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The '''1960 European Football Championship''', then called the '''European Nations Cup''', was the first edition of the [[European Football Championship]], held every four years and endoresed by [[UEFA]]. The final tournament was held in [[France]]. It was won by the [[USSR national football team|Soviet Union]] 2-1 over [[Yugoslavia national football team|Yugoslavia]] in [[Paris]] after extra time.
[[Image:Euro 60.jpg|right|Competition logo]]The '''1960 European Football Championship''', then called the '''European Nations Cup''', was the first edition of the [[European Football Championship]], held every four years and endoresed by [[UEFA]]. The final tournament was held in [[France]]. It was won by the [[USSR national football team|Soviet Union]] 2-1 over [[Yugoslavia national football team|Yugoslavia]] in [[Paris]] after extra time.


The tournament was a knockout competition; just 17 teams entered with some notable absences ([[Germany national football team|West Germany]] and [[Italy national football team|Italy]] among them). The teams would play home-and-away matches until the semifinals; the final four teams would move on to the final tournament, whose host was selected after the teams became known.
The tournament was a knockout competition; just 17 teams entered with some notable absences ([[Germany national football team|West Germany]] and [[Italy national football team|Italy]] among them). The teams would play home-and-away matches until the semifinals; the final four teams would move on to the final tournament, whose host was selected after the teams became known.

Revision as of 00:17, 9 March 2006

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The 1960 European Football Championship, then called the European Nations Cup, was the first edition of the European Football Championship, held every four years and endoresed by UEFA. The final tournament was held in France. It was won by the Soviet Union 2-1 over Yugoslavia in Paris after extra time.

The tournament was a knockout competition; just 17 teams entered with some notable absences (West Germany and Italy among them). The teams would play home-and-away matches until the semifinals; the final four teams would move on to the final tournament, whose host was selected after the teams became known.

Spain refused to travel to the Soviet Union and withdrew from the tournament, so the final four had three Eastern Block countries: USSR, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia, to go with hosts France. In the semifinals, 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 lead 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. Regulation ended 1-1, and Viktor Ponedelnik scored with seven minutes left in extra time to give the Soviets the inaugurual European Championship.

Qualifying Rounds

Pre-qualifying

Republic of Ireland 2 - 0
0 - 4
Czechoslovakia

 

Round of 16

USSR 3 - 1
1 - 0
Hungary
France 7 - 1
1 - 1
File:Greece flag large.png Greece
Poland 2 - 4
0 - 3
Spain
Norway 0 - 1
2 - 5
File:Austria flag large.png Austria
Denmark 2 - 2
1 - 5
Czechoslovakia
Yugoslavia 2 - 0
1 - 1
Bulgaria
File:Steagul Republicii Socialiste Romania.png Romania 3 - 0
0 - 2
File:Turkey flag large.png Turkey
File:East Germany flag.png East Germany 0 - 2
2 - 3
File:Portugal flag large.png Portugal

Quarterfinals

USSR walk
over
Spain
France 5 - 2
4 - 2
File:Austria flag large.png Austria
File:Steagul Republicii Socialiste Romania.png Romania 0 - 2
0 - 3
Czechoslovakia
File:Portugal flag large.png Portugal 2 - 1
1 - 5
Yugoslavia

Final Tournament

Semifinals

July 6, 1960

 

USSR 3 - 0 Czechoslovakia
Yugoslavia 5 - 4 France

Third place match

July 9, 1960

Czechoslovakia 2 - 0 France

Final

July 10, 1960

USSR 2 - 1 (AET) Yugoslavia
Venue: Parc Des Princes, Paris
Attendance: 18,000

Tournament Statistics

Top Goalscorers

2 Goals: François Heutte (France), Valentin Ivanov (USSR), Viktor Ponedelnik (USSR), Milan Galić (Yugoslavia), Dražen Jerković (Yugoslavia)

Fastest Goal

11 Minutes: Milan Galić (Yugoslavia vs France)

Average Goals

4.25 Per Game

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