Sir Rols Posted December 27, 2016 Report Share Posted December 27, 2016 14 minutes ago, TeamBlakeUSA said: Not Interested With The St. Petersburg Euro 2020 Logo, And Would You All Keep Trolling And Tricking Me Or I Will Get Very Annoyed If You Don't Enter The Logo Comp. Last chance to get your entries in: 10th Annual GamesBids Olympic Logo Comp Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TeamBlakeUSA Posted December 30, 2016 Author Report Share Posted December 30, 2016 Not Interested With Comp, I'm Still Waiting For The St. Petersburg Euro 2020 Logo, And Would You Stop Trolling And Tricking Me Or I Will Get Very Annoyed Get Very Very Very Mad Because of That. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sir Rols Posted December 30, 2016 Report Share Posted December 30, 2016 2 minutes ago, TeamBlakeUSA said: Still Not Interested With The St. Petersburg Euro 2020 Logo, And Would You Please Keep Trolling And Tricking Me Or I Will Get Very Annoyed Get Very Very Very Mad Because of People Not Entering the Comp. Last chance to get your entries in: 10th Annual GamesBids Olympic Logo Comp Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TeamBlakeUSA Posted January 2, 2017 Author Report Share Posted January 2, 2017 We Still Haven't Unveil The Final Host City Logo Yet. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sir Rols Posted January 2, 2017 Report Share Posted January 2, 2017 (edited) 1 hour ago, TeamBlakeUSA said: We Have Unveiled The Winning Kathmandu Logo! Yeah! Kathmandu 2030 Winner's Ceremony Edited January 2, 2017 by Sir Rols Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
world atlas Posted January 19, 2017 Report Share Posted January 19, 2017 Saint Petersburg Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sir Rols Posted January 19, 2017 Report Share Posted January 19, 2017 Someone will be pleased at that! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gotosy Posted September 28, 2017 Report Share Posted September 28, 2017 Dublin to stage European Qualifiers draw on 2 December 2018 The Convention Centre Dublin will be the venue for the UEFA EURO 2020 qualifying draw on 2 December 2018. All 55 UEFA member nations will be involved in the European Qualifiers running from March to November 2019. The ten groups of five or six teams will decide 20 finalists, with the remaining four contenders emerging from the play-offs, for which teams will qualify via the new UEFA Nations League. European Qualifiers: how they work UEFA EURO 2020 : all you need to know UEFA Nations League: full guide UEFA selected the Republic of Ireland as the venue for this draw following an invitation to bid issued to the host cities of the final tournament of this unique European Football Championship. UEFA EURO 2020 marks the 60th anniversary of UEFA's prestigious national-team competition, and matches will be hosted in 13 cities across Europe on a one-off basis. The Irish capital is set to stage three group games and one round of 16 tie at the Dublin Arena. The other host cities for UEFA EURO 2020 will be Amsterdam, Baku, Bilbao, Brussels, Bucharest, Budapest, Copenhagen, Glasgow, London, Munich, Rome and Saint Petersburg. UEFA http://www.uefa.com/uefaeuro-2020/news/newsid=2503882.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
world atlas Posted November 28, 2017 Report Share Posted November 28, 2017 Quote The UEFA Executive Committee will hold its next meeting at the House of European Football in Nyon, Switzerland, on Thursday 7 December at 10.00 local time. The main items on the agenda are: UEFA EURO 2020: Confirmation or replacement of Brussels as host city Drawing of lots to determine host city pairings Selection of opening match venue – candidate cities are: Amsterdam, Brussels, Glasgow, Rome and St Petersburg UEFA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StefanMUC Posted November 28, 2017 Report Share Posted November 28, 2017 57 minutes ago, world atlas said: A Why would Brussels need to be replaced? B If it needs to be replaced, why is in the selection for the opening match? *confused* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rob. Posted November 29, 2017 Report Share Posted November 29, 2017 (edited) 20 hours ago, StefanMUC said: A Why would Brussels need to be replaced? B If it needs to be replaced, why is in the selection for the opening match? *confused* A: The bid for Euro 2020 matches was made on the back of the new Belgium National Stadium being built. However, it's been beset by delays over environmental and building permits and if it happens it may be built with a smaller capacity and may not be ready by 2020. The existing King Baudouin Stadium does not comply with UEFA requirements. This is Belgium's problem - they promised something they're failing to deliver. B: I assume all the stadiums with a certain capacity not already hosting knckout-stage games are in the mix for this match. Brussels would obviously drop out of contention if they lose their hosting rights, but that hasn't happened (yet) so they're still technically in there. ---- I'm going to guess (don't put any money on this) that Brussels will be replaced by Stockholm and the opening match will go to Amsterdam (Belgium gone, Olympic Stadium in Rome not the greatest for football, Russia ruled out as previous world cup host plus sh1tstorm over IOC decision re PC2018 will be raging by next Thursday, Hampden not greatest stadium and British city already hosting semis and final). Edited November 29, 2017 by Rob. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rob. Posted December 7, 2017 Report Share Posted December 7, 2017 Breaking: Wembley to get Brussels Euro 2020 games. Wembley to host 7 games now (inc. semi-finals and final) Rome to host opening game of tournament.https://twitter.com/richard_conway/status/938783107762835456 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rob. Posted December 7, 2017 Report Share Posted December 7, 2017 Unanimous decision apparently. UEFA bloody loves Wembley don't they?! Also, it's probably the only win London will get over Brussels for a while. Maybe we should get the FA to run Brexit? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
world atlas Posted December 7, 2017 Report Share Posted December 7, 2017 Quote London to host additional matches at UEFA EURO 2020 Thursday 7 December 2017 The UEFA Executive Committee met today at the House of European Football in Nyon, Switzerland and took the following decisions: UEFA EURO 2020 - Due to the Eurostadium project’s failure to meet the conditions imposed by the UEFA Executive Committee during its meeting of 20th September 2017, the four matches initially scheduled to be held in Brussels will now be allocated to Wembley Stadium, London following a vote by the committee. This means Wembley will host a total of seven matches since they were already set to stage the semi-finals and final of the tournament. - The Stadio Olimpico in Rome was selected as the venue for the opening match. - The host city pairings were decided by means of a random draw - from six different lists of city pairings established on the basis of sporting strength and geographical considerations - and will be as follows: - Group A: Rome and Baku - Group B: Saint Petersburg and Copenhagen - Group C: Amsterdam and Bucharest - Group D: London and Glasgow - Group E: Bilbao and Dublin - Group F: Munich and Budapest Each qualified host country will play a minimum of two matches at home in the group-stage. UEFA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yoshi Posted December 7, 2017 Report Share Posted December 7, 2017 Seems like a pretty odd way of spreading it out & Cardiff is especially hacked off - if they wanted that many games at Wembley, they could've given it to England Interesting idea of restricting travel times by putting Rome with Baku too. I presume that means the Brussels stadium project is finally dead now? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rob. Posted December 7, 2017 Report Share Posted December 7, 2017 It means they couldn't give guarantees it'd be ready for 2020. As far as I can work out the intention is still to build it but it's bogged down in layers of bureaucracy still. Another thing worth mentioning with this weird tournament is that the host city group pairings were released today. It means England will definitely be in the same group as Scotland if they both qualify (same goes for all the host country pairings)... Group A: Rome and Baku Group B: Saint Petersburg and Copenhagen Group C: Amsterdam and Bucharest Group D: London and Glasgow Group E: Bilbao and Dublin Group F: Munich and Budapest Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
world atlas Posted December 2, 2018 Report Share Posted December 2, 2018 Quote UEFA EURO 2020 qualifying draw made in Dublin Sunday 2 December 2018 The ten UEFA EURO 2020 qualifying groups have been confirmed following the draw in Dublin on Sunday. UEFA EURO 2020 qualifying groups Group A: England, Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Montenegro, Kosovo Group B: Portugal, Ukraine, Serbia, Lithuania, Luxembourg Group C: Netherlands, Germany, Northern Ireland, Estonia, Belarus Group D: Switzerland, Denmark, Republic of Ireland, Georgia, Gibraltar Group E: Croatia, Wales, Slovakia, Hungary, Azerbaijan Group F: Spain, Sweden, Norway, Romania, Faroe Islands, Malta Group G: Poland, Austria, Israel, Slovenia, FYR Macedonia, Latvia Group H: France, Iceland, Turkey, Albania, Moldova, Andorra Group I: Belgium, Russia, Scotland, Cyprus, Kazakhstan, San Marino Group J: Italy, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Finland, Greece, Armenia, Liechtenstein How will qualifying work? Simple: every team in a group plays each other twice, with the top two in each section qualifying automatically for the finals. That's 20 of the 24 finals places taken care of, with a further four filled via the play-offs. How do the play-offs fit in? Each separate League (A, B, C and D) in the UEFA Nations League has been allocated one UEFA EURO 2020 place. Four sides from each League will contest single-leg semi-finals and a one-off final (entirely specific to the EURO) in March 2020. The winner of each of these four one-off finals gets a ticket to UEFA EURO 2020. In theory, the play-offs are contested by the four winners of the quartet of groups that form each of the four Leagues. However, if a UEFA Nations League group winner has already qualified via the European Qualifiers, their spot goes to the next best-ranked team in their League. If a League does not have four teams to compete (say, for example, ten of the 12 League A teams qualify automatically), the remaining slots are allocated to sides from another League in accordance with the overall rankings. Dates for your diary 21–23/03/19: Matchday one 24–26/03/19: Matchday two 07–08/06/19: Matchday three 10–11/06/19: Matchday four 05–07/09/19: Matchday five 08–10/09/19: Matchday six 10–12/10/19: Matchday seven 13–15/10/19: Matchday eight 14–16/11/19: Matchday nine 17–19/11/19: Matchday ten 22/11/19: European Qualifiers play-off draw 01/12/19: UEFA EURO 2020 final tournament draw 26–31/03/20: European Qualifiers play-offs 01/04/20: Additional final tournament draw if required 12/06–12/07/20: UEFA EURO 2020 final tournament How did the draw work? The teams were split into seven pots: the UEFA Nations League pot, consisting of the four teams set to compete in next year's Finals, as well as Pots 1 to 6. The four countries in the UEFA Nations League pot – Switzerland, Portugal, Netherlands and England – were drawn into the first position in Groups A to D to ensure they each have two dates free for the Finals in June. The pots were determined by the overall UEFA Nations League rankings issued on 21 November. The six teams in Pot 1 were drawn into the first position in Groups E to J. The ten teams in Pot 2 were drawn into second positions in the ten groups, with the draw continuing in similar style for Pots 3, 4 and 5 to fill positions 3, 4 and 5 respectively. The teams in Pot 6 were then drawn into the sixth position in the six-team Groups F to J. There were various other restrictions regarding host nations, prohibited team clashes, winter venues and excessive travel implemented around the draw. UEFA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
world atlas Posted March 25, 2019 Report Share Posted March 25, 2019 Quote EURO 2020 mascot revealed Sunday 24 March 2019 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LOMgy2tQrS8 Meet Skillzy, a larger-than-life character inspired by freestyling, street and panna culture. The official mascot for UEFA EURO 2020 has been unveiled during a spectacular pre-match display in Amsterdam. Accompanied by two of the world's leading freestylers, Liv Cooke and Tobias Becs, Skillzy showed off a few moves to the 55,000 crowd ahead of the European Qualifier between the Netherlands and Germany. UEFA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ikarus360 Posted July 14, 2019 Report Share Posted July 14, 2019 Mascot looks much better on the animation presentation which, by the way, i'm glad we're seeing a return on 2D animation. Still though, what's with Europe and always picking kids as their tournament mascots ever since 2004. In other news, Budapest new stadium is almost finished. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
world atlas Posted November 24, 2019 Report Share Posted November 24, 2019 Quote UEFA EURO 2020 play-offs: All you need to know Friday 22 November 2019 The play-offs involve 16 teams competing in four different paths for the last four slots at UEFA EURO 2020. Play-off draw Path A: Iceland v Romania, Bulgaria v Hungary* Path B: Bosnia and Herzegovina v Northern Ireland*, Slovakia v Republic of Ireland Path C: Scotland v Israel, Norway v Serbia* Path D: Georgia v Belarus*, North Macedonia v Kosovo *Winners of these semi-finals will play the final at home Draw details Fixtures are a 20:45 CET kick-off unless otherwise stated. Full play-off match schedule available here. Path D A draw determined that the winners of semi-final 1 (Georgia or Belarus) will play the final at home (18:00 CET). The semi-finals are as follows: Semi-final 1 (1 v 4): Georgia v Belarus (18:00 CET) Semi-final 2 (2 v 3): North Macedonia v Kosovo If Iceland, Bulgaria or Hungary win Path A then the winner of Path D will complete UEFA EURO 2020 Group C. If Romania win Path A then the winner of Path D will complete UEFA EURO 2020 Group F. Path C A draw determined that Israel would go into Path C, while Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania joined Iceland in Path A. A separate draw determined that the winners of semi-final 2 (Norway or Serbia) will play the final at home (18:00 or 20:45 CET). The semi-finals are as follows: Semi-final 1 (1 v 4): Scotland v Israel Semi-final 2 (2 v 3): Norway v Serbia (18:00 CET) The Path C winners will complete UEFA EURO 2020 Group D. Path B A draw determined that the winners of semi-final 1 (Bosnia and Herzegovina or Northern Ireland) will play the final at home. The semi-finals are as follows: Semi-final 1 (1 v 4): Bosnia and Herzegovina v Northern Ireland Semi-final 2 (2 v 3): Slovakia v Republic of Ireland The Path B winners will complete UEFA EURO 2020 Group E. Path A A draw determined that the winners of semi-final 2 (Bulgaria or Hungary) will play the final at home. The semi-finals are as follows: Semi-final 1 (1 v 4): Iceland v Romania Semi-final 2 (2 v 3): Bulgaria v Hungary If Iceland, Bulgaria or Hungary win Path A then they will complete UEFA EURO 2020 Group F. If Romania win Path A then they will complete UEFA EURO 2020 Group C. The three remaining teams from League C - Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania - were allocated to Path A to complete the semi-final pairings in the order of their ranking: Best-ranked team to play at home in semi-final 2. Next best-ranked team to play away in semi-final 2. Next best-ranked team to play away in semi-final 1. Additional draw Denmark and Russia have both qualified for UEFA EURO 2020. As both are hosts (Copenhagen and Saint Petersburg) and paired together in Group B of the final tournament, a draw was held to determine that Denmark will play three group stage games at home; Russia will play two group stage matches at home. When was the draw? The UEFA EURO 2020 play-off draw took place on Friday 22 November, starting at 12:00 CET. It was streamed live on UEFA.com. Who was involved? The play-offs comprised of teams that failed to qualify via the European Qualifiers, based on their performance in the 2018/19 UEFA Nations League – namely the four top-ranked eligible sides in each League. If there were not enough non-qualified teams in the same League then the spot went to the next best side in the overall ranking in accordance with article 16.03 of the competition regulations. Is this new? Qualifying for UEFA EURO 2020 is different to previous editions. Because of the unique format of the finals, with games taking place in 12 cities in 12 European countries, for the first time since 1976 hosts have not qualified automatically. Instead, 20 teams qualified via the European Qualifiers. The remaining four slots are decided by these play-offs, creating the perfect bridge between the UEFA Nations League and EURO. How will the play-off ties be decided? Unlike previous play-offs, these will be single-leg knockout matches. The winners of each final qualifies for UEFA EURO 2020. When do the play-offs take place? The semi-finals will be played on Thursday 26 March, with the finals five days later on Tuesday 31 March. Kick-offs are generally 20:45 CET but exceptions may apply, in particular related to time zones. Key dates Final tournament draw: 30 November Play-off semi-finals: 26 March 2020 Play-off finals: 31 March 2020 Final tournament: 12 June–12 July 2020 With the confirmation of the 20 teams directly qualified and the 16 teams qualified for the play-offs, UEFA confirmed that the procedures established for the play-off draw and the final draw could be fully executed. No additional draw was required (the draw had been provisionally scheduled for 1 April 2020). UEFA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
world atlas Posted December 1, 2019 Report Share Posted December 1, 2019 Quote UEFA EURO 2020 match schedule: all the fixtures Saturday 30 November 2019 Turkey v Italy kicks matters off in Rome on 12 June Details of the UEFA EURO 2020 final tournament match schedule have been confirmed following the draw in Bucharest. Download the fixture list The draw Group A (Rome/Baku): Turkey, Italy (hosts), Wales, Switzerland Group B (Copenhagen/St Petersburg): Denmark (hosts), Finland, Belgium, Russia (hosts) Group C (Amsterdam/Bucharest): Netherlands (hosts), Ukraine, Austria, Play-off winner D or A Group D (London/Glasgow): England (hosts), Croatia, Play-off winner C, Czech Republic Group E (Bilbao/Dublin): Spain (hosts), Sweden, Poland, Play-off winner B Group F (Munich/Budapest): Play-off winner A or D, Portugal (holders), France, Germany (hosts) EURO 2020 MATCH SCHEDULE All kick-off times CET GROUP STAGE Friday 12 June Group A: Turkey v Italy (21:00, Rome) Saturday 13 June Group A: Wales v Switzerland (15:00, Baku) Group B: Denmark v Finland (18:00, Copenhagen) Group B: Belgium v Russia (21:00, St Petersburg) Sunday 14 June Group D: England v Croatia (15:00, Wembley) Group C: Austria v Play-off winner D or A (18:00, Bucharest) Group C: Netherlands v Ukraine (21:00, Amsterdam) Monday 15 June Group D: Play-off winner C v Czech Republic (15:00, Glasgow) Group E: Poland v Play-off winner B (18:00, Dublin) Group E: Spain v Sweden (21:00, Bilbao) Tuesday 16 June Group F: Play-off winner A or D v Portugal (18:00, Budapest) Group F: France v Germany (21:00, Munich) Wednesday 17 June Group B: Finland v Russia (15:00, St Petersburg) Group A: Turkey v Wales (18:00, Baku) Group A: Italy v Switzerland (21:00, Rome) Thursday 18 June Group C: Ukraine v Play-off winner D or A (15:00, Bucharest) Group B: Denmark v Belgium (18:00, Copenhagen) Group C: Netherlands v Austria (21:00, Amsterdam) Friday 19 June Group E: Sweden v Play-off winner B (15:00, Dublin) Group D: Croatia v Czech Republic (18:00, Glasgow) Group D: England v Play-off winner C (21:00, London) Saturday 20 June Group F: Play-off winner A or D v France (15:00, Budapest) Group F: Portugal v Germany (18:00, Munich) Group E: Spain v Poland (21:00, Bilbao) Sunday 21 June Group A: Italy v Wales (18:00, Rome) Group A: Switzerland v Turkey (18:00, Baku) Monday 22 June Group C: Play-off winner D or A v Netherlands (18:00, Amsterdam) Group C: Ukraine v Austria (18:00, Bucharest) Group B: Russia v Denmark (21:00, Copenhagen) Group B: Finland v Belgium (21:00, St Petersburg) Tuesday 23 June Group D: Czech Republic v England (21:00, London) Group D: Croatia v Play-off winner C (21:00, Glasgow) Wednesday 24 June Group E: Play-off winner B v Spain (18:00, Bilbao) Group E: Sweden v Poland (18:00, Dublin) Group F: Germany v Play-off winner A or D (21:00, Munich) Group F: Portugal v France (21:00, Budapest) - Top two in each group plus four best third-placed teams go through KNOCKOUT PHASE Round of 16 Saturday 27 June 1: 2A v 2B (18:00, Amsterdam) 2: 1A v 2C (21:00, London) Sunday 28 June 3: 1C v 3D/E/F (18:00, Budapest) 4: 1B v 3A/D/E/F (21:00, Bilbao) Monday 29 June 5: 2D v 2E (18:00, Copenhagen) 6: 1F v 3A/B/C (21:00, Bucharest) Tuesday 30 June 7: 1D v 2F (18:00, Dublin) 8: 1E v 3A/B/C/D (21:00, Glasgow) Rest days on 1 and 2 July Quarter-finals Friday 3 July QF1: Winner 6 v Winner 5 (18:00, Saint Petersburg) QF2: Winner 4 v Winner 2 (21:00, Munich) Saturday 4 July QF3: Winner 3 v Winner 1 (18:00, Baku) QF4: Winner 8 v Winner 7 (21:00, Rome) Rest days on 5 and 6 July Semi-finals Tuesday 7 July SF1: Winner QF2 v Winner QF1 (21:00, London) Wednesday 8 July SF2: Winner QF4 v Winner QF3 (21:00, London) Rest days on 9, 10, 11 July Final Sunday 12 July Winner SF1 v Winner SF2 (21:00, London) UEFA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
world atlas Posted December 1, 2019 Report Share Posted December 1, 2019 Quote UEFA EURO 2020 matches by venue Saturday 30 November 2019 Which matches are being played in which cities next summer? Wembley will stage seven games at UEFA EURO 2020 Rome, Olimpico in Rome 12 June – Turkey v Italy (21:00 CET) 17 June – Italy v Switzerland (21:00 CET) 21 June – Italy v Wales (18:00 CET) 4 July – Quarter-final W43 v W44 (21:00 CET) Baku, Baku Olympic Stadium 13 June – Wales v Switzerland (15:00 CET) 17 June – Turkey v Wales (18:00 CET) 21 June – Switzerland v Turkey (18:00 CET) 4 July – Quarter-final W40 v W38 (18:00 CET) Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg Stadium 13 June – Belgium v Russia (21:00 CET) 17 June – Finland v Russia (15:00 CET) 22 June – Finland v Belgium (21:00 CET) 3 July – Quarter-final W41 v W42 (18:00 CET) Copenhagen, Parken Stadium 13 June – Denmark v Finland (18:00 CET) 18 June – Denmark v Belgium (18:00 CET) 22 June – Russia v Denmark (21:00 CET) 29 June – Round of 16 2D v 2E (18:00 CET) Amsterdam, Johan Cruijff ArenA 14 June – Netherlands v Ukraine (21:00 CET) 18 June – Netherlands v Austria (21:00 CET) 22 June – Play-off winner D (A) v Netherlands (18:00 CET) 27 June – Round of 16 2A v 2B (18:00 CET) Bucharest, National Arena Bucharest 14 June – Austria v Play-off winner D (A) (18:00 CET) 18 June – Ukraine v Play-off winner D (A) (15:00 CET) 22 June – Ukraine v Austria (18:00 CET) 29 June – Round of 16 1F v 3A/B/C (21:00 CET) London, Wembley Stadium 14 June – England v Croatia (15:00 CET) 19 June – England v Play-off winner C (21:00 CET) 23 June – Czech Republic v England (21:00 CET) 27 June – Round of 16 1A v 2C (21:00 CET) 7 July – Semi-final W46 v W45 (21:00 CET) 8 July - Semi-final W48 v W47 (21:00 CET) 12 July – Final W49 v W50 (21:00 CET) Glasgow, Hampden Park 15 June – Play-off winner C v Czech Republic (15:00 CET) 19 June – Croatia v Czech Republic (18:00 CET) 23 June – Croatia v Play-off winner C (21:00 CET) 30 June – Round of 16 (1E v 3A/B/C/D) (21:00 CET) Bilbao, San Mamés Stadium 15 June – Spain v Sweden (21:00 CET) 20 June – Spain v Poland (21:00 CET) 24 June – Play-off winner B v Spain (18:00 CET) 28 June – Round of 16 1B v 3A/D/E/F (21:00 CET) Dublin, Dublin Arena 15 June – Poland v Play-off winner B (18:00 CET) 19 June – Sweden v Play-off winner B (15:00 CET) 24 June – Sweden v Poland (18:00 CET) 30 June – Round of 16 1D v 2F (18:00 CET) Munich, Football Arena Munich 16 June – France v Germany (21:00 CET) 20 June – Portugal v Germany (18:00 CET) 24 June – Germany v Play-off winner A (D) (21:00 CET) 3 July – Quarter-final W39 v W37 (21:00 CET) Budapest, Puskás Aréna 16 June – Play-off winner A (D) v Portugal (18:00 CET) 20 June – Play-off winner A (D) v France (15:00 CET) 24 June – Portugal v France (21:00 CET) 28 June – Round of 16 1C v 3D/E/F (18:00 CET) UEFA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
world atlas Posted February 18, 2020 Report Share Posted February 18, 2020 Quote EURO 2020 attracts record 28m ticket requests Friday 14 February 2020 An unprecedented number of applications have been made for tickets for this summer's final tournament. Ticketing for UEFA EURO 2020 has smashed all records, with the latest phase for fans of qualified teams taking the overall ticket requests tally to 28.3m – double the figure for UEFA EURO 2016. Ticket sales have come in two phases: - General public sales (12 June to 12 July) – 19.3m ticket applications - Fans of qualified teams (4–18 December) – 9m ticket applications The latest phase, for fans of qualified teams, brought a threefold increase in ticket requests compared to UEFA EURO 2016 in France. The overall figure of 28.3m is double the previous record and apparently due in significant part to the unique nature of the first Europe-wide tournament, which features 12 host countries. The group match between France and Germany in Munich on 16 June, for example, attracted 710,000 ticket requests – only 4,000 fewer than the Wembley final. Some 64% of applications came from fans within host nations, and there has also been strong demand from hosts' neighbouring countries such as Finland, Austria, France and Poland. How you can still get involved Fans of the play-off winners The European Qualifiers play-offs at the end of March will determine the last four teams in this summer’s final tournament, and fans of those sides will be able to apply online for UEFA EURO 2020 tickets in early April. Purchase phase If supply exceeds demand for specific tickets then they will be sold on a first-come, first-served basis closer to the tournament. Official ticket resale platform Fans wishing to re-sell their tickets will be able to do so via the official UEFA resale platform, which launches at the end of February. If tickets are sold, the original purchaser gets their money back. UEFA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Texas Posted March 10, 2020 Report Share Posted March 10, 2020 Has UEFA announced what the plan for Euro 2020 is if Corona Virus is still around by June? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StefanMUC Posted March 10, 2020 Report Share Posted March 10, 2020 While they keep a straight face and pretend all will be fine, I’m sure they’re desperately considering all options right now. That’s what they usually do in clandestine organisations residing at Lake Geneva. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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