12th european football championship

This article is about the sporting event. For the video recording crippled based on this event, see UEFA Euro 2004 ( video recording game )

UEFA Euro 2004
Campeonato Europeu de Futebol 2004

(in Portuguese)

UEFA Euro 2004 logo.svg Vive O 2004!
Tournament details
Host country Portugal
Dates 12 June – 4 July
Teams 16
Venue(s) 10 (in 8 host cities)
Final positions
Champions  Greece ( 1st style )
Runners-up  Portugal
Tournament statistics
Matches played 31
Goals scored 77 (2.48 per match)
Attendance 1,160,802 (37,445 per match)
Top scorer(s) Czech RepublicMilan Baroš ( 5 goals )
Best player(s) GreeceTheodoros Zagorakis
2000 2008 →

International football competition
The 2004 UEFA European Football Championship, normally referred to as Euro 2004, was the 12th edition of the UEFA European Championship, a quadrennial football contest contested by the men ‘s home teams of UEFA member associations. The final examination tournament was hosted for the first prison term in Portugal, from 12 June to 4 July 2004. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] A full of 31 matches were played in ten venues across eight cities – Aveiro, Braga, Coimbra, Guimarães, Faro / Loulé, Leiria, Lisbon, and Porto. As in 1996 and 2000, the final examination tournament was contested by 16 teams : the hosts plus the 15 teams that came through the stipulate tournament, which began in September 2002. Latvia secured their first participation in a major tournament after overcoming Turkey in the play-offs, while Greece returned to the European Championship after 24 years. The tournament was rich in surprises and upsets : Germany, Spain, and Italy were eliminated in the group stage, while defending champions France were knocked out in the quarter-finals by Greece. Portugal recovered from an open defeat against Greece to reach the concluding, eliminating England and the Netherlands along the way. For the first time in a major european football tournament, the last match featured the lapp teams as the afford equal. [ 3 ] Portugal were again defeated by Greece with a goal from Angelos Charisteas. [ 4 ] Greece ‘s victory was unexpected, considering that they had only qualified for two other major tournaments, the UEFA Euro 1980 and the 1994 FIFA World Cup, where they failed to win a individual match. As winners, Greece earned the right to represent Europe at the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup. During the afford ceremony, one of the tableau depicted a ship – symbolising the voyages of the portuguese explorers – sailing through a ocean that transformed into the flags of all competing countries. [ 5 ] In the close ceremony, Portuguese-Canadian singer Nelly Furtado performed her one and official tournament root song, “ Força “ .

Bid process [edit ]

Portugal were announced as hosts for UEFA Euro 2004 on 12 October 1999, in Aachen, Germany, beating Spain and the joint bid of Austria and Hungary. [ 1 ]

drumhead [edit ]

Group A opened with a shock as Greece, ranked outsiders from start, defeated the hosts 2–1. Giorgos Karagounis put the Greeks ahead after lone seven minutes and Angelos Basinas made it 2–0 from the penalty spot on 51 minutes. A stoppage-time goal by Cristiano Ronaldo proved no more than a consolation. [ 6 ] Greece then drew with Spain [ 7 ] before losing to Russia in their end group stage crippled. [ 8 ] Portugal recovered from their open kill by defeating Russia 2–0, who had their keeper Sergei Ovchinnikov sent off. [ 9 ] Nuno Gomes scored the winning goal against Spain, [ 10 ] which ensured Portugal finished top of Group A. Greece advanced to the quarter-finals as runner-up, ahead of Spain on goals scored. [ 11 ] France, the holders, scored doubly in stop clock to go from 1–0 down to beat England 2–1. Zinedine Zidane scored both goals ; the second from the penalty position. [ 12 ] England ‘s other two games were memorable for the performances of their young star Wayne Rooney. alone 18 at the time, Rooney ‘s goal-scoring ability proved implemental in victories over Switzerland ( 3–0 ) and Croatia ( 4–2 ). [ 13 ] [ 14 ] France and England qualified from the group as winners and runner-up respectively. [ 15 ]
Group C featured a tripartite necktie between Sweden, Denmark and Italy. All matches between the three sides had ended in draws and all three had beaten Bulgaria. [ 16 ] [ 17 ] [ 18 ] Italy were ultimately eliminated on the count of goals scored after Sweden and Denmark drew 2–2 and qualified as group winners and runner-up. [ 19 ] [ 20 ] The Italians accused Sweden and Denmark of fixing their match, [ 21 ] as both sides knew that a 2–2 consequence would advance them both over Italy, but UEFA dismissed the complaint. [ 22 ] The Czech Republic won Group D as the only team to win all three of their group matches. They defeated Latvia 2–1, [ 23 ] the Netherlands 3–2, [ 24 ] and Germany 2–1. [ 25 ] It was another disappointing european campaign for the Germans, who failed to advance from the group stage for the moment consecutive prison term. [ 26 ] The Netherlands claimed a quarter-final berth as runner-up. [ 27 ]
swedish striker Henrik Larsson taking a free kick against the Netherlands in the quarter-finals In the first quarter-final between England and Portugal, the English opened the score after lone two minutes through Michael Owen. Portugal ‘s changeless assail pressure from then on resulted in Hélder Postiga ‘s 83rd-minute counterweight. In the die minutes, Owen hit the portuguese crossbar and Sol Campbell headed in the rebound, but the finish was ruled out by referee Urs Meier for a foul on the Portuguese goalkeeper Ricardo. The sides exchanged goals in extra-time, sending the match to a penalty shoot-out. Portugal won 6–5, as Ricardo saved from Darius Vassell and then scored the winning goal himself. [ 28 ] The Greeks, meanwhile, continued to stun everybody. Firm defensive play and an Angelos Charisteas finish on 65 minutes helped Greece defeat France 1–0 and progress to the semi-finals. [ 29 ] This victory made Greece the first team to defeat both the holders and the hosts in the lapp tournament. Sweden and the Netherlands played out an agitate but scoreless meet, even after a dramatic period of extra-time in which Freddie Ljungberg hit the inside of the Dutch goalpost. The Dutch progressed after winning the penalty shoot-out 5–4, their first victory on penalties in a major tournament. [ 30 ] The last quarter-final pit saw the Czechs dispatch Denmark, as a two-goal attempt from Milan Baroš helped seal a 3–0 win. [ 31 ]
Angelos Charisteas (first from left with white shirt), scoring Greece’s winner against Portugal in the final. Portugal and the Netherlands faced each other in the first semi-final. Cristiano Ronaldo put the hosts in the lead from a corner kick midway through the first base one-half, and barely before the hour mark Maniche made it 2–0 with a spectacular goal from the corner of the penalty area. An own goal from Jorge Andrade gave the Netherlands a gleam of hope. The game ended 2–1 to Portugal and the hosts, [ 32 ] after their opening day failure, were through to the final of the European Championship for the first clock time. The Czech Republic looked likely candidates to face the hosts in the final examination. They were favourites to take the trophy, having won all four of their games. however, they would have to see off the kip Greeks to do therefore. The Czechs had respective chances, including a shoot from Tomáš Rosický that struck the stripe. The game remained scoreless until the dying moments of the first half of extra fourth dimension, when Traianos Dellas headed home the winner, the first base and only eloquent goal in a european Championship. [ 33 ] The concluding was a recur of the open bet on of the tournament and Portugal were hoping to avenge their defeat. Portugal attacked and dominate possession but once again, hardy defend and goalkeeping from Greece kept the hosts off the scoreboard. Just before the hour notice, Greece earned a corner kick from which Angelos Charisteas scored. Portugal continued to press after the goal but evening with five minutes of arrest time, they could not find an counterweight. Greece won the couple 1–0 and were crowned european champions, [ 34 ] a title that they were given a 150–1 prospect of winning before the tournament. [ 35 ] All of Greece ‘s wins in the knockout stage came in an identical manner : a 1–0 win, with the finish being a header off a crabbed from the proper fender. Portugal became the first host state to lose in a european Championship final .

qualification [edit ]

The draw for the qualify round off was held on 25 January 2002 at the Europarque Congress Centre, in Santa Maria district attorney Feira, Portugal. Fifty teams were divided into ten groups of five and each team played two matches against all its opponents, on a home-and-away footing. qualification matches took rate from September 2002 to November 2003. The first-placed teams from each group qualified automatically to the final tournament, whereas the ten-spot runner-up took part in a two-legged play-off to select the remaining five teams that would join the host nation in the concluding tournament. [ 36 ] [ 37 ]

Qualified teams [edit ]

Ten of the sixteen finalists participated in the previous tournament in 2000. Latvia made its beginning appearance in a major football contest, while Greece returned to the European Championship finals after a 24-year absence. Bulgaria, Croatia, Russia and Switzerland besides took separate in their irregular tournament finals since their debut in 1996.

Final trace [edit ]

The draw for the group stage took home on 30 November 2003 at the Pavilhão Atlântico in Lisbon, Portugal, where the 16 finalists were divided into four groups. [ 38 ] [ 39 ] The toilet allocations were based on the UEFA national team coefficient which measured performance of teams in the 2002 FIFA World Cup qualifying and UEFA Euro 2004 qualifying. [ 38 ] The coefficient was calculated by dividing the number of all points scored ( three points for a winnings, one for a draw ) by the total of all matches played. Results from the final tournaments, play-off matches and friendly games were all ignored. [ 40 ] As host area, Portugal were mechanically placed in position A1. The remaining 15 teams were split into four pots, with title-holders France seeded aboard Sweden and the Czech Republic in the first pot. [ 38 ]

Pot 1[a]
Team
 France[b] 3.000 1
 Sweden 2.389 3
 Czech Republic 2.333 4
Pot 2
Team
 Italy 2.313 5
 Spain 2.313 6
 England 2.313 7
 Germany 2.188 9
Pot 3
Team
 Netherlands 2.167 10
 Croatia 2.125 11
 Russia 2.056 13
 Denmark 2.056 14
Pot 4
Team
 Bulgaria 1.889 18
  Switzerland 1.611 22
 Greece 1.563 23
 Latvia 1.250 32
  1. ^ Hosts Portugal ( coefficient 2.400 ; rank 2nd ) were mechanically assigned to status A1 .
  2. ^ Defending champions France ( coefficient 3.000 ; rank 1st ) were mechanically assigned to Pot 1 .

The Pot 1 teams were assigned to the first positions of their groups, while the positions of all other teams were drawn individually ( for the purposes of determining the match schedules in each group ). The trace resulted in the follow groups :

Venues [edit ]

The final tournament was played in ten venues located in eight different cities. Lisbon and Porto, the two biggest cities, had two venues each, while Aveiro, Braga, Coimbra, Faro – Loulé, Guimarães and Leiria had one venue. In order to meet UEFA ‘s requirements on venue capacity and infrastructure, seven new stadiums were built – Estádio Municipal de Aveiro ( Aveiro ), [ 41 ] Estádio Municipal de Braga ( Braga ), [ 42 ] Estádio Algarve ( Faro-Loulé ), [ 43 ] Estádio Dr. Magalhães Pessoa ( Leiria ), [ 44 ] Estádio district attorney Luz ( Lisbon ), [ 45 ] Estádio José Alvalade ( Lisbon ), [ 46 ] and Estádio do Dragão ( Porto ) [ 47 ] – and three undergo renovation works – Estádio Cidade de Coimbra ( Coimbra ), [ 48 ] Estádio D. Afonso Henriques ( Guimarães ), [ 49 ] and Estádio do Bessa ( Porto ). [ 50 ] The Estádio district attorney Luz was the largest stadium with a tournament capacity of 65,647 seats, and served as the venue for the concluding. The opening ceremony and match took plaza at the Estádio do Dragão. This was the first european Championship where matches took seat in more than eight venues since the tournament was expanded to 16 teams in 1996. [ 51 ] The table below lists stadium capacity for the final examination tournament, which may not correspond to their effective maximum capacitance .

Ticketing [edit ]

A entire of 1.2 million tickets were available for the 31 matches of the final tournament, [ 52 ] of which 77 % were to be sold to the general public, and the remainder reserved for sponsors and partners ( 13 % ), media ( 5 % ), and bodied cordial reception ( 5 % ). [ 53 ] Public sales for an initial batch of 450,000 tickets ( 38 % ) were launched on 28 April 2003, [ 54 ] in a ceremony in Lisbon which gathered early european football stars Eusébio and Ruud Gullit. [ 55 ] ticket prices were divided in three categories, ranging from €35 ( group matches ) to €270 ( final examination ). [ 53 ] In a first phase lasting until 16 June 2003, supporters could apply for tickets via UEFA ‘s tournament web site or through forms available at the Portuguese Football Federation and equal venues. Applicants could request a maximum of four tickets per couple but were limited to one match per sidereal day. In latitude to individual couple tickets, UEFA created a new class of tickets called “ Follow My team ”, which allowed supporters to see all the matches of their front-runner team ( group stage and, if qualified, knockout stage matches ). If there were oversubscribed matches by the end of the first phase of sales, a match-specific draw would take station to select the successful applicants. [ 53 ] Between 1 August and 24 November 2003, available tickets were placed again on sale in a first-come, first-served footing. [ 56 ] After the draw for the group stage on 30 November, a third base phase of public sales began on 9 December, which included a second batch of tickets ( 39 % ) that could be bought until March 2004 through the national associations of the finalist teams. [ 57 ] Every national association was awarded 20 % of the venue capacity for each of their team ‘s matches. [ 53 ] From 1 to 30 April 2004, excess tickets from UEFA or national associations were made available to the public for the last time. [ 58 ] Ticket distribution began in May, after sales were officially closed. [ 53 ]

team base camps [edit ]

Each team was provided a base camp for residence and daily train between tournament matches. An initial list of 25 bases approved by the Portuguese Football Federation, following a choice process started in November 2001, was announced by the organization on 5 February 2003. [ 59 ]

Squads [edit ]

Each national team had to submit a police squad of 23 players, three of whom must be goalkeepers, at least ten days before the opening pit of the tournament. If a musician became hurt or ill sternly enough to prevent his participation in the tournament before his team ‘s first pit, he would be replaced by another player .

match officials [edit ]

On 4 December 2003, UEFA revealed the twelve referees and four fourth officials. [ 60 ] Each refereeing team was composed by one main reviewer and two assistant referees from the same state. In April 2004, the UEFA Referees Committee replaced Russian adjunct referee Gennady Krasyuk with Yuri Dupanov of Belarus. [ 61 ] The switch was made after Krasyuk incorrectly disallowed a second gear goal from Paul Scholes for offside in the Champions League round of 16 second stage between Manchester United and Porto. [ 62 ]

Group stage [edit ]

UEFA Euro 2004 finalists and their result UEFA announced the match schedule for the final tournament on 10 March 2003, in Porto, Portugal. In a change from the previous tournament schedule, where two quarter-final matches were played per day, over two days, the quarter-finals at the Euro 2004 were to be played over four straight days, with one match per day. [ 63 ] [ 64 ] All times are local, WEST (UTC+1).

Tiebreakers [edit ]

If two or more teams were equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following tie-breaking criteria were applied : [ 65 ] [ 66 ]

  1. Higher number of points obtained in the matches played between the teams in question;
  2. Superior goal difference resulting from the matches played between the teams in question;
  3. Higher number of goals scored in the matches played between the teams in question;
  4. Superior goal difference in all group matches;
  5. Higher number of goals scored in all group matches;
  6. If on the last round of the group stage, two teams are facing each other and each has the same number of points, as well as the same number of goals scored and conceded, and the score finishes level in their match, their ranking is determined by a penalty shoot-out. (This criterion is not used if more than two teams have the same number of points.);
  7. Higher coefficient derived from 2002 FIFA World Cup qualifying and UEFA Euro 2004 qualifying (points obtained divided by number of matches played);
  8. Fair play conduct of the team in the final tournament;
  9. Drawing of lots.

euro 2004 marked the introduction of the penalty shoot-out as a tiebreaker between two teams in the group stage, although no match required the use of this routine. The lapp procedure was used in future european championship tournaments.

Group A [edit ]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Portugal ( H ) 3 2 0 1 4 2 +2 6 Advance to knockout stage
2  Greece 3 1 1 1 4 4 0 4[a]
3  Spain 3 1 1 1 2 2 0 4[a]
4  Russia 3 1 0 2 2 4 −2 3
  1. a b Tied on neck and neck consequence ( Greece 1–1 Spain ) and overall goal difference ( 0 ). overall goals for was used as the tiebreaker .

Group B [edit ]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  France 3 2 1 0 7 4 +3 7 Advance to knockout stage
2  England 3 2 0 1 8 4 +4 6
3  Croatia 3 0 2 1 4 6 −2 2
4   Switzerland 3 0 1 2 1 6 −5 1

Group C [edit ]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Sweden 3 1 2 0 8 3 +5 5[a] Advance to knockout stage
2  Denmark 3 1 2 0 4 2 +2 5[a]
3  Italy 3 1 2 0 3 2 +1 5[a]
4  Bulgaria 3 0 0 3 1 9 −8 0
  1. a b c[67] Tied on neck and neck points ( 2 ) and goal remainder ( 0 ). neck and neck goals for : sweden 3, Denmark 2, Italy 1 .

Group D [edit ]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Czech Republic 3 3 0 0 7 4 +3 9 Advance to knockout stage
2  Netherlands 3 1 1 1 6 4 +2 4
3  Germany 3 0 2 1 2 3 −1 2
4  Latvia 3 0 1 2 1 5 −4 1

Knockout stage [edit ]

The Greek national team at the trophy ceremony. The hard stage was a single-elimination tournament involving the eight teams that advanced from the group stage. There were three rounds of matches, with each orotund eliminating half of the teams entering that round, culminating in the final to decide the champions. Any game in the knockout stage that was not decided by the end of the regular 90 minutes was followed by up to 30 minutes of extra prison term ( two 15-minute halves ). For the first time in an external football tournament, the silver finish organization was applied, whereby the team that led the game at the half-time break in during the extra time period would be declared the achiever. [ 68 ] If the scores were even level after the initial 15 minutes of supernumerary time, play would continue for a foster 15 minutes. If the teams could inactive not be separated after the extra clock time, there would be a penalty shoot-out ( at least five penalties each ) to determine which team progressed to the future turn. [ 68 ] The silver goal replaced the fortunate finish from the former two championships and was used in the semifinal concluding between Greece and the Czech Republic. As with every tournament since UEFA Euro 1984, there was no one-third stead play-off. All times are local, WEST (UTC+1).

bracket [edit ]

final [edit ]

Statistics [edit ]

Goalscorers [edit ]

There were 77 goals scored in 31 matches, for an modal of 2.48 goals per pit. 5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
1 own goal
generator : UEFA [ 69 ] [ 70 ]

Awards [edit ]

UEFA Team of the Tournament

The UEFA Technical Team was charged with naming a team composed of the 23 best players over the course of the tournament. [ 71 ] [ 72 ] The group of eight analysts watched every crippled at the tournament before making their decision after the final. Five players from the winning greek team were named to the team of the tournament. Michael Ballack and Gianluca Zambrotta were the merely players to be included whose teams were knocked out in the group stage. [ 72 ] [ 73 ]

Golden Boot

The Golden Boot was awarded to Milan Baroš, who scored all five of his goals in three group degree matches and in the quarter-finals against Denmark .

UEFA Player of the Tournament

Prize money [edit ]

overall, CHF 200 million was awarded to the 16 teams, a boost from the CHF120 million in the previous event. [ 76 ] Below is a dispatch list of the allocations : [ 77 ]

  • Prize for participating: CHF7.5 million

Extra requital based on teams performance :

  • Winner: CHF10 million
  • Runner-up: CHF6 million
  • Semi-finals: CHF4 million
  • Quarter-finals: CHF3 million
  • Group stage (per match):
    • Win: CHF1 million
    • Draw: CHF500,000

discipline [edit ]

If a player was shown a red tease – whether as a result of two bookable offences or a neat bolshevik – he would become suspended from playing in his team ‘s future match. A musician would besides become suspended for one equal for picking up two scandalmongering cards in separate matches. however, any chicken cards accumulated would be cancelled once a team was eliminated from the tournament or reached the semi-finals. In extreme point cases of ill-discipline, UEFA could choose to have a disciplinary panel examine the incident in order to determine whether or not further suspension would be required. The follow players were suspended for one or more games as a result of bolshevik cards or yellow wag accretion :

market [edit ]

Logo, mascot and official birdcall [edit ]

UEFA Euro 2004 mascot, Kinas The official tournament logo was created by Euro RSCG Wnek Gosper agency and unveiled on 13 May 2002 at a ceremony held in Lisbon ‘s Belém Cultural Center. [ 78 ] It represents a football in the center of a kernel, surrounded by seven green dots. The football – displaying typical Portuguese tribe artistic motifs on its panels – and the affection – shaped in the traditional manner of the filigree art – conveyed the football passion of the server state. The seven dots represent significant portuguese elements and achievements, such as the number of castles in the national coat of arms or the seduction of the seven seas during the Age of Discoveries. The logo ‘s color pallette was based on the portuguese sag and its warm tones recall the light and sunday associated with the portuguese landscape and climate. [ 79 ] [ 80 ] The rival motto used was “ Vive o 2004 ! ” ( english : survive 2004 ! ). [ 81 ] [ 82 ] The official mascot was a boy named Kinas – derived from quinas ( english : inescutcheons ), one of the symbols of the Portuguese coating of arms [ 83 ] – who wore a football kit with the portuguese colours ( bolshevik shirt and green shorts ) and was constantly playing with a football. He possessed the cognition and endowment of generations of highly gifted football players, and embodied the energy and passion of football. [ 84 ] Created by Warner Bros., Kinas was formally unveiled on 29 March 2003 at the Casa de Serralves, in Porto, Portugal. [ 83 ] The official song, called “ Força “ ( english : strength ), was written and performed by Portuguese-Canadian singer Nelly Furtado. [ 85 ] The song was taken from her second base studio album, Folklore, and released as its third gear individual, soon after the begin of the tournament. Furtado was selected to sing the official song of the tournament, because of her familial association to the horde area ( her parents are both Portuguese from the Azores ). [ 86 ] She wrote “ Força ” with “ the mania the portuguese people have for football ” in take care. [ 86 ] The sung was played at every match, and performed live by Furtado at the close ceremony prior to the final. [ 87 ] [ 88 ]

Match ball [edit ]

The official match ball was presented during the final pull ceremony on 30 November 2003 in Lisbon. [ 89 ] [ 90 ] It was produced by Adidas and named Adidas Roteiro, after the logbook ( portuguese : roteiro ) used by portuguese maritime explorers such as Vasco district attorney Gama. [ 89 ] Roteiro was the first official tournament football to employ the new thermal-bonding technique in its production, which resulted in a seamless surface and a more homogeneous design. [ 89 ] Portuguese Football Federation president of the united states Gilberto Madaíl praised the ball, stating : “ Adidas has delivered a stun, mod and state-of the-art Portuguese football. This is very much how we envisage the UEFA Euro 2004 consequence to be ”. [ 89 ] Roteiro was besides used at the 2004 AFC asian Cup, [ 91 ] and during the mid-season of the 2004–05 german Bundesliga. [ 92 ] The new ball received interracial reactions from players and technical foul staffs. England midfielder David Beckham, who was asked by Adidas to test it, was pleased with Roteiro ‘s operation, peculiarly in free-kicks. [ 89 ] France midfielder Zinedine Zidane believed the ball would “ improve the game ”. [ 92 ] respective spanish players, however, regarded it as “ atrocious, unmanageable to control and to pass ”, with very Madrid football player Iván Helguera describing it as a “ beach ball ”. [ 93 ] noteworthy players of the Italy national team, such as Francesco Totti, Andrea Pirlo and goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon besides voiced criticisms. [ 94 ]

Trophy tour [edit ]

During the two months ahead of the tournament, the Henri Delaunay Trophy travelled across Portugal to promote the european Championship finals in the host nation. The tour began on 8 April 2004 at the Praça do Comércio in Lisbon, where the launch ceremony took place with the presence of Portuguese football legend and tournament ambassador Eusébio. [ 95 ] A sum of twenty towns and cities were visited by the trophy go van, including the ten-spot that would host matches. [ 96 ]

Merchandise and memorabilia [edit ]

In November 2002, UEFA appointed Warner Bros. consumer Products ( WBCP ) as the tournament ‘s exclusive global license agentive role. [ 97 ] As the global license rights owner, WBCP was responsible for negotiating product license contracts with third parties on the behalf of UEFA and define product sales strategies across the host country. other tasks included setting up and managing market plans, product distribution and prices, and prevent illegal practice of trademarks and merchandise sales. [ 98 ] Over 2,000 merchandise items were developed by the 28 licencees chosen by WBCP, and were distributed not only within Portugal but besides in major european and asian markets. [ 99 ] To celebrate Portugal ‘s host of the Euro 2004 finals, commemorative mint and stamp collections were issued by the Imprensa Nacional-Casa district attorney Moeda, the Portuguese national mint and print house, [ 100 ] and CTT, the national postal overhaul. [ 101 ]
UEFA distinguishes between ball-shaped sponsors and national sponsors. Global Euro sponsors can come from any country and have together single cosmopolitan sponsorship rights for a UEFA european Football Championship. National sponsors come from the horde nation and do only have sponsorship rights within that country. Eight sponsors were announced by UEFA in December 2002. [ 103 ]

Broadcasting [edit ]

nineteen cameras were used in each of the ten-spot venues to broadcast the alive matches, with three extra cameras in the open and knockout stage matches. [ 121 ] [ 122 ]

See besides [edit ]

  • Vive O 2004!, the official album for UEFA Euro 2004
  • UEFA Euro 2004, the official video game for UEFA Euro 2004

References [edit ]