UEFA Futsal Euro 2012 explained

Tourney Name:UEFA Futsal Euro 2012
Year:2012
Other Titles:UEFA Europsko futsal prvenstvo 2012
Size:150px
Country:Croatia
Dates:31 January – 11 February
Num Teams:12
Confederations:1
Venues:2
Cities:2
Count:6
Matches:20
Goals:109
Attendance:95519
Top Scorer: Jordi Torras (5 goals)
Player: Kike
Prevseason:2010
Nextseason:2014

The UEFA Futsal Euro 2012 was the eighth official edition of the UEFA European Championship for national futsal teams. It was hosted by Croatia, and was played from January, 31 to February, 11. 12 teams competed for the title, with 11 teams gain entries from qualification rounds, while Croatia gained an automatic entry as hosts. The championship was played in the two biggest Croatian cities, Zagreb and the 15,024 seater Arena Zagreb and in Split, at the 10,931 capacity Spaladium Arena.

Spain defended their title, having won it for the sixth consecutive time.[1]

Bids

Three nations had made bids for the 2012 Championship. Alongside Croatia, Belgium – which had failed in the 2010 bid – made a new bid with Antwerp and Charleroi, while Macedonia made one with the city of Skopje. Croatia was selected to host the Championship by a decision made on 24 March 2010, at the UEFA Executive Committee meeting in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Squads

See main article: 2012 UEFA Futsal Championship squads.

Venues

ArenaArena ZagrebSpaladium Arena
Picture
CityZagrebSplit
Capacity15,02410,931

Qualification

See main article: 2012 UEFA Futsal Championship qualifying.

Forty-two nations took part in 2012 edition. Host nation qualified directly, while other had to go through qualification rounds.

The qualification was played in two stages, with 24 sides competing in the preliminary round between 20–24 January 2011. The group winners progressed to join the other 18 entrants in the next phase. In the main qualifying round, which was taking place between 24–27 February 2011, 24 teams were split in 6 groups of 4 teams. The winners and best five second-placed teams joined Croatia in the finals.

Qualified teams

width=17%Country !width=17%Qualified as!width=17%Previous appearances in tournament1
00Hosts 2 (1999, 2001)
00Group 1 winner 7 (1996, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2010)
00Group 1 runner-up 1 (2010)
00Group 2 winner 7 (1996, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2010)
00Group 2 runner-up 3 (1999, 2007, 2010)
00Group 3 winner 5 (1999, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2010)
00Group 4 winner 5 (2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2010)
00Group 4 runner-up 1 (2007)
00Group 5 winner 6 (1996, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2010)
00Group 5 runner-up 0 (debut)
00Group 6 winner 7 (1996, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2010)
00Group 6 runner-up 2 (2003, 2010)

Seeding

UEFA announced the seedings on Monday, 28 February 2011, one day after the qualification was concluded. Croatia was automatically seeded as A1. The Draw was scheduled for 9 September 2011 in the Croatian capital Zagreb.

width=33%Pot 1 width=33%Pot 2 width=33%Pot 3
(host, assigned to A1)
(title holder)










Referees

CountryReferees
Gerald Bauernfeind
Pascal Lemal
Danijel Janosevic
Petros Panayides
Karel Henych
Marc Birkett
Fernando Gutiérrez Lumbreras
Timo Onatsu
CountryReferees
Stephan Kammerer
Gabor Kovacs
Francesco Massini
Sebastian Stawicki
Eduardo Jose Fernandes Coelho
Bogdan Sorescu
Ivan Shabanov
Borut Sivic

Group stage

Group A

TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
220075+26
210143+13
200258−30

--------

Group B

TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
220083+56
21017703
2002510−50

--------

Group C

TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
211072+54
211053+24
200218−70

--------

Group D

TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
220062+46
2101101003
2002913–40

--------

Knockout stage

Quarter-finals

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Semi-finals

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Final

Final ranking

RankTeam
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Spain celebrate once more in Croatia. 12 February 2012. uefa.com.