UEFA Euro 1976 Final

UEFA Euro 1976 Final

The Crvena Zvezda Stadium held the final
Event UEFA Euro 1976
Czechoslovakia won 5–3 on penalties
Date 20 June 1976
Venue Crvena Zvezda Stadium, Belgrade
Referee Sergio Gonella (Italy)
Attendance 30,790

The UEFA Euro 1976 Final was the final match of UEFA Euro 1976, the fifth UEFA European Football Championship, UEFA's top football competition for national teams. The match was played at Stadion Crvena Zvezda, Belgrade, on 20 June 1976. The match was contested by Czechoslovakia and West Germany.

After extra time, the result was 2–2, and so the first penalty shootout in a European Championships final ensued. The first seven kicks were converted, until West Germany's fourth penalty taker, Uli Hoeneß, ballooned his shot over the bar. With the score 4–3, Antonín Panenka stepped up to take the fifth Czechoslovakian penalty, to win the match under immense pressure. German goalkeeper Sepp Maier dived to his left, while Panenka chipped the ball straight in the middle of the net.[1] The sheer cheek of the goal led a watching French journalist to dub Panenka "a poet", and to this day his winning kick is one of the most famous ever, making Panenka's name synonymous with that particular style of penalty kick.

Match details

Czechoslovakia
West Germany
GK 1 Ivo Viktor
DF 2 Karol Dobiaš  55'  94'
DF 3 Jozef Čapkovič
DF 4 Anton Ondruš (c)
DF 5 Ján Pivarník
DF 12Koloman Gögh
MF 7 Antonín Panenka
MF 8 Jozef Móder  59'
MF 17Ján Švehlík  79'
FW 10Marián Masný
FW 11Zdeněk Nehoda
Substitutions:
DF 6 Ladislav Jurkemik  79'
MF 16František Veselý  94'
Manager:
Czechoslovakia Václav Ježek
GK 1 Sepp Maier
SW 5 Franz Beckenbauer (c)
CB 2 Berti Vogts
CB 3 Bernard Dietz
CB 4 Hans-Georg Schwarzenbeck
CM 6 Herbert Wimmer  46'
CM 7 Rainer Bonhof
CM 8 Uli Hoeneß
AM 10Erich Beer  80'
CF 9 Dieter Müller
CF 11Bernd Hölzenbein
Substitutions:
MF 15Heinz Flohe  46'
MF 14Hans Bongartz  80'
Manager:
West Germany Helmut Schön
 Euro 1976 Champions 

Czechoslovakia
First title

References

  1. Scott Murray, Tom Bryant and Tom Henry (31 October 2007). "The footballers who have moves named after them". The Guardian (Guardian News and Media Limited). Retrieved 28 January 2013.

External links


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