Uefa Euro 2000

The 2000 UEFA European Football Championship, also known as Euro 2000, was the 11th UEFA European Championship, a football tournament held every four years and organised by UEFA, the sport's governing body in Europe.

UEFA Euro 2000
Europees Voetbalkampioenschap
België/Nederland 2000 (in Dutch)
Championnat d'Europe de football
Belgique/Pays-Bas 2000 (in French)
Fußball-Europameisterschaft
Belgien/Niederlande 2000 (in German)
Uefa Euro 2000
Football without frontiers
Tournament details
Host countriesBelgium
Netherlands
Dates10 June – 2 July
Teams16
Venue(s)8 (in 8 host cities)
Final positions
ChampionsUefa Euro 2000 France (2nd title)
Runners-upUefa Euro 2000 Italy
Tournament statistics
Matches played31
Goals scored85 (2.74 per match)
Attendance1,122,833 (36,220 per match)
Top scorer(s)Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Savo Milošević
Netherlands Patrick Kluivert
(5 goals each)
Best player(s)France Zinedine Zidane
1996
2004

The finals tournament was played between 10 June and 2 July 2000, and co-hosted by Belgium and the Netherlands, the first time the tournament had been held in more than one nation. Spain and Austria also bid to host the event. The finals tournament was contested by 16 nations; with the exception of the hosts, Belgium and the Netherlands, the finalists had to go through a qualifying tournament to reach the final stage. France won the tournament by defeating Italy 2–1 in the final, via a golden goal.

The finals saw the first major UEFA competition contested in the King Baudouin Stadium (formerly the Heysel Stadium) since the events of the 1985 European Cup final and the Heysel Stadium disaster, with the opening game being played in the rebuilt stadium.

A high-scoring championship with many exciting matches and an elite standard of play, Euro 2000 is often labelled by football writers one of the greatest international tournaments.

Bid process

Belgium and the Netherlands were selected as co-hosts on 14 July 1995 by the UEFA Executive Committee at a meeting in Geneva, Switzerland.

Hooliganism concerns

Football hooliganism was a significant problem in the Netherlands in the 1990s, especially the fierce rivalry between Ajax and Feyenoord. There were concerns that hooliganism would overshadow the finals. Many instances of violence occurred, including several football riots in Rotterdam between 1995 and 1999, which would host the Euro 2000 final. One of the most infamous incidents was the Battle of Beverwijk in 1997. Although the violence is normally associated with domestic clubs, there were concerns that it could attach to the Dutch national team.

Violence did eventually occur during the Euro 2000 finals, albeit not involving the Dutch team. On 17 June 174 England fans were arrested in Brussels, Belgium, following violence with Germans ahead of an England v Germany match.

Summary

One of the biggest surprises of the tournament was Portugal, winning Group A with three wins, including a 3–0 win against Germany, with Sérgio Conceição scoring a hat-trick, and a 3–2 win over England, in which they came back from 2–0 down. Romania was the other qualifier from the group, beating England with a late penalty in their last group game.

Belgium had a surprise exit in the group stage, winning the tournament's first game against Sweden, but losing to Turkey and Italy. They finished third in Group B, behind Italy and Turkey. The other co-host and favourite, the Netherlands, progressed as expected from Group D, along with World Cup winners France. The Netherlands won the group, by beating France in their last group match. Also in Group D, Denmark's three losses with eight goals conceded and none scored set a new record for the worst team performance in the group stages of a Euros. Group C was memorable for the match between FR Yugoslavia and Spain. Spain needed a win to ensure progression, but found themselves trailing 3–2 after Slobodan Komljenović scored in the 75th minute. The Spanish side rescued their tournament by scoring twice in injury time to record a 4–3 victory. FR Yugoslavia managed to go through as well, despite losing because Norway and Slovenia played to a draw.

Uefa Euro 2000 
France and Italy before the final on 2 July

Italy and Portugal maintained their perfect records in the quarter-finals, beating Romania and Turkey, respectively, and the Netherlands started a goal-avalanche against FR Yugoslavia, winning 6–1. Spain fell 2–1 to France; Raúl missed a late penalty that ended Spanish hopes.

Italy eliminated the Netherlands in the semi-finals, despite going down to ten men and facing two penalty kicks. Italian goalkeeper Francesco Toldo, who had been drafted into the starting XI as Gianluigi Buffon missed the tournament through injury, made two saves in the penalty shootout (in addition to his penalty save in normal time) to carry the Italians to the final.

In the other semi-final, Portugal lost in extra time to France after Zinedine Zidane converted a controversial penalty kick. Several Portuguese players challenged the awarding of the penalty for a handball and were given lengthy suspensions for shoving the referee. France won the tournament, defeating Italy 2–1 in the final with a golden goal by David Trezeguet after equalising with a last-minute goal, and became the first team to win the European championship while being world champion.

In Britain, Match of the Day named Stefano Fiore's goal against Belgium the Goal of the Tournament, ahead of Patrick Kluivert's against France and Zinedine Zidane's against Spain.

Qualification

Qualification for the tournament took place throughout 1998 and 1999. Forty-nine teams were divided into nine groups and each played the others in their group, on a home-and-away basis. The winner of each group and the best runner-up qualified automatically for the final tournament. The eight other runners-up played an additional set of play-off matches to determine the last four qualifiers. Belgium and the Netherlands automatically qualified for the tournament as co-hosts.

As of 2024, this was the last time Norway qualified for the European Championship finals, as well as the last time that Croatia failed to qualify.

Qualified teams

Team Qualified as Qualified on Previous appearances in tournament
Uefa Euro 2000  Belgium Co-host 14 July 1995 3 (1972, 1980, 1984)
Uefa Euro 2000  Netherlands 5 (1976, 1980, 1988, 1992, 1996)
Uefa Euro 2000  Czech Republic Group 9 winner 9 June 1999 4 (1960, 1976, 1980, 1996)
Uefa Euro 2000  Norway Group 2 winner 8 September 1999 0 (debut)
Uefa Euro 2000  Sweden Group 5 winner 8 September 1999 1 (1992)
Uefa Euro 2000  Spain Group 6 winner 8 September 1999 5 (1964, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1996)
Uefa Euro 2000  Italy Group 1 winner 9 October 1999 4 (1968, 1980, 1988, 1996)
Uefa Euro 2000  Germany Group 3 winner 9 October 1999 7 (1972, 1976, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996)
Uefa Euro 2000  France Group 4 winner 9 October 1999 4 (1960, 1984, 1992, 1996)
Uefa Euro 2000  Romania Group 7 winner 9 October 1999 2 (1984, 1996)
Uefa Euro 2000  Yugoslavia Group 8 winner 9 October 1999 4 (1960, 1968, 1976, 1984)
Uefa Euro 2000  Portugal Best runner-up 9 October 1999 2 (1984, 1996)
Uefa Euro 2000  Denmark Play-off winner 17 November 1999 5 (1964, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996)
Uefa Euro 2000  England Play-off winner 17 November 1999 5 (1968, 1980, 1988, 1992, 1996)
Uefa Euro 2000  Slovenia Play-off winner 17 November 1999 0 (debut)
Uefa Euro 2000  Turkey Play-off winner 17 November 1999 1 (1996)

Final draw

The finals draw took place 15:00 CET on 12 December 1999, at the Brussels Expo in Belgium; and was streamed live on UEFA's official website.

The composition of pots 1 to 4 was based on the teams' UEFA national team coefficient ranking at the end of 1999, with the exception of pot 1 automatically top seeding Germany as holders along with co-hosts Belgium and Netherlands.

Pot 1
Team Coeff Rank
Uefa Euro 2000  Germany (holders) 2.278 7
Uefa Euro 2000  Belgium (co-hosts) 2.375 5
Uefa Euro 2000  Netherlands (co-hosts) 2.250 8
Uefa Euro 2000  Spain 2.611 1
Pot 2
Team Coeff Rank
Uefa Euro 2000  Romania 2.600 2
Uefa Euro 2000  Norway 2.500 3
Uefa Euro 2000  Sweden 2.389 4
Uefa Euro 2000  Czech Republic 2.300 6
Pot 3
Team Coeff Rank
Uefa Euro 2000  FR Yugoslavia 2.222 9
Uefa Euro 2000  Portugal 2.100 11
Uefa Euro 2000  France 2.100 12
Uefa Euro 2000  Italy 2.063 13
Pot 4
Team Coeff Rank
Uefa Euro 2000  England 2.000 15
Uefa Euro 2000  Turkey 1.938 18
Uefa Euro 2000  Denmark 1.938 19
Uefa Euro 2000  Slovenia 1.000 37
  Automatically selected as a top-seeded team into pot 1, irrespectively of their ranking position.

Prior to the draw, the seeded teams in Pot 1 were assigned positions: Germany (defending champion) to A1, Belgium (co-host) to B1, Spain (highest coefficient) to C1, and the Netherlands (co-host) to D1. Teams were drawn consecutively from Pots 2 to 4 into a group, with each team then being assigned a specific position (for the purposes of determining the match schedules in each group).

The draw resulted in the following groups:

Group A
Team
Uefa Euro 2000  Germany
Uefa Euro 2000  Romania
Uefa Euro 2000  Portugal
Uefa Euro 2000  England
Group B
Team
Uefa Euro 2000  Belgium
Uefa Euro 2000  Sweden
Uefa Euro 2000  Turkey
Uefa Euro 2000  Italy
Group C
Team
Uefa Euro 2000  Spain
Uefa Euro 2000  Norway
Uefa Euro 2000  FR Yugoslavia
Uefa Euro 2000  Slovenia
Group D
Team
Uefa Euro 2000  Netherlands
Uefa Euro 2000  Czech Republic
Uefa Euro 2000  France
Uefa Euro 2000  Denmark

Venues

Capacity figures are those for matches at UEFA Euro 2000 and are not necessarily the total capacity that the stadium is capable of holding.

Belgium Netherlands
Brussels Bruges Amsterdam Rotterdam
King Baudouin Stadium Jan Breydel Stadium Amsterdam Arena Feijenoord Stadion
Capacity: 50,000 Capacity: 30,000 Capacity: 52,000 Capacity: 51,000
Uefa Euro 2000  Uefa Euro 2000  Uefa Euro 2000  Uefa Euro 2000 
Liège Charleroi Eindhoven Arnhem
Stade Maurice Dufrasne Stade du Pays de Charleroi Philips Stadion GelreDome
Capacity: 30,000 Capacity: 30,000 Capacity: 33,000 Capacity: 30,000
Uefa Euro 2000  Uefa Euro 2000  Uefa Euro 2000  Uefa Euro 2000 

Team base camps

The 16 national teams each stayed in their own "team base camp" during the tournament.

Team Base camp Ref.
Belgium Lichtaart
Czech Republic Knokke-Heist
Denmark Brunssum
England Spa/Waterloo
FR Yugoslavia Edegem
France Genval
Germany Vaals
Italy Grobbendonk
Netherlands Hoenderloo
Norway Knokke-Heist
Portugal Ermelo
Romania Grimbergen/Arnhem
Slovenia Soestduinen
Spain Tegelen
Sweden Oisterwijk
Turkey Delden

Squads

Each national team had to submit a squad of 22 players, three of whom must be goalkeepers.

Match officials

On 15 February 2000, UEFA appointed 12 referees, 16 assistant referees and four fourth officials for the competition, including a referee and an assistant referee from the Confederation of African Football. The event saw assistant referees being allowed to intervene an ongoing game, in particular to help the match official apply the 10-metre rule when deciding free-kicks – as well as warn the referee instantly if he had booked or ejected the wrong player, something that was not possible in previous tournaments. Also, fourth officials were given a larger role in assisting to take command of the match if any decisions are gone unnoticed by the referee or an assistant referee.

The German referee Markus Merk was selected to referee the opening game between Belgium and Sweden.

Referees Assistant referees Fourth officials
Uefa Euro 2000  Günter Benkö Uefa Euro 2000  Yuri Dupanov Uefa Euro 2000  Michel Piraux
Uefa Euro 2000  Kim Milton Nielsen Uefa Euro 2000  Roland Van Nylen Uefa Euro 2000  Kyros Vassaras
Uefa Euro 2000  Gamal Al-Ghandour Uefa Euro 2000  Ivan Lekov Uefa Euro 2000  Terje Hauge
Uefa Euro 2000  Graham Poll Uefa Euro 2000  Jens Larsen Uefa Euro 2000  Ľuboš Micheľ
Uefa Euro 2000  Gilles Veissière Uefa Euro 2000  Philip Sharp
Uefa Euro 2000  Markus Merk Uefa Euro 2000  Jacques Poudevigne
Uefa Euro 2000  Pierluigi Collina Uefa Euro 2000  Kurt Ertl
Uefa Euro 2000  Dick Jol Uefa Euro 2000  Sergio Zuccolini
Uefa Euro 2000  Vítor Melo Pereira Uefa Euro 2000  Dramane Dante
Uefa Euro 2000  Hugh Dallas Uefa Euro 2000  Emanuel Zammit
Uefa Euro 2000  José María García-Aranda Uefa Euro 2000  Jaap Pool
Uefa Euro 2000  Anders Frisk Uefa Euro 2000  Eddie Foley
Uefa Euro 2000  Urs Meier Uefa Euro 2000  Nicolae Grigorescu
Uefa Euro 2000  Igor Šramka
Uefa Euro 2000  Carlos Martín Nieto
Uefa Euro 2000  Leif Lindberg
Uefa Euro 2000  Turgay Güdü

Group stage

Uefa Euro 2000 
UEFA Euro 2000 finalists and their results

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

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. greater number of points in the matches between the teams in question;
  2. greater goal difference in matches between the teams in question;
  3. greater number of goals scored in matches between the teams in question;
  4. greater goal difference in all group games;
  5. greater number of goals scored in all group games;
  6. higher coefficient derived from Euro 2000 and 1998 World Cup qualifiers (points obtained divided by number of matches played);
  7. fair play conduct in Euro 2000;
  8. drawing of lots.

Group A

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Uefa Euro 2000  Portugal 3 3 0 0 7 2 +5 9 Advance to knockout stage
2 Uefa Euro 2000  Romania 3 1 1 1 4 4 0 4
3 Uefa Euro 2000  England 3 1 0 2 5 6 −1 3
4 Uefa Euro 2000  Germany 3 0 1 2 1 5 −4 1
Source: UEFA
Germany Uefa Euro 2000 1–1Uefa Euro 2000  Romania
  • Scholl Uefa Euro 2000  28'
Report
Portugal Uefa Euro 2000 3–2Uefa Euro 2000  England
Report
Philips Stadion, Eindhoven
Attendance: 31,500
Referee: Anders Frisk (Sweden)

Romania Uefa Euro 2000 0–1Uefa Euro 2000  Portugal
Report
GelreDome, Arnhem
Attendance: 28,400
Referee: Gilles Veissière (France)
England Uefa Euro 2000 1–0Uefa Euro 2000  Germany
Report

England Uefa Euro 2000 2–3Uefa Euro 2000  Romania
Report
Portugal Uefa Euro 2000 3–0Uefa Euro 2000  Germany
Report
Feijenoord Stadion, Rotterdam
Attendance: 44,000
Referee: Dick Jol (Netherlands)

Group B

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Uefa Euro 2000  Italy 3 3 0 0 6 2 +4 9 Advance to knockout stage
2 Uefa Euro 2000  Turkey 3 1 1 1 3 2 +1 4
3 Uefa Euro 2000  Belgium (H) 3 1 0 2 2 5 −3 3
4 Uefa Euro 2000  Sweden 3 0 1 2 2 4 −2 1
Source: UEFA
(H) Hosts
Belgium Uefa Euro 2000 2–1Uefa Euro 2000  Sweden
Report
King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels
Attendance: 46,700
Referee: Markus Merk (Germany)
Turkey Uefa Euro 2000 1–2Uefa Euro 2000  Italy
Report
GelreDome, Arnhem
Attendance: 22,500
Referee: Hugh Dallas (Scotland)

Italy Uefa Euro 2000 2–0Uefa Euro 2000  Belgium
Report
Sweden Uefa Euro 2000 0–0Uefa Euro 2000  Turkey
Report
Philips Stadion, Eindhoven
Attendance: 27,000
Referee: Dick Jol (Netherlands)

Turkey Uefa Euro 2000 2–0Uefa Euro 2000  Belgium
Report
Italy Uefa Euro 2000 2–1Uefa Euro 2000  Sweden
Report

Group C

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Uefa Euro 2000  Spain 3 2 0 1 6 5 +1 6 Advance to knockout stage
2 Uefa Euro 2000  FR Yugoslavia 3 1 1 1 7 7 0 4
3 Uefa Euro 2000  Norway 3 1 1 1 1 1 0 4
4 Uefa Euro 2000  Slovenia 3 0 2 1 4 5 −1 2
Source: UEFA
Notes:
Spain Uefa Euro 2000 0–1Uefa Euro 2000  Norway
Report
FR Yugoslavia Uefa Euro 2000 3–3Uefa Euro 2000  Slovenia
Report

Slovenia Uefa Euro 2000 1–2Uefa Euro 2000  Spain
Report
Amsterdam Arena, Amsterdam
Attendance: 51,300
Referee: Markus Merk (Germany)
Norway Uefa Euro 2000 0–1Uefa Euro 2000  FR Yugoslavia
Report
Stade Maurice Dufrasne, Liège
Attendance: 28,750
Referee: Hugh Dallas (Scotland)

FR Yugoslavia Uefa Euro 2000 3–4Uefa Euro 2000  Spain
Report
Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges
Attendance: 26,611
Referee: Gilles Veissière (France)
Slovenia Uefa Euro 2000 0–0Uefa Euro 2000  Norway
Report
GelreDome, Arnhem
Attendance: 21,000
Referee: Graham Poll (England)

Group D

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Uefa Euro 2000  Netherlands (H) 3 3 0 0 7 2 +5 9 Advance to knockout stage
2 Uefa Euro 2000  France 3 2 0 1 7 4 +3 6
3 Uefa Euro 2000  Czech Republic 3 1 0 2 3 3 0 3
4 Uefa Euro 2000  Denmark 3 0 0 3 0 8 −8 0
Source: UEFA
(H) Hosts
France Uefa Euro 2000 3–0Uefa Euro 2000  Denmark
Report
Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges
Attendance: 28,100
Referee: Günter Benkö (Austria)
Netherlands Uefa Euro 2000 1–0Uefa Euro 2000  Czech Republic
Report
Amsterdam Arena, Amsterdam
Attendance: 50,800
Referee: Pierluigi Collina (Italy)

Czech Republic Uefa Euro 2000 1–2Uefa Euro 2000  France
Report
Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges
Attendance: 27,243
Referee: Graham Poll (England)
Denmark Uefa Euro 2000 0–3Uefa Euro 2000  Netherlands
Report
Feijenoord Stadion, Rotterdam
Attendance: 51,425
Referee: Urs Meier (Switzerland)

Denmark Uefa Euro 2000 0–2Uefa Euro 2000  Czech Republic
Report
France Uefa Euro 2000 2–3Uefa Euro 2000  Netherlands
Report
Amsterdam Arena, Amsterdam
Attendance: 50,000
Referee: Anders Frisk (Sweden)

Knockout stage

The knockout stage was a single-elimination tournament with each round eliminating the losers. Any game that was undecided by the end of the regular 90 minutes, was followed by up to thirty minutes of extra time. For the second time the golden goal system was applied, whereby the first team to score during the extra time would become the winner. If no goal was scored there would be a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner. For the second time the final was won by a golden goal.

As with every tournament since UEFA Euro 1984, there was no third place play-off.

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

Bracket

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
25 June – Bruges
 
 
Uefa Euro 2000  Spain1
 
28 June – Brussels
 
Uefa Euro 2000  France2
 
Uefa Euro 2000  France (g.g.)2
 
24 June – Amsterdam
 
Uefa Euro 2000  Portugal1
 
Uefa Euro 2000  Turkey0
 
2 July – Rotterdam
 
Uefa Euro 2000  Portugal2
 
Uefa Euro 2000  France (g.g.)2
 
24 June – Brussels
 
Uefa Euro 2000  Italy1
 
Uefa Euro 2000  Italy2
 
29 June – Amsterdam
 
Uefa Euro 2000  Romania0
 
Uefa Euro 2000  Italy (p)0 (3)
 
25 June – Rotterdam
 
Uefa Euro 2000  Netherlands0 (1)
 
Uefa Euro 2000  Netherlands6
 
 
Uefa Euro 2000  FR Yugoslavia1
 

Quarter-finals

Portugal Uefa Euro 2000 2–0Uefa Euro 2000  Turkey
Report
Amsterdam Arena, Amsterdam
Attendance: 42,000
Referee: Dick Jol (Netherlands)

Italy Uefa Euro 2000 2–0Uefa Euro 2000  Romania
Report

Netherlands Uefa Euro 2000 6–1Uefa Euro 2000  FR Yugoslavia
Report

Spain Uefa Euro 2000 1–2Uefa Euro 2000  France
Report
Jan Breydel Stadium, Bruges
Attendance: 26,614
Referee: Pierluigi Collina (Italy)

Semi-finals

France Uefa Euro 2000 2–1 (a.e.t.)Uefa Euro 2000  Portugal
Report

Italy Uefa Euro 2000 0–0 (a.e.t.)Uefa Euro 2000  Netherlands
Report
Penalties
3–1
Amsterdam Arena, Amsterdam
Attendance: 50,000
Referee: Markus Merk (Germany)

Final

France Uefa Euro 2000 2–1 (a.e.t./g.g.)Uefa Euro 2000  Italy
Report
De Kuip, Rotterdam
Attendance: 48,100
Referee: Anders Frisk (Sweden)

Statistics

Goalscorers

There were 85 goals scored in 31 matches, for an average of 2.74 goals per match.

5 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

Source: UEFA

Awards

Goalkeepers Defenders Midfielders Forwards
Uefa Euro 2000  Fabien Barthez
Uefa Euro 2000  Francesco Toldo
Uefa Euro 2000  Laurent Blanc
Uefa Euro 2000  Marcel Desailly
Uefa Euro 2000  Lilian Thuram
Uefa Euro 2000  Fabio Cannavaro
Uefa Euro 2000  Paolo Maldini
Uefa Euro 2000  Alessandro Nesta
Uefa Euro 2000  Frank de Boer
Uefa Euro 2000  Patrick Vieira
Uefa Euro 2000  Zinedine Zidane
Uefa Euro 2000  Demetrio Albertini
Uefa Euro 2000  Edgar Davids
Uefa Euro 2000  Rui Costa
Uefa Euro 2000  Luís Figo
Uefa Euro 2000  Pep Guardiola
Uefa Euro 2000  Savo Milošević
Uefa Euro 2000  Thierry Henry
Uefa Euro 2000  Francesco Totti
Uefa Euro 2000  Patrick Kluivert
Uefa Euro 2000  Nuno Gomes
Uefa Euro 2000  Raúl

Golden Boot

UEFA Player of the Tournament

Prize money

Prize money
Rank Team CHFMillion
1 Uefa Euro 2000  France 14.4
2 Uefa Euro 2000  Italy 13.2
3 Uefa Euro 2000  Netherlands
Uefa Euro 2000  Portugal
10.2
5 Uefa Euro 2000  Romania
Uefa Euro 2000  Spain
Uefa Euro 2000  Turkey
Uefa Euro 2000  FR Yugoslavia
7.8
9 Uefa Euro 2000  Belgium
Uefa Euro 2000  Czech Republic
Uefa Euro 2000  England
Uefa Euro 2000  Norway
5.4
13 Uefa Euro 2000  Denmark
Uefa Euro 2000  Germany
Uefa Euro 2000  Slovenia
Uefa Euro 2000  Sweden
4.8

A sum of CHF120 million was awarded to the 16 qualified teams in the competition. France, the winners of the tournament, received a total prize money of CHF14.4 million. Below is a complete list of the allocations:

Extra payment based on teams performances:

On 9 July 2000, UEFA refused to hand FR Yugoslavia their prize money of CHF7.8 million, because of alleged ties between the Football Association of FR Yugoslavia and Slobodan Milošević's government. However, no connections were found and the Football Association of FR Yugoslavia later received their money with an additional bonus.

Marketing

Slogan and theme song

The slogan of the competition was "Football without frontiers". "Campione 2000" by E-Type was the official anthem of the event.

Match ball

Uefa Euro 2000 
The Adidas Terrestra Silverstream, the match ball used at the tournament.

The Adidas Terrestra Silverstream was unveiled as the official match ball of the competition on 13 December 1999 at Constant Vanden Stock Stadium, Anderlecht's home arena by Alessandro Del Piero, Edwin van der Sar, Zinedine Zidane and Luc Nilis.

Mascot

Uefa Euro 2000 
Benelucky, the Euro 2000 mascot

The official mascot for the tournament was Benelucky (a pun on Benelux), a lion-devil hybrid with its mane having the flag colours of both host nations. The lion is the national football emblem of the Netherlands and a devil is the emblem of Belgium (the team being nicknamed "the Red Devils").

Sponsorships

Official Sponsors Official Suppliers

Broadcasting

Notes

References

This article uses material from the Wikipedia English article UEFA Euro 2000, 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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