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2007 UEFA Futsal Championship

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2007 UEFA Futsal Championship
Campeonato Europeu de Futsal de 2007
UEFA Futsal Championship Portugal 2007 logo
Tournament details
Host countryPortugal
Dates16–25 November
Teams8 (from 1 confederation)
Venue(s)2 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions Spain (4th title)
Runners-up Italy
Third place Russia
Fourth place Portugal
Tournament statistics
Matches played16
Goals scored83 (5.19 per match)
Attendance33,579 (2,099 per match)
Top scorer(s)Spain Daniel
Serbia Predrag Rajić
Russia Cirilo
(5 goals each)
Best player(s)Portugal Ricardinho
2005
2010

The 2007 UEFA Futsal Championship was the sixth official edition of the UEFA-governed European Championship for national futsal teams. It was held in Portugal, between November 16 and November 25, 2007, in two venues located in Porto's Greater Metropolitan AreaGondomar and Santo Tirso municipalities. Eight teams competed in the final round, after a qualifying phase where seven teams managed to join the Portuguese hosts.

Spain, the 2000 FIFA Futsal World Championship and 2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship winners, successfully defended their European crown and added a fourth continental title to their record, by defeating Italy 3-1, in a reprise of the last FIFA Futsal World Championship final.

Bids

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The Portuguese bid was selected during a meeting of UEFA's Executive Committee, on April 19, 2005, in Tallinn, Estonia. The bid was picked ahead of two other entries from the Netherlands (Eindhoven and Maastricht) and Bosnia and Herzegovina (Sarajevo), which had been previously shortlisted from nine preliminary bids.[1]

Venues

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The bid's proposed main venue was to be the 4,500-seated Rosa Mota Pavilion, in the heart of Porto, and a second venue would be located in the neighbouring Matosinhos municipality. However, on August 14, 2006 the tournament's main venue was switched to the future 3,800-seated arena in the Gondomar municipality — the Pavilhão Multiusos de Gondomar "Coração de Ouro" (English: Gondomar's Multi-Purpose Pavilion "Heart of Gold".[2] The second venue was also changed to Santo Tirso's Pavilhão Desportivo Municipal (English: Municipal Sports Pavilion).

Referees

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  • Alexandr Remin (Belarus)
  • Antonio Jose Fernandes Cardoso (Portugal)
  • Antonius Van Eekelen (Netherlands)
  • Edi Šunjić (Croatia)
  • Ivan Shabanov (Russia)
  • Karel Henych (Czech Republic)
  • Károly Török (Hungary)
  • Massimo Cumbo (Italy)
  • Oleg Ivanov (Ukraine)
  • Pascal Lemal (Belgium)
  • Roberto Gracia Marin (Spain)
  • Vladimir Colbasiuc (Moldova)

Final tournament

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Group stage

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Group A

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Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Italy 3 2 1 0 11 1 +10 7
 Portugal 3 2 1 0 8 3 +5 7
 Romania 3 1 0 2 9 14 −5 3
 Czech Republic 3 0 0 3 7 17 −10 0
Portugal 0–0 Italy
Report
Attendance: 3,300
Referee: Károly Török (Hungary)

Czech Republic 4–8 Romania
G. Dobre 15' (o.g.)
T. Sluka 18'
L. Rešetár 27'
M. Mareš 30'
Report R. F. Matei 12', 37', 40' (pen.)
C. Gherman 17'
R. Lupu 23' 35'
G. Molomfalean 24'
Lo. Szöcs 32'
Attendance: 1,800
Referee: Oleg Ivanov (Ukraine)

Italy 7–1 Romania
C. Morgado 2', 21', 23'
S. Assis 6'
A. Foglia 10', 19'
F. Grana 26'
Report C. Gherman 14'
Attendance: 1,988
Referee: Roberto Gracia Marin (Spain)

Portugal 5–3 Czech Republic
Ricardinho 7'
Gonçalo 15'
Arnaldo 20'
Marcelinho 28'
Formiga 36'
Report R. Mareš 1', 12'
D. Frič 9'
Attendance: 3,648
Referee: Ivan Shabanov (Russia)

Romania 0–3 Portugal
Report Ricardinho 1', 25'
Leitão 34'
Attendance: 3,450
Referee: Edi Sunjic (Croatia)

Italy 4–0 Czech Republic
S. Zanetti 11'
A. Foglia 23'
A. Fabiano 32'
F. Grana 36'
Report
Attendance: 900
Referee: Alexandr Remin (Belarus)

Group B

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Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Spain 3 2 1 0 11 4 +7 7
 Russia 3 2 0 1 10 8 +2 6
 Serbia 3 1 1 1 7 8 −1 4
 Ukraine 3 0 0 3 5 13 −8 0
Spain 6–2 Ukraine
Marcelo 15', 38'
Kike 17'
Álvaro 27'
Jordi Torras 33'
Daniel 35'
Report S. Cheporniuk 17', 27'
Attendance: 1,000
Referee: Antonius Van Eekelen (Netherlands)

Serbia 3–5 Russia
P. Rajić 24', 31'
M. Perić 26'
Report Cirilo 2', 15', 34'
D. Khamadiev 24'
V. Shayakhmetov 37'
Attendance: 1,000
Referee: Karel Henych (Czech Republic)

Ukraine 1–4 Russia
D. Khamadiev 35' (o.g.) Report O. Khursov 20' (o.g.)
Cirilo 26' (pen.)
V. Shayakhmetov 27'
S. Zuev 36'
Attendance: 748
Referee: Antonio Jose Fernandes Cardoso (Portugal)

Spain 1–1 Serbia
Andreu 18' Report P. Rajić 40'
Attendance: 1,100
Referee: Vladimir Colbasiuc (Moldova)

Russia 1–4 Spain
K. Maevski 6' Report Andreu 17'
Daniel 20', 38'
Marcelo 23'
Attendance: 1,313
Referee: Massimo Cumbo (Italy)

Ukraine 2–3 Serbia
S. Cheporniuk 21'
S. Sytin 24'
Report P. Rajić 5', 23'
V. Cvetanović 14'
Attendance: 850
Referee: Pascal Lemal (Belgium)

Knockout stage

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Semi-finals

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Italy 2–0 Russia
Grana 3'
A. Fabiano 31'
Report
Attendance: 1,882
Referee: Roberto Gracia Marin (Spain)

Spain 2–2 Portugal
Daniel 36'
Andreu 39'
Report Gonçalo 31'
Ricardinho 35'
Penalties
Kike soccer ball with check mark
Daniel soccer ball with check mark
Jordi Torras soccer ball with check mark
Ortiz soccer ball with check mark
4–3 soccer ball with check mark Ricardinho
soccer ball with red X Joel Queirós
soccer ball with check mark Marcelinho
soccer ball with check mark Ivan
soccer ball with red X Leitão
Attendance: 3,900
Referee: Massimo Cumbo (Italy)

Third place play-off

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Russia 3–2 Portugal
Cirilo 17'
A. Fukin 18'
V. Shayakhmetov 36'
Report Gonçalo 15'
Leitão 36'
Attendance: 3,100
Referee: Oleg Ivanov (Ukraine)

Final

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Italy 1–3 Spain
A. Feller 30' Report Marcelo 9'
Daniel 22'
Javi Rodríguez 27'
Attendance: 3,600
Referee: Antonio Jose Fernandes Cardoso (Portugal)

Champions

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 UEFA Futsal Championship 2007 winners 

Spain
Fourth title

Final ranking

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 Spain
 Italy
 Russia
4  Portugal
5  Serbia
6  Romania
7  Ukraine
8  Czech Republic

Top goalscorers

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Scorer Goals Nation
Predrag Rajić 5  Serbia
Cirilo 5  Russia
Daniel 5  Spain
Ricardinho 4  Portugal
Marcelo 4  Spain

References

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  1. ^ "Porto to stage 2007 finals". UEFA. 2005-04-19. Retrieved 2007-12-04.
  2. ^ "Gondomar given EURO honour". UEFA. 2006-08-14. Retrieved 2007-12-04.
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