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1964 European Nations' Cup final tournament: Difference between revisions

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|17 June – [[Santiago Bernabéu Stadium|Madrid]]|{{fb|ESP|1945}} {{aet}}|2|{{fb|HUN}}|1
|17 June – [[Santiago Bernabéu Stadium|Real Madrid]]|{{fb|ESP|1945}} {{aet}}|2|{{fb|HUN}}|1
|17 June – [[Camp Nou|Barcelona]]|{{fb|DEN}}|0|{{fb|URS}}|3
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*[[Chus Pereda|Pereda]] {{goal|35}}
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*[[Amancio Amaro|Amancio]] {{goal|112}}
*[[Amancio (footballer)|Amancio]] {{goal|112}}
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|LH ||'''6''' ||[[Josep Maria Fusté]]
|LH ||'''6''' ||[[Josep Maria Fusté]]
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|OR ||'''7''' ||[[Amancio Amaro]]
|OR ||'''7''' ||[[Amancio (footballer)|Amancio]]
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==Final==
==Final==
{{main|1964 European Nations' Cup Final}}
{{main|1964 European Nations' Cup final}}


{{#lst:1964 European Nations' Cup Final|final}}
{{#lst:1964 European Nations' Cup final|final}}
{{#lst:1964 European Nations' Cup Final|lineups}}
{{#lst:1964 European Nations' Cup final|lineups}}


==See also==
==See also==
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[[Category:Football competitions in Madrid]]
[[Category:Football competitions in Madrid]]
[[Category:Football competitions in Barcelona]]
[[Category:Football competitions in Barcelona]]
[[Category:International sports competitions hosted by Catalonia]]
[[Category:International association football competitions hosted by Catalonia]]
[[Category:1960s in Madrid]]
[[Category:1960s in Madrid]]
[[Category:1964 in Catalonia]]
[[Category:1964 in Catalonia]]

Latest revision as of 09:47, 16 November 2024

The final tournament of the 1964 European Nations' Cup was a single-elimination tournament involving the four teams that qualified from the quarter-finals. There were two rounds of matches: a semi-final stage leading to the final to decide the champions. The final tournament began with the semi-finals on 17 June and ended with the final on 21 June at the Santiago Bernabéu in Madrid. Spain won the tournament with a 2–1 victory over the Soviet Union.[1]

All times Central European Time (UTC+1)

Format

[edit]

Any game in the final tournament that was undecided by the end of the regular 90 minutes was followed by thirty minutes of extra time (two 15-minute halves). If scores were still level, a coin toss would be used in all matches but the final. If the final finished level after extra time, a replay would take place at a later date to decide the winner.

Teams

[edit]
Team Method of
qualification
Date of
qualification
Finals
appearance
Last
appearance
Previous best
performance
 Denmark Quarter-final winner 18 December 1963 1st Debut
 Hungary Quarter-final winner 23 May 1964 1st Debut
 Soviet Union Quarter-final winner 27 May 1964 2nd 1960 Winners (1960)
 Spain (host) Quarter-final winner 8 April 1964 1st Debut

Bracket

[edit]
 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
17 June – Real Madrid
 
 
 Spain (a.e.t.)2
 
21 June – Madrid
 
 Hungary1
 
 Spain2
 
17 June – Barcelona
 
 Soviet Union1
 
 Denmark0
 
 
 Soviet Union3
 
Third place play-off
 
 
20 June – Barcelona
 
 
 Hungary (a.e.t.)3
 
 
 Denmark1

Semi-finals

[edit]

Spain vs Hungary

[edit]
Spain 2–1 (a.e.t.) Hungary
Report
Attendance: 34,713
Spain
Hungary
GK 1 José Ángel Iribar
RB 2 Feliciano Rivilla
LB 3 Ferran Olivella (c)
RH 4 Isacio Calleja
CH 5 Ignacio Zoco
LH 6 Josep Maria Fusté
OR 7 Amancio
IR 8 Chus Pereda
CF 9 Marcelino Martínez
IL 10 Luis Suárez
OL 11 Carlos Lapetra
Manager:
José Villalonga
GK 1 Antal Szentmihályi
RB 2 Sándor Mátrai
LB 4 László Sárosi
RH 3 Kálmán Mészöly
CH 5 István Nagy
LH 6 Ferenc Sipos
OR 7 Ferenc Bene
IR 8 Imre Komora
CF 9 Flórián Albert
IL 10 Lajos Tichy (c)
OL 11 Máté Fenyvesi
Manager:
Lajos Baróti

Denmark vs Soviet Union

[edit]
Denmark 0–3 Soviet Union
Report
Attendance: 38,556
Denmark
Soviet Union
GK 1 Leif Nielsen
RB 2 Jens Jørgen Hansen
LB 3 Kaj Hansen
RH 4 Bent Hansen
CH 5 Birger Larsen
LH 6 Erling Nielsen
OR 7 Carl Bertelsen
IR 8 Ole Sørensen
CF 9 Ole Madsen (c)
IL 10 Kjeld Thorst
OL 11 John Danielsen
Manager:
Poul Petersen
GK 1 Lev Yashin
RB 2 Viktor Shustikov
CB 3 Albert Shesternyov
CB 4 Eduard Mudrik
LB 6 Viktor Anichkin
CM 5 Valery Voronin
CM 10 Gennadi Gusarov
RW 7 Igor Chislenko
LW 11 Galimzyan Khusainov
CF 9 Viktor Ponedelnik
CF 8 Valentin Ivanov (c)
Manager:
Konstantin Beskov

Third place play-off

[edit]
Hungary 3–1 (a.e.t.) Denmark
Report
Attendance: 3,869
Hungary
Denmark
GK 1 Antal Szentmihályi
RB 2 Dezső Novák
LB 3 Kálmán Mészöly
RH 4 Kálmán Ihász
CH 5 Ernő Solymosi
LH 6 Ferenc Sipos (c)
OR 7 János Farkas
IR 8 Zoltán Varga
CF 10 Ferenc Bene
IL 9 Flórián Albert
OL 11 Máté Fenyvesi
Manager:
Lajos Baróti
GK 1 Leif Nielsen
RB 2 Bent Wolmar
LB 3 Kaj Hansen
RH 4 Bent Hansen
CH 5 Birger Larsen
LH 6 Erling Nielsen
OR 7 Carl Bertelsen
IR 8 Ole Sørensen
CF 9 Ole Madsen (c)
IL 10 Kjeld Thorst
OL 11 John Danielsen
Manager:
Poul Petersen

Final

[edit]
Spain 2–1 Soviet Union
Report, lineups
Attendance: 79,115
Spain
Soviet Union
GK 1 José Ángel Iribar
RB 2 Feliciano Rivilla
CB 5 Ferran Olivella (c)
LB 3 Isacio Calleja
RH 4 Ignacio Zoco
LH 6 Josep Maria Fusté
OR 11 Carlos Lapetra
IR 10 Luis Suárez
CF 9 Marcelino Martínez
IL 8 Chus Pereda
OL 7 Amancio
Manager:
José Villalonga
GK 1 Lev Yashin
RB 6 Viktor Anichkin
CB 2 Viktor Shustikov
CB 3 Albert Shesternyov
LB 4 Eduard Mudrik
CM 5 Valery Voronin
CM 10 Alexey Korneyev
RW 7 Igor Chislenko
LW 11 Galimzyan Khusainov
CF 8 Valentin Ivanov (c)
CF 9 Viktor Ponedelnik
Manager:
Konstantin Beskov

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Spain's Marcelino stoops to conquer Europe". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 2 October 2003. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
[edit]