
DF 3 Jakub Jugas
MF 7 Martin Kraus
MF 8 Martin Sladký  36'
FW 10 Antonín Fantiš  102'  107'
DF 11 Patrik Lácha  79'
FW 15 Vojtěch Hadaščok
Manager
Czech Republic Jaroslav Hřebík
Spain
Spain
GK 1 Edgar Badia
DF 3 Sergi Gómez
DF 4 Ignasi Miquel
DF 5 Jon Aurtenetxe
MF 6 Rubén Pardo
FW 7 Álvaro Morata
MF 8 Álex Fernández  47'  55'
MF 10 Pablo Sarabia (c)  78'
DF 12 Albert Blázquez
FW 15 Juanmi  54'
MF 17 Gerard Deulofeu
Substitutes
GK 13 Adrián Ortolá
DF 2 Dani Carvajal
FW 9 Borja
FW 11 Paco Alcácer  54'
DF 14 Jonás Ramalho
MF 16 José Campaña  55'  119'
MF 18 Juan Muñiz  78'
Manager
Spain Ginés Meléndez
Assistant referees
Russia Dmitri Mosyakin
Denmark Lars Hummelgaard
Fourth official
Kazakhstan Artyom Kuchin

Goalscorers

6 goals
3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

References

  1. "Álex Fernández, Golden player of the tournament". UEFA.com. 1 August 2011. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  2. "Spanish dominance shows no sign of abating". UEFA.com. 2 August 2011. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
  3. "Stadionul Berceni". uefa.com. 1 January 2011.
  4. "Football Centre FRF, Buftea". uefa.com. 1 January 2011.
  5. "Stadionul Concordia, Chiajna". uefa.com. 1 January 2011.
  6. "Romanian FA Football Centre, Mogosoaia". uefa.com. 1 January 2011.
  7. "2011 final tournament". uefa.com. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  8. "Group draw" (in Romanian). frf.com. 8 June 2011.
  9. "Spain-Belgium rescheduled". UEFA. 2011-07-20. Retrieved 2011-07-20.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 31, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.