Uefa Euro 1992

The 1992 UEFA European Football Championship was hosted by Sweden between 10 and 26 June 1992.

It was the ninth UEFA European Championship, which is held every four years and supported by UEFA.

1992 UEFA European Football Championship
Europamästerskapet i fotboll
Sverige 1992
Uefa Euro 1992
Small is Beautiful
Tournament details
Host countrySweden
Dates10–26 June
Teams8
Venue(s)4 (in 4 host cities)
Final positions
ChampionsUefa Euro 1992 Denmark (1st title)
Runners-upUefa Euro 1992 Germany
Tournament statistics
Matches played15
Goals scored32 (2.13 per match)
Attendance430,111 (28,674 per match)
Top scorer(s)Denmark Henrik Larsen
Germany Karl-Heinz Riedle
Netherlands Dennis Bergkamp
Sweden Tomas Brolin
(3 goals each)
1988
1996

Denmark won the 1992 championship, having qualified only after Yugoslavia was disqualified as a result of the breakup of the country and the ensuing warfare there. Eight national teams contested the final tournament.

The CIS national football team (Commonwealth of Independent States), representing the recently dissolved Soviet Union, whose national team had qualified for the tournament, were present at the tournament. It was also the first major tournament in which the reunified Germany (who were beaten 2–0 by Denmark in the final) had competed.

It was the last tournament with only eight participants, to award the winner of a match with only two points, and before the introduction of the back-pass rule, the latter of which was brought in immediately after the tournament was completed. When the next competition was held in 1996, 16 teams were involved and were awarded three points for a win.

Bid process

On 16 December 1988, following a decision made by the UEFA Executive Committee, Sweden was chosen over Spain to host the event. Spain was at a disadvantage as they had already been chosen to host the EXPO 1992 in Seville and the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona.

Summary

Seven of the eight teams had to qualify for the final stage; Sweden qualified automatically as hosts of the event. The Soviet Union qualified for the final tournament shortly before the break-up of the country, and took part in the tournament under the banner of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), before the former Soviet republics formed their own national teams after the competition. The CIS team represented the following former Soviet nations: Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Moldova, and Tajikistan. Four out of 15 ex-republics were not members of the CIS: Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania did not send their players; Georgia was not a member of the CIS at the time, but Georgian Kakhaber Tskhadadze was a part of the squad.

Originally, Yugoslavia qualified for the final stage and were about to participate as FR Yugoslavia, but due to the Yugoslav Wars, the team was disqualified and Denmark, as the runners-up from Yugoslavia's qualifying group, was invited to take part instead. After a draw with England and a loss to host nation Sweden, Denmark beat France in their final group match to qualify for the semi-finals, where they faced the reigning European champions, the Netherlands. Denmark led 2–1 going into the last five minutes, but a Frank Rijkaard equaliser meant the game went to a penalty shoot-out; Danish goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel saved Marco van Basten's kick, giving Denmark a 5–4 win on penalties and a place in the final against the reigning world champions, Germany. Denmark won the final 2–0 with goals from John Jensen and Kim Vilfort in either half to claim their first European title.

Qualification

Scotland and the hosts Sweden made their respective debuts despite having already made many appearances at the World Cup. France qualified for the first Euro in which they were not the hosts. They played after missing the previous tournament.

As of 2024, this was the last time the Czech Republic (then Czechoslovakia), Italy, Portugal and Spain failed to qualify for the European Championship finals.

Qualified teams

Team Qualified as Qualified on Previous appearances in tournament
Uefa Euro 1992  Sweden Host 16 December 1988 0 (debut)
Uefa Euro 1992  France Group 1 winner 12 October 1991 2 (1960, 1984)
Uefa Euro 1992  England Group 7 winner 13 November 1991 3 (1968, 1980, 1988)
Uefa Euro 1992  CIS Group 3 winner 13 November 1991 5 (1960, 1964, 1968, 1972, 1988)
Uefa Euro 1992  Scotland Group 2 winner 13 November 1991 0 (debut)
Uefa Euro 1992  Germany Group 5 winner 20 November 1991 5 (1972, 1976, 1980, 1984, 1988)
Uefa Euro 1992  Netherlands Group 6 winner 4 December 1991 3 (1976, 1980, 1988)
Uefa Euro 1992  Denmark Group 4 runner-up 31 May 1992 3 (1964, 1984, 1988)

Final draw

The draw for the final tournament took place on 17 January 1992 in Gothenburg. Only two teams were seeded: Sweden (as hosts) and the Netherlands (as holders). The remaining six teams were all unseeded and could be drawn in any group. Months after the draw, Yugoslavia was banned from participating and replaced by Denmark, which had come second in the qualifying group.

In the draw procedure, the unseeded teams were drawn one by one. The first two were placed in position 4 of each group, the next two in position 3, and the last 2 in position 2. The two seeded teams were then drawn and placed consecutively into position 1 of the groups.

Pot 1: Seeded teams Pot 2: Unseeded teams

The draw resulted in the following groups:

Group 1
Uefa Euro 1992  Sweden
Uefa Euro 1992  France
Uefa Euro 1992  YugoslaviaUefa Euro 1992  Denmark
Uefa Euro 1992  England
Group 2
Uefa Euro 1992  Netherlands
Uefa Euro 1992  Scotland
Uefa Euro 1992  CIS
Uefa Euro 1992  Germany

Venues

Gothenburg Stockholm
Ullevi Råsunda Stadium
Capacity: 44,000 Capacity: 40,000
Uefa Euro 1992  Uefa Euro 1992 
Malmö Norrköping
Malmö Stadion Idrottsparken
Capacity: 30,000 Capacity: 23,000
Uefa Euro 1992  Uefa Euro 1992 

Squads

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

Match ball

Adidas Etrusco Unico was used as the official match ball of the tournament. The ball was previously used in the 1990 FIFA World Cup.

Match officials

Country Referee Linesmen Matches refereed
Uefa Euro 1992  Austria Hubert Forstinger Johann Möstl Alois Pemmer France 1–2 Denmark
Uefa Euro 1992  Belgium Guy Goethals Pierre Mannaerts Robert Surkijn Scotland 0–2 Germany
Uefa Euro 1992  CIS Alexey Spirin Victor Filippov Andrei Butenko Sweden 1–1 France
Uefa Euro 1992  Denmark Peter Mikkelsen Arne Paltoft Jørgen Ohmeyer Netherlands 0–0 CIS
Uefa Euro 1992  France Gérard Biguet Marc Huguenin Alain Gourdet CIS 1–1 Germany
Uefa Euro 1992  Germany Aron Schmidhuber Joachim Ren Uwe Ennuschat Sweden 1–0 Denmark
Uefa Euro 1992  Hungary Sándor Puhl László Varga Sándor Szilágyi France 0–0 England
Uefa Euro 1992  Italy Pierluigi Pairetto Domenico Ramicone Maurizio Padovan Netherlands 3–1 Germany
Tullio Lanese Sweden 2–3 Germany (Semi-final)
Uefa Euro 1992  Netherlands John Blankenstein Jan Dolstra Robert Overkleeft Denmark 0–0 England
Uefa Euro 1992  Portugal José Rosa dos Santos Valdemar Aguiar Pinto Lopes Antonio Guedes Gomes De Carvalho Sweden 2–1 England
Uefa Euro 1992  Spain Emilio Soriano Aladrén Francisco García Pacheco José Luis Iglesia Casas Netherlands 2–2 Denmark (Semi-final)
Uefa Euro 1992  Sweden Bo Karlsson Lennart Sundqvist Bo Persson Netherlands 1–0 Scotland
Uefa Euro 1992  Switzerland Kurt Röthlisberger Zivanko Popović Paul Wyttenbach Scotland 3–0 CIS
Bruno Galler Denmark 2–0 Germany (Final)
Country Fourth officials
Uefa Euro 1992  Austria Gerhard Kapl
Uefa Euro 1992  Belgium Frans van den Wijngaert
Uefa Euro 1992  CIS Vadim Zhuk
Uefa Euro 1992  Denmark Kim Milton Nielsen
Uefa Euro 1992  France Rémi Harrel
Uefa Euro 1992  Germany Karl-Josef Assenmacher
Uefa Euro 1992  Hungary Sándor Varga
Uefa Euro 1992  Netherlands Mario van der Ende
Uefa Euro 1992  Portugal Jorge Emanuel Monteiro Coroado
Uefa Euro 1992  Sweden Leif Sundell

Group stage

Uefa Euro 1992 
Results. Yugoslavia (stripes) qualified and were going to participate as FR Yugoslavia, but banned and replaced by Denmark. CIS (yellow on the right side of the map) qualified as Soviet Union.

The teams finishing in the top two positions in each of the two groups progress to the semi-finals, while the bottom two teams in each group were eliminated from the tournament.

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

Tiebreakers

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

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Uefa Euro 1992  Sweden (H) 3 2 1 0 4 2 +2 5 Advance to knockout stage
2 Uefa Euro 1992  Denmark 3 1 1 1 2 2 0 3
3 Uefa Euro 1992  France 3 0 2 1 2 3 −1 2
4 Uefa Euro 1992  England 3 0 2 1 1 2 −1 2
Source: UEFA
(H) Hosts
Sweden Uefa Euro 1992 1–1Uefa Euro 1992  France
Report
Råsunda Stadium, Solna
Attendance: 29,860
Referee: Alexey Spirin (CIS)
Denmark Uefa Euro 1992 0–0Uefa Euro 1992  England
Report
Malmö Stadion, Malmö
Attendance: 26,385
Referee: John Blankenstein (Netherlands)

France Uefa Euro 1992 0–0Uefa Euro 1992  England
Report
Malmö Stadion, Malmö
Attendance: 26,535
Referee: Sándor Puhl (Hungary)
Sweden Uefa Euro 1992 1–0Uefa Euro 1992  Denmark
Report
Råsunda Stadium, Solna
Attendance: 29,902
Referee: Aron Schmidhuber (Germany)

Sweden Uefa Euro 1992 2–1Uefa Euro 1992  England
Report
France Uefa Euro 1992 1–2Uefa Euro 1992  Denmark
Report
Malmö Stadion, Malmö
Attendance: 25,763
Referee: Hubert Forstinger (Austria)

Group 2

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Uefa Euro 1992  Netherlands 3 2 1 0 4 1 +3 5 Advance to knockout stage
2 Uefa Euro 1992  Germany 3 1 1 1 4 4 0 3
3 Uefa Euro 1992  Scotland 3 1 0 2 3 3 0 2
4 Uefa Euro 1992  CIS 3 0 2 1 1 4 −3 2
Source: UEFA
Netherlands Uefa Euro 1992 1–0Uefa Euro 1992  Scotland
Report
Ullevi, Gothenburg
Attendance: 35,720
Referee: Bo Karlsson (Sweden)
CIS Uefa Euro 1992 1–1Uefa Euro 1992  Germany
Report
Idrottsparken, Norrköping
Attendance: 17,410
Referee: Gérard Biguet (France)

Scotland Uefa Euro 1992 0–2Uefa Euro 1992  Germany
Report
Idrottsparken, Norrköping
Attendance: 17,638
Referee: Guy Goethals (Belgium)
Netherlands Uefa Euro 1992 0–0Uefa Euro 1992  CIS
Report
Ullevi, Gothenburg
Attendance: 34,440
Referee: Peter Mikkelsen (Denmark)

Netherlands Uefa Euro 1992 3–1Uefa Euro 1992  Germany
Report
Ullevi, Gothenburg
Attendance: 37,725
Referee: Pierluigi Pairetto (Italy)
Scotland Uefa Euro 1992 3–0Uefa Euro 1992  CIS
Report

Knockout stage

In the knockout phase, extra time and a penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary. As with every tournament since UEFA Euro 1984, there was no third place play-off.

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

Bracket

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
22 June – Gothenburg
 
 
Uefa Euro 1992  Netherlands2 (4)
 
26 June – Gothenburg
 
Uefa Euro 1992  Denmark (p)2 (5)
 
Uefa Euro 1992  Denmark2
 
21 June – Solna
 
Uefa Euro 1992  Germany0
 
Uefa Euro 1992  Sweden2
 
 
Uefa Euro 1992  Germany3
 

Semi-finals

Sweden Uefa Euro 1992 2–3Uefa Euro 1992  Germany
Report
Råsunda Stadium, Solna
Attendance: 28,827
Referee: Tullio Lanese (Italy)

Netherlands Uefa Euro 1992 2–2 (a.e.t.)Uefa Euro 1992  Denmark
Report
Penalties
4–5
Ullevi, Gothenburg
Attendance: 37,450
Referee: Emilio Soriano Aladrén (Spain)

Final

Denmark Uefa Euro 1992 2–0Uefa Euro 1992  Germany
Report
Ullevi, Gothenburg
Attendance: 37,800
Referee: Bruno Galler (Switzerland)

Statistics

Goalscorers

There were 32 goals scored in 15 matches, for an average of 2.13 goals per match.

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

Source: UEFA

Awards

Goalkeeper Defenders Midfielders Forwards
Uefa Euro 1992  Peter Schmeichel Uefa Euro 1992  Jocelyn Angloma
Uefa Euro 1992  Laurent Blanc
Uefa Euro 1992  Andreas Brehme
Uefa Euro 1992  Jürgen Kohler
Uefa Euro 1992  Brian Laudrup
Uefa Euro 1992  Stefan Effenberg
Uefa Euro 1992  Thomas Häßler
Uefa Euro 1992  Ruud Gullit
Uefa Euro 1992  Dennis Bergkamp
Uefa Euro 1992  Marco van Basten

Marketing

Slogan and theme song

Small is Beautiful was the official slogan of the contest. The official anthem of the tournament was "More Than a Game", performed by Towe Jaarnek and Peter Jöback.

Logo and identity

It was the last tournament to use the UEFA plus flag logo, and before the tournament was known as "Euro" (it is known as "Euro 1992" only retrospectively). It was also the first major football competition in which the players had their names printed on their backs, around the time that it was becoming a trend in club football across Europe.

Mascot

The official mascot of the competition was a rabbit named Rabbit, dressed in a Swedish football jersey, as well as wearing head and wristbands while playing with a ball.

Sponsorship

Global sponsors Event sponsors
Sweden

References

This article uses material from the Wikipedia English article UEFA Euro 1992, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license ("CC BY-SA 3.0"); additional terms may apply (view authors). Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
®Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wiki Foundation, Inc. Wiki English (DUHOCTRUNGQUOC.VN) is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wiki Foundation.

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Uefa Euro 1992 Bid processUefa Euro 1992 SummaryUefa Euro 1992 QualificationUefa Euro 1992 VenuesUefa Euro 1992 SquadsUefa Euro 1992 Match ballUefa Euro 1992 Match officialsUefa Euro 1992 Group stageUefa Euro 1992 Knockout stageUefa Euro 1992 StatisticsUefa Euro 1992 MarketingUefa Euro 1992

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