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UEFA Euro 1988

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
8th European association football championship

1988 UEFA European Football Championship
Fußball-Europameisterschaft
Bundesrepublik Deutschland 1988
Tournament details
Host countryWest Germany
Dates10–25 June
Teams8
Venue8 (in 8 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Netherlands (1st title)
Runners-up Soviet Union
Tournament statistics
Matches played15
Goals scored34 (2.27 per match)
Attendance849,844 (56,656 per match)
Top scorerNetherlandsMarco van Basten(5 goals)
1984
1992
International football competition

The1988 UEFA European Football Championship final tournament was held in West Germany from 10 to 25 June 1988. It was the eighthUEFA European Championship, which is held every four years and supported byUEFA.France were the defending champions, but failed to qualify. The tournament crownedthe Netherlands as European champions for the first time.

Euro 1988 was a rare instance of a major football tournament ending without a single sending-off or goalless draw, nor any knockout matches going to extra time or penalties. This was the final European Championship to feature teams fromWest Germany and theSoviet Union, as the West and East Germansreunified to become Germany in 1990, and the Soviet Uniondisintegrated into 15 countries in 1991.

Bid process

[edit]

West Germany won the right to host the tournament with five votes ahead of a joint bid from Norway, Sweden and Denmark, which earned one vote, and a bid from England.[1] Because theEastern Bloc disagreed thatWest Berlin was part of theFederal Republic of Germany, theGerman Football Association ruled out playing Championship matches in West Berlin. This secured the participation of Eastern European members of UEFA.[2][3] In the1974 FIFA World Cup, however, West Berlin had hosted three games.[4] As a compromise, theBerlin Olympic Stadium hosted aFour Nations Tournament in 1988, with West Germany playing against theSoviet Union,Argentina andSweden.[5][6]

Overview

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Group matches

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The first group pitted two pre-tournament favouritesWest Germany andItaly together, along withSpain andDenmark. The West German team had won the1980 European Championship and were the runners-up in each of the last two World Cups in1982 and1986, although in1984 they failed to qualify from their group. With such results and additionally as the host they were commonly considered the main favourite of the tournament.

The Italians had not played at Euro 1984, though they had finished fourth in the 1980 tournament, for which they were the hosts; they had also won the 1982 World Cup, albeit followed by a middling performance in 1986. Spain and Denmark contested the second semi-final of the 1984 edition, in which Spain prevailed on penalty-kicks, but then lost the final to hosts,France (who failed to qualify in 1988). Both Spain and Denmark played in the 1986 World Cup, and met there again, in a Round of 16 match of the knockout stage which Spain won 5–1.

The Germans and Italians played out the opening game. This game was tightly contested.Roberto Mancini capitalised on a defensive error on the left-hand side of the German goal and the striker squeezed in a shot from a tight angle low to the left corner. Just three minutes later, Italy's goalkeeper,Walter Zenga was penalised for taking more than four steps with the ball andAndreas Brehme scored the resulting free-kick from the edge of the penalty area with a low shot to the right corner. Both teams settled for a 1–1 draw.

Spain defeated Denmark again, this time 3–2.Míchel opened the scoring after five minutes with a shot to the left corner from inside the penalty area andMichael Laudrup equalised 20 minutes later with a left foot shot from the edge of the penalty area to the left corner. Spain dominated the next hour andEmilio Butragueño scored with a low shot through the goalkeepers legs and thenRafael Gordillo putting the Spanish 3–1 to the good with a free-kick which deceived the goalkeeper. A late surge sawFlemming Povlsen reduce the scoreline with a header in off the left post, but was not enough for the Danes, who now needed to win both their remaining games to be certain of a place in the semi-finals.

In the remaining games the West Germans swept aside the Danes and Spanish.Jürgen Klinsmann andOlaf Thon scored to dispatch the former 2–0 while two goals fromRudi Völler were enough to beat Spain 2–0. The second goal was particularly notable.Lothar Matthäus ran 40 yards into the Spanish penalty box before back-heeling the ball for the oncoming Völler, following up his run, to strike the ball with the outside of his foot and into the corner of the goal.

The Italians won a difficult match against the Spanish 1–0, courtesy of a goal fromGianluca Vialli, a low cross-shot to the net on 73 minutes. In the last game, against an already eliminated Denmark, the Italians prevailed 2–0.

The second group witnessed a surprising set of results. In the opening game, one of the pre-tournament favouritesEngland lost 1–0 toIreland.Ray Houghton scored a looping header after six minutes after the English defence failed to clear a cross. The English applied strong pressure as the game wore on.Gary Lineker was unusually sluggish, missing a series of chances and hitting the crossbar – he was later diagnosed withhepatitis B.[7] In the other opening game, the Soviet Union defeated theNetherlands 1–0 through aVasyl Rats goal, despite the Dutch dominating for long periods.

England met the Netherlands inDüsseldorf; both needed to win. England started strongly with Lineker hitting a post andGlenn Hoddle striking the post with a free-kick. The English defence, weakened by the absence ofTerry Butcher, conceded the first of three goals toMarco van Basten on 44 minutes. Van Basten turned Butcher's replacementTony Adams and beatPeter Shilton – playing his 100th game for England – to give his side a 1–0 lead. England rallied after the break. Lineker andBryan Robson exchanged a kick one-two pass allowing Robson to burst into the box and lift the ball overHans van Breukelen after 53 minutes. The score remained until Van Basten turned Tony Adams inside out to finish from 18 yards on 71 minutes. The striker pounced from close-range after a corner to seal a 3–1 win four minutes later.

The Irish and Soviets led the group after two games through a 1–1 draw inHanover.Ronnie Whelan scored a spectacular left-foot volley from 18 yards to put the Irish into the lead.Oleh Protasov equalised with a low shot as the Soviets exerted late pressure.

Needing to defeat the Irish to progress, the Dutch won the game 1–0 through a lateWim Kieft goal. The ball deflected into his path and he delivered a looping header which spun into the right corner of the Irish net with nine minutes remaining just afterPaul McGrath hit a Dutch post with a header. In the other game, the Soviets soundly thrashed England. A mistake from Hoddle allowedSergei Aleinikov to score after three minutes. Adams equalised and England had chances to go ahead, but a goal before half-time and late in the game assured the Soviet Union would finish in first place in the group.[8]

Semi-finals and final

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The first semi-final was significant as rivals West Germany played the Netherlands. It was only the third time the two sides had faced each other since the1974 FIFA World Cup Final; the West Germans winning a first round match in the 1980 European Championship, and a 2–2 draw in a1978 FIFA World Cup second round group match. The game was tight, and the West Germans broke the deadlock on 55 minutes with a Matthäus penalty after a foul on Klinsmann. The lead was held for 20 minutes untilJürgen Kohler brought down Van Basten.Ronald Koeman converted the spot-kick to level the match. With the match headed forextra time, a through ball caught the Germans out and Van Basten finished clinically with a shot as he slid along the floor, beating the goalkeeper and Kohler to the ball in the 88th minute for a 2–1 win. It gave the Dutch their first competitive victory against the Germans and the first appearance in the competition's final. The victory was marred by the reaction of Dutch defender Koeman who wiped the shirt of Olaf Thon, given to him after the match, on his backside in front of the German fans. The player apologised afterwards.

The other semi-final was another unpredictable result. Italy were strong favourites to reach the final and had beaten the Soviets 4–1 in a friendly just two months earlier. Despite controlling the play and having the majority of the chances, the Italians were undone by poor finishing and a strong, tough opposition who sought to stop their more skilful opponents from playing through hard tackles and a defensive strategy. The hard work-rate of the Soviets paid off and in just four second-half minutes, counter-attacks saw two goals fromHennadiy Lytovchenko and Oleg Protasov. The first one from Lytovchenko was initially blocked, but with quick reactions he beat Franco Baresi to the ball to fire the second shot into the far corner. The second from Protasov was a looping shot that floated over Zenga for a 2–0 victory. It would be the Soviet Union's fourth appearance in aEuropean Championship final.

The final was played on 25 June between the Soviet Union, in what would turn out to be the nation's last European Championship match, and the Netherlands at theOlympiastadion inMunich. The Dutch won the match 2–0, with goals by captainRuud Gullit and tournament top scorer Marco van Basten. Hans van Breukelen blocked a low penalty shot ofIgor Belanov. Van Basten's goal, a sharply hit volley across the goal off an incoming looping pass, would later be described as one of the greatest goals in the history of the European Championships.[9][10]

Qualification

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Main article:UEFA Euro 1988 qualifying

Qualified teams

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Seven countries had to qualify for the final stage. West Germany qualified automatically as hosts of the event. The Republic of Ireland qualified for the first time for any major tournament. The holders, France, failed to qualify despite finishing third in the 1986 World Cup. As of 2024, this is the last time that France failed to qualify for the European Championship finals, and since the conversion to a group stage in the finals tournament, this remains the only time the previous tournament winners failed to qualify for the next competition.[11] Other notable absentees were Belgium (the 1980 runners-up and 1986 FIFA World Cup semi-finalists) and Portugal (semi-finalists of Euro 1984). The following eight teams qualified for the final tournament:

TeamQualified asQualified onPrevious appearances
in tournament[A]
 West GermanyHost14 March 19854 (1972,1976,1980,1984)
 DenmarkGroup 6 winner14 October 19872 (1964,1984)
 Soviet UnionGroup 3 winner28 October 19874 (1960,1964,1968,1972)
 EnglandGroup 4 winner11 November 19872 (1968,1980)
 Republic of IrelandGroup 7 winner11 November 19870 (debut)
 ItalyGroup 2 winner14 November 19872 (1968,1980)
 SpainGroup 1 winner18 November 19873 (1964,1980,1984)
 NetherlandsGroup 5 winner9 December 19872 (1976,1980)
  1. ^Bold indicates champion for that year.Italic indicates host for that year.
Group 1
 West Germany
 Italy
 Denmark
 Spain
Group 2
 England
 Republic of Ireland
 Netherlands
 Soviet Union

Venues

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MunichGelsenkirchen
OlympiastadionParkstadion
Capacity:69,256Capacity:70,748
HamburgFrankfurt
VolksparkstadionWaldstadion
Capacity:61,330Capacity:61,056
DüsseldorfHanoverStuttgartCologne
RheinstadionNiedersachsenstadionNeckarstadionMüngersdorfer Stadion
Capacity:68,400Capacity:60,366Capacity:70,705Capacity:60,584

Squads

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Main article:UEFA Euro 1988 squads

Each national team had to submit a squad of 20 players.

Match officials

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Special stamp issued byDeutsche Bundespost for the tournament
CountryRefereeLinesmenMatches refereed
 AustriaHorst BrummeierHeinz HolzmannHelmut KohlRepublic of Ireland–Netherlands (group 2)
 BelgiumAlexis PonnetFrans Van Den WijngaertJean-François CruckeSoviet Union–Italy (semi-finals)
 East GermanySiegfried KirschenKlaus PeschelManfred RoßnerEngland–Republic of Ireland (group 2)
 EnglandKeith HackettNeil MidgleyBrian HillWest Germany–Italy (group 1)
 FranceMichel VautrotGérard BiguetRémi HarrelWest Germany–Spain (group 1)
Soviet Union–Netherlands (final)
 ItalyPaolo CasarinCarlo LonghiPierluigi MagniEngland–Netherlands (group 2)
 NetherlandsBep ThomasJohn BlankensteinJacob van der NietDenmark–Spain (group 1)
 PortugalJosé Rosa dos SantosJosé Francisco Conceição SilvaFortunato Alves de AzevedoEngland–Soviet Union (group 2)
 RomaniaIoan IgnaȘtefan Dan PetrescuIon CrăciunescuWest Germany–Netherlands (semi-finals)
 ScotlandBob ValentineKenny HopeAndrew WaddellWest Germany–Denmark (group 1)
 SpainEmilio Soriano AladrénJosé Donato Pes PérezJosé Mauro Socorro GonzálezRepublic of Ireland–Soviet Union (group 2)
 SwedenErik FredrikssonBo KarlssonChrister DrottzItaly–Spain (group 1)
 SwitzerlandBruno GallerRenzo PeduzziPhilippe MercierItaly–Denmark (group 1)
 West GermanyDieter PaulyKarl-Heinz TritschlerAron SchmidhuberNetherlands–Soviet Union (group 2)

Fourth officials

This list isincomplete; you can help byadding missing items.(December 2019)
CountryFourth officials
 PolandMichał Listkiewicz
 West GermanyKarl-Josef Assenmacher
 West GermanyWerner Föckler
 West GermanyWolf-Günter Wiesel

Group stage

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Results for UEFA Euro 1988 finalists

The teams finishing in the top two of each group progressed to the semi-finals.

All times are local,CEST (UTC+2).

Tiebreakers

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If two or more teams finished level on points after completion of the group matches, the following tie-breakers were used to determine the final ranking:

  1. Goal difference in all group matches
  2. Greater number of goals scored in all group matches
  3. Drawing of lots

Group 1

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Main article:UEFA Euro 1988 Group 1
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1 West Germany(H)321051+45Advance toknockout stage
2 Italy321041+35
3 Spain310235−22
4 Denmark300327−50
Source:UEFA
(H) Hosts
West Germany 1–1 Italy
Report
Attendance: 62,552
Denmark 2–3 Spain
Report
Attendance: 55,707

West Germany 2–0 Denmark
Report
Attendance: 64,812
Italy 1–0 Spain
Report
Attendance: 47,506

West Germany 2–0 Spain
Report
Attendance: 63,802
Italy 2–0 Denmark
Report
Attendance: 53,951

Group 2

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Main article:UEFA Euro 1988 Group 2
England v Netherlands match
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1 Soviet Union321052+35Advance toknockout stage
2 Netherlands320142+24
3 Republic of Ireland31112203
4 England300327−50
Source:UEFA
England 0–1 Republic of Ireland
Report
Attendance: 51,373
Netherlands 0–1 Soviet Union
Report
Attendance: 54,336

England 1–3 Netherlands
Report
Attendance: 63,940
Republic of Ireland 1–1 Soviet Union
Report
Attendance: 38,308

England 1–3 Soviet Union
Report
Attendance: 48,335
Republic of Ireland 0–1 Netherlands
Report
Attendance: 64,731

Knockout stage

[edit]
Main article:UEFA Euro 1988 knockout stage

In the knockout phase,extra time would be played if scores were level after 90 minutes, and apenalty shoot-out if teams could not be separated after the additional period.

Bracket

[edit]
 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
22 June –Stuttgart
 
 
 Soviet Union2
 
25 June –Munich
 
 Italy0
 
 Soviet Union0
 
21 June –Hamburg
 
 Netherlands2
 
 West Germany1
 
 
 Netherlands2
 

Semi-finals

[edit]
West Germany 1–2 Netherlands
Report
Attendance: 56,115
Referee:Ioan Igna (Romania)

Soviet Union 2–0 Italy
Report
Attendance: 61,606

Final

[edit]
Main article:UEFA Euro 1988 final
Soviet Union 0–2 Netherlands
Report
Attendance: 62,770[12]

Statistics

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Goalscorers

[edit]

There were 34 goals scored in 15 matches, for an average of 2.27 goals per match.

5 goals

2 goals

1 goal

Awards

[edit]
UEFA Team of the Tournament[13]
GoalkeeperDefendersMidfieldersForwards
NetherlandsHans van BreukelenItalyGiuseppe Bergomi
ItalyPaolo Maldini
NetherlandsRonald Koeman
NetherlandsFrank Rijkaard
ItalyGiuseppe Giannini
NetherlandsJan Wouters
West GermanyLothar Matthäus
ItalyGianluca Vialli
NetherlandsRuud Gullit
NetherlandsMarco van Basten

References

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  1. ^Schulze-Marmeling, Dietrich; Dahlkamp, Hubert (2007).Die Geschichte der Fußball-Europameisterschaft 1960–2008 (in German). Göttingen: Verlag Die Werkstatt.ISBN 978-3-89533-553-2.
  2. ^"Political football divides Germanys".UPI. 21 February 1985. Retrieved28 February 2025.
  3. ^"German soccer body rejects Berlin as site for tournament".Toronto Star.Associated Press. 28 February 1985. p. H2 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^Stokkermans, Karel; Jarreta, Sergio Henrique (22 October 1999)."World Cup 1974 (West Germany, June 13–July 7)".RSSSF. Retrieved28 February 2025.
  5. ^Hausmann, Jörg (28 March 2008)."Der zu Recht vergessene EM-Testlauf" [The rightly forgotten European Championship test run].T-Online (in German). Archived fromthe original on 8 April 2016.
  6. ^Pierrend, José Luis (28 July 2016)."Four Nations Tournament (West-Berlin, West Germany 1988)".RSSSF. Retrieved26 February 2025.
  7. ^Smyth, Rob."On Second Thoughts: Rob Smyth on England at Euro 88".The Guardian. Retrieved24 June 2016.
  8. ^"When Saturday Comes - Classic matches ~ England v USSR, Euro 68 & 88".Wsc.co.uk. 9 July 2012. Archived fromthe original on 1 July 2016. Retrieved24 June 2016.
  9. ^Humphrey, Jake."Which is the best Euro Goal Ever?".BBC Sport. Retrieved23 October 2008.
  10. ^"10 Greatest Goals in the European Championships".FourFourTwo. Future plc. 8 May 2008. Archived fromthe original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved24 August 2017.
  11. ^Magowan, Alistair (12 May 2012)."Euro 1988: Valery Lobanovsky's last stand for Soviet Union".BBC Sport. Retrieved17 June 2012.
  12. ^"European Football Championship 1988 Final".euro2000.org. UEFA. Archived fromthe original on 17 August 2000. Retrieved26 December 2017.
  13. ^"UEFA 1988 Team of the Tournament".UEFA. 1 January 2022. Retrieved26 February 2025.

External links

[edit]
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