UEFA Euro 2004 final

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UEFA Euro 2004 Final
Greece's celebration at the stadium after beating Portugal, 1-0.
The Greece team celebrating their win
EventUEFA Euro 2004
Date4 July 2004 (2004-07-04)
VenueEstádio da Luz, Lisbon
Man of the MatchTheodoros Zagorakis (Greece)
RefereeMarkus Merk (Germany)
Attendance62,865
WeatherSunny
28 °C (82 °F)
37% humidity
2000
2008

The UEFA Euro 2004 Final was the final match of Euro 2004, the 12th European Championship, a football competition organised by UEFA for the senior men's national teams of its member associations. The match was played at the Estádio da Luz in Lisbon, Portugal, on 4 July 2004, and was contested by Portugal, the tournament's hosts, and Greece, the latter playing in their second European Championship. The 16-team tournament consisted of a group stage, from which eight teams qualified for the knockout stage. Both finalists were drawn in Group A of the tournament, and they played each other in the opening game, Greece winning 2–1 in what BBC Sport labelled a "shock defeat" for the hosts. Portugal won their other two group games, against Russia and Spain; Greece drew with Spain and lost to Russia, leaving Portugal top of the group and Greece second. In the knockout stage, Portugal beat England in a penalty shoot-out and then the Netherlands, and Greece beat France in the quarter-final and the Czech Republic in the semi-final.

The final took place in front of 62,865 supporters and was refereed by Markus Merk from Germany. Portugal made several early runs towards the opposition goal, and Greek goalkeeper Antonios Nikopolidis had to make the first save of the match from a shot by Miguel. Angelos Charisteas almost scored for Greece two minutes after that, before a Maniche shot for Portugal from the edge of the Greek penalty area went narrowly wide. The two defences ensured that goal-scoring opportunities were limited, and the score was 0–0 at half-time. Deco had a penalty appeal turned down early in the second half, and it was Greece who took the lead after 57 minutes of the game. Angelos Basinas took Greece's first corner of the match, which was met by Charisteas, who sent a powerful header past goalkeeper Ricardo. Cristiano Ronaldo had an immediate chance to equalise, but his shot from just outside the penalty area was saved by Nikopolidis. Portugal had further chances through Luís Figo and Maniche, and on 74 minutes Ronaldo hit a shot over the crossbar when he was through on goal with only the goalkeeper to beat. Greece held on to complete a 1–0 victory.

Several pundits labelled Greece's tournament win the greatest upset in the history of the European Championship; among these was BBC Sport's John May, who cited Greece's record of never having previously won a match at a major event and their pre-tournament

in 2016
.

Background

UEFA Euro 2004 was the 12th UEFA European Championship, a football competition organised by UEFA for the senior men's national teams of its member associations. The tournament was played in Portugal from 12 June to 4 July 2004.[1][2] Qualifying matches were played between September 2002 and November 2003, in which fifty teams were divided into ten groups of five, playing each other on a home-and-away round-robin tournament basis. Portugal qualified automatically as hosts, along with the top team in each qualifying group. The remaining five teams were determined by a series of two-legged play-offs between the ten group runners-up.[2][3] For the finals tournament, the teams were divided into four groups of four, and each team played the others in their group once. The top two teams from each group advanced to a knockout phase.[2]

Neither Greece nor Portugal had appeared in a European Championship final before 2004.[1] Greece's only prior appearance in the finals was in 1980, when they were eliminated in the group phase.[4] Their only other major tournament appearance was at the 1994 FIFA World Cup, in which they also failed to qualify for the knockouts, losing all of their group games.[5] Portugal had qualified three times previously: in 1984, when they lost 3–2 in the semi-final to France, a loss to the Czech Republic in the quarter-final in 1996, and another semi-final defeat to France in 2000, 2–1 on a golden goal.[6] The two teams' last meeting before Euro 2004 was a 1–1 draw in a friendly in November 2003, and their last competitive fixture was a Euro 1992 qualifier in 1991, which Portugal won 1–0.[7]

The final was played on 4 July 2004 at the 65,000-capacity Estádio da Luz in Lisbon.[8] Opened in 2003, it was built to replace the former home stadium of Portuguese club S.L. Benfica.[8] Prior to the final, the Estádio da Luz hosted four matches at Euro 2004: three group matches from Groups A and B,[9] and the quarter-final between Portugal and England.[10]

Route to the final

Portugal

Portugal's route to the final
Opponent Result
1 Greece 1–2
2 Russia 2–0
3 Spain 1–0
QF England
a.e.t.) (6–5 p
)
SF Netherlands 2–1

As the tournament hosts, Portugal were drawn in Group A, in which they were joined by Greece, Russia and Spain.[11] Their match against eventual finalists Greece was the tournament's opening fixture, played on 12 June 2004 at the Estádio do Dragão in Porto.[12][13] In what BBC Sport described as a "shock defeat", Portugal lost the match 2–1.[13] Greece took the lead in the 7th minute through Giorgos Karagounis, who scored from 27 yards (25 m) after Portugal's Paulo Ferreira had lost possession. They doubled their lead in the second half when Cristiano Ronaldo, a substitute for Portugal, fouled Greek player Giourkas Seitaridis and Angelos Basinas scored with the resulting penalty. Ronaldo scored for Portugal late in the game, but Greece held on for a victory which marked the first time in European Championship history that a host nation had lost in the opening match.[12] Portugal's second group game was against Russia at the Estádio da Luz in Lisbon on 16 June.[14] They took an early lead in the 7th minute, when Deco sent the ball into the area and it was met by Maniche, who scored into the bottom corner of the Russian goal. Russia's goalkeeper Sergei Ovchinnikov was then given a red card shortly before half-time for handling the ball outside of his penalty area.[15] Luís Figo had an opportunity for Portugal midway through the second half, which was pushed on to the goalpost by substitute goalkeeper Vyacheslav Malafeev, before Rui Costa scored a second on 89 minutes from a close-range shot with the toe of his boot, after a Ronaldo cross, to seal a 2–0 Portugal win.[16] Their final group game was against Spain at Lisbon's Estádio José Alvalade on 20 June. Needing a win to guarantee progress,[17] Portugal scored the game's only goal through substitute Nuno Gomes on 57 minutes.[18] The 1–0 win saw Portugal qualify for the next round as group winners.[3]

Portugal's quarter-final match was against England, on 24 June at the Estádio da Luz.

sudden death at 4–4. Taking England's seventh penalty, Darius Vassell had his shot saved by goalkeeper Ricardo, who then took Portugal's next penalty himself, to seal a 6–5 shoot-out win.[21] The hosts returned to the Estádio José Alvalade for the semi-final on 30 June, in which they played the Netherlands.[3][22] Ronaldo scored after 26 minutes with a header,[23] following what BBC Sport described as "slack Dutch marking".[24] Maniche then scored Portugal's second on 58 minutes, with a curving shot from the edge of the penalty area from a Ronaldo pass. Jorge Andrade scored an own goal five minutes later, under pressure from the Netherlands' Ruud van Nistelrooy, but Portugal held on for a 2–1 win and a place in the final.[23]

Greece

Greece's route to the final
Opponent Result
1 Portugal 2–1
2 Spain 1–1
3 Russia 1–2
QF France 1–0
SF Czech Republic
a.e.t.
)

After defeating Portugal in the opening game, Greece's second Group A fixture was against Spain at Porto's Estádio do Bessa.[25] Spain took the lead shortly before the half-hour mark through a low shot by Fernando Morientes, after Raúl had taken the ball from Greece's Michalis Kapsis on the edge of the penalty area.[26] Raúl had a chance to make it 2–0 with a header in the second half, but it was Greece who scored the next goal, when Angelos Charisteas latched on to a long pass from Vasilios Tsiartas for the equaliser. The match finished 1–1,[27] leaving Greece on 4 points and needing only a draw from their final group game to progress to the next round. That match took place on 20 June 2004, against already-eliminated Russia at the Estádio Algarve in Faro. Greece suffered an early setback, when Dmitri Kirichenko opened the scoring for Russia 68 seconds into the game,[28] which is as of 2021 the fastest goal in the history of the European Championship.[29] Greece went further behind on 17 minutes, through a Dmitri Bulykin header following a Russian corner kick. Shortly before half-time, Zisis Vryzas scored a goal for Greece to reduce the deficit, but they could not find an equaliser and the game finished 2–1 to Russia. Spain's defeat to Portugal meant that Greece and Spain were level on points but Greece progressed as they had scored more goals than Spain.[28]

In the quarter-finals, Greece faced France on 25 June at the Estádio José Alvalade.

silver goal rule, in which the game would end if any team were leading at half-time in extra time. Greece thus won the match 1–0, without the second period of extra time being played. It was the only major international game decided by a silver goal before the rule was abolished.[36]

Match

View from the stand of the pitch and opposite stands, with large flags covering a large part of the playing surface, held aloft by a number of flag-bearers
Portuguese and Greek flags on display before the match

Pre-match

Portugal made one change from the team that started the semi-final; Ronaldo started on the right wing, while Simão dropped to the substitutes' bench.

fourth official.[39]

First half

Greece kicked off the match at 7:45 pm local time (6:45 pm

tackle by Zagorakis, and then through Ronaldo, Deco and Figo, but after 10 minutes neither side had had any serious opportunities to score in the opening.[37] Nikopolidis had to make the first save of the match in the 13th minute when he tipped behind a low shot on goal by Miguel.[40] Greece almost scored two minutes later when Charisteas was in possession 10 yards (9 m) from goal following a Portuguese defensive error, Ricardo running off his line to save the toe-poked shot. Maniche hit a shot from the edge of the Greek penalty area on 23 minutes, which went narrowly wide of the right-hand goalpost.[37]

Around the half-hour mark, Greece launched several attacks down the left. Portugal had an opportunity with a free kick taken by Figo on the edge of the Greek penalty area, but it was too high for Ronaldo's attempted header. Both defences continued to prevent many goal-scoring opportunities as the half progressed. Katsouranis had one opportunity on 38 minutes, but his header was weak and went wide of the goal. Miguel was replaced by Paulo Ferreira in the 41st minute, after sustaining an injury, then Basinas received a yellow card shortly before half-time for a deliberate handball as Ronaldo attempted to pass the ball to Figo. That was the last action of the half, which finished 0–0, as Barry Glendenning of The Guardian described the game thus far as "dull".[37]

Second half

Close-up view of the penalty area and part of the goal, showing three Portuguese players and four Greek players, with Charisteas in the air heading the ball
Angelos Charisteas scoring the winning goal

No substitutions were made by either team at half-time, and Portugal kicked off the second half. Pauleta ran with the ball into the Greek penalty area on 48 minutes, but his shot was blocked by Greek defender Takis Fyssas. Deco then fell to the ground in the penalty area and appealed to the referee for a penalty, but it was not given. Five minutes into the second half, Glendenning wrote that Greece's defence looked "completely impenetrable". Maniche then had an opportunity to shoot outside the penalty area on 53 minutes, but Giannakopoulos tackled him before he could shoot.[37] Greece won their first corner of the match on 57 minutes, which Basinas took, sending the ball into the Portuguese penalty area. It was met by Charisteas around 8 yards (7 m) from goal; he sent a powerful header past Ricardo to give Greece the lead.[40] Journalist Matthew Gibbs of These Football Times later described the goal as "practically a carbon copy" of Greece's headed winners against France and the Czech Republic in the quarter-final and semi-final, opining that Portugal's defence should have prepared for it.[41]

Ronaldo had a chance to equalise shortly after the Greece goal, shooting from 20 yards (18 m), but it was saved by Nikopolidis.[40] They had another chance with a free kick, but it was struck over the Greek crossbar. Portugal's manager Luiz Felipe Scolari brought on Rui Costa in place of Costinha. Then, on 63 minutes, Figo ran with the ball into the Greek penalty area. He attempted a shot at goal, but Nikopolidis prevented it going in. He then sent the ball upfield for a Greek counter-attack; Zagorakis passed it over the top of the Portuguese defenders into the path of two attackers but Ricardo prevented them reaching the ball. On 67 minutes, a Portuguese free kick from the right was claimed by Nikopolidis in the air. Glendenning queried whether Portugal should have had a penalty during the attack, as a Greek player had his arms wrapped around Andrade, but nothing was given.[37] Ronaldo had what McNulty described as his best chance of the match on 74 minutes, when he was through on goal with only the goalkeeper to beat. He ran wide with the ball, and when Nikopolidis ran towards him, he hit his shot over the crossbar.[37][40] Maniche had a shot on goal from distance on 80 minutes; Nikopolidis parried the shot, but no Portugal attackers were available to collect the rebound. Shortly before the end, Figo took a shot on the turn from inside the Greek box, which went narrowly wide, and Andrade had an attempt with a header which went over the crossbar. Greece held on to complete a 1–0 victory.[37]

Details

Portugal 0–1 Greece
Report
Attendance: 62,865
Referee: Markus Merk (Germany)
Portugal
Greece
GK 1 Ricardo
RB 13 Miguel downward-facing red arrow 43'
CB 4 Jorge Andrade
CB 16 Ricardo Carvalho
LB 14 Nuno Valente Yellow card 90+3'
CM 18 Maniche
CM 6 Costinha Yellow card 12' downward-facing red arrow 60'
RW 17 Cristiano Ronaldo
AM 20 Deco
LW 7 Luís Figo (c)
CF 9 Pauleta downward-facing red arrow 74'
Substitutions:
DF 2 Paulo Ferreira upward-facing green arrow 43'
MF 10 Rui Costa upward-facing green arrow 60'
FW 21 Nuno Gomes upward-facing green arrow 74'
Manager:
Brazil Luiz Felipe Scolari
Diagram of the football field, showing the position of play for each of the 22 starting players from each side
GK 1 Antonios Nikopolidis
RB 2 Giourkas Seitaridis Yellow card 63'
CB 19 Michalis Kapsis
CB 5 Traianos Dellas
LB 14 Takis Fyssas Yellow card 67'
DM 21 Kostas Katsouranis
CM 7 Theodoros Zagorakis (c)
CM 6 Angelos Basinas Yellow card 45+2'
RW 9 Angelos Charisteas
LW 8 Stelios Giannakopoulos downward-facing red arrow 76'
CF 15 Zisis Vryzas downward-facing red arrow 81'
Substitutions:
DF 3 Stylianos Venetidis upward-facing green arrow 76'
FW 22
Dimitris Papadopoulos
Yellow card 85' upward-facing green arrow 81'
Manager:
Germany Otto Rehhagel

Man of the Match:
Theodoros Zagorakis (Greece)[42]

Assistant referees:[39]
Christian Schräer (Germany)
Jan-Hendrik Salver (Germany)
Fourth official:
Anders Frisk (Sweden)

Match rules[43]

Statistics

Overall[44]
Statistic Portugal Greece
Goals scored 0 1
Total shots 17 4
Shots on target 5 1
Ball possession 58% 42%
Corner kicks 10 1
Fouls committed 18 19
Offsides 4 3
Yellow cards 2 4
Red cards 0 0

Post-match

Greeks celebrating Euro 2004 victory

After the match, BBC Sport's John May labelled Greece's victory as the most surprising tournament win in European Championship history, ahead of Denmark's at Euro 1992. May cited Greece's record of never having previously won a match at a major event, as well as their pre-tournament odds, which were as long as 150–1 with some bookmakers.[36][45] In 2020, Gibbs similarly labelled it the greatest upset in the tournament's history, writing "They entered this grand stage as underdogs but calling the final result a shock almost does them an injustice in reality."[41] Gibbs noted that the calibre of Euro 2004's teams was high; several of the teams were experiencing a golden generation, and "future icons" such as Ronaldo and England's Wayne Rooney made their first appearances at a major tournament.[41] Writers in France's Le Parisien wrote that the Greeks were "heroes of modern mythology who entered into legend and broke the hearts of all of Portugal", and Spain's Marca commented on Greece's style of play, saying "all winners deserve to win and although the debate as to whether they played football or anti-football is valid, the only thing that matters here is winning".[46]

Greece's German manager Otto Rehhagel became the first person to coach a nation other than his own to victory in a major championship.[40] He said after the game that "it was an unusual achievement for Greek football and especially for European football".[47] He accepted that Portugal had been the better team technically, but that Greece had won as a result of taking their chances in the game. Charisteas said "We're the best team in Europe and we deserved it", going on to add that it was a "unique moment, which many of us may never experience again".[47] Zagorakis was named as man of the match, and was also given the player-of-the-tournament award by UEFA. Gérard Houllier, one of the decision-makers for the latter award, commented that "Throughout the tournament, as well as in the final against Portugal, he showed leadership quality and skill and technical ability as well as his character".[48] When interviewed, Zagorakis said "I want to congratulate the players. We proved once again that the Greek soul is, and always will be, our strength."[47] After returning home on 5 July, Greece's players held a celebration in the Panathenaic Stadium, and more than 100,000 supporters assembled on the streets between the airport and the stadium to welcome them back. Alluding to construction delays for the upcoming Olympic Games in Athens, Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis said "These boys taught us a lesson as to what Greeks can do when we really believe in something".[49]

Portugal manager Scolari expressed his pain at the result, saying that Greece were the better team and lamenting that Portugal had been beaten by "one piece of sloppy defending". He was upbeat about the future, labelling his side "European vice-champions" and predicting that they would win a trophy in the future.

won the European Championship at Euro 2016.[55]

See also

References

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External links