2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship explained

Tourney Name:UEFA European Under-21 Championship
Size:200px
Year:2013
Other Titles:אליפות אירופה בכדורגל עד גיל 21 - 2013
Country: Israel
Dates:5–18 June
Confederations:1
Num Teams:8
Venues:4
Cities:4
Count:4
Matches:15
Goals:45
Top Scorer: Álvaro Morata (4 goals)
Player: Thiago[1]
Prevseason:2011
Nextseason:2015

2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship, or simply the 2013 Euro Under-21, was the 19th staging of UEFA's European Under-21 Championship. The final tournament was hosted by Israel from 5–18 June 2013.

The Israeli bid was chosen by UEFA's Executive Committee on 27 January 2011 in Nyon, Switzerland.[2] This bid defeated the other bids from Bulgaria, Czech Republic, England and Wales.

Spain defended the title they won two years prior, winning their fourth championship after defeating Italy 4–2 in the final.

Qualification

See main article: 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification. The draw for the group stage of qualifying for the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship took place on 3 February in Nyon, Switzerland. 52 national teams took part in the qualifying. The group stage of qualifying began on 25 March 2011.[3] There were a total of ten groups, consisting of five or six teams each. All the teams in each group faced each other two times, at home and away. The team at the top of each group and the four best second-placed teams qualified to the playoff round. In the playoff round, the 14 teams were drawn to play seven two-legged matches. The winners joined Israel in the tournament finals.

List of qualified teams

The following teams qualified for the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship:

Venues

The Competition was played at four venues in major cities all around Israel: Bloomfield (Tel Aviv), Teddy (Jerusalem), HaMoshava (Petah Tikva) and the Netanya Stadium (Netanya).

JerusalemNetanya
Teddy StadiumNetanya Stadium
Capacity: 31,733Capacity: 13,610
Petah TikvaTel Aviv
HaMoshava StadiumBloomfield Stadium
Capacity: 11,500Capacity: 14,413

Match officials

In December 2012, it was announced that these six referees would take charge of matches at the final tournament:

It was furthermore announced that additional assistant referees would be deployed at Israel's final tournament.[4]

Seeding

The draw for the final tournament took place on 28 November 2012 in Tel Aviv. As the highest-ranked team according to the competition coefficient rankings, Spain were one of the top two seeds alongside hosts Israel. Those two sides were drawn into separate groups, as were the second and third-ranked teams in the list, England and the Netherlands. The remaining four countries were unseeded and were placed in the remaining positions in the two four-team sections.[5] [6]

width=28%Top seedswidth=24%Second seedswidth=24%Unseeded
  • (assigned to A1)
  • (assigned to B1)

Squads

See main article: 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship squads.

The deadline for the submission of the final 23-man squads was 26 May 2013, ten days before the opening match.

Group stage

The draw for the group stage was held on 28 November 2012 in Tel Aviv.[7]

All times are local (UTC+3).

Group A

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Group B

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Knockout stage

Semifinals

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Final

See main article: 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship Final.

Team of the Tournament

The UEFA Technical Team was charged with naming a squad composed of the 23 best players over the course of the tournament. Spain, with eleven, had the most players in the team of the tournament.[1]

UEFA Team of the Tournament
GoalkeepersDefendersMidfieldersForwards
Alberto Moreno Asier Illarramendi Álvaro Morata
Francesco Bardi Iñigo Martínez Isco Rodrigo
Ørjan Nyland Marc Bartra Koke Fabio Borini
Martín Montoya Thiago Georginio Wijnaldum
Luca Caldirola Lewis Holtby Luuk de Jong
Bruno Martins Indi Marco Verratti
Stefan Strandberg Adam Maher
Alan Dzagoev

Goalscorers

4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal

Official match ball

The official ball for the UEFA European Under-21 Championship was unveiled during the draw in Tel Aviv on 28 November 2012.[9] The ball had the same blue and white colours as tournament hosts Israel and its design featured the same thermally bonded triangular patterns as the Adidas Tango 12, match ball of UEFA Euro 2012.

Calls to boycott tournament

After Israel was announced as host, there were calls by some to boycott the tournament. The most prominent petition against the tournament taking place in Israel was organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, which demanded UEFA President Michel Platini reverse his decision.[10] Another petition[11] organised by Muslim Public Affairs Committee UK demanded that UEFA move the tournament to England after the UEFA considered asking the FA to be on standby if the Gaza-Israel conflict continued.[12]

Another petition, organised by former Sevilla footballer Frédéric Kanouté and containing the name of 50 professional footballers who had signed it,[13] also gained media attention[14] but attracted criticism when some of the names listed on it were disputed. Didier Drogba, for example, claimed he never signed the petition and his name was removed from the list.[15]

Broadcast from UEFA European Under-21 Championship

Américas

Free TV

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Thiago leads all-star squad dominated by Spain. UEFA.com. 21 June 2013. 21 June 2013.
  2. Israel awarded U21 Championship in 2013. UEFA. 27 January 2011. 21 January 2011.
  3. Draw signals first steps on road to Israel. UEFA. 31 January 2011. 31 January 2011.
  4. Web site: UEFA deploys Additional Assistant Referees at Under-21 Championship - The 3rd Team . 2013-04-14 . 2015-11-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151123031755/http://footballrefereeing.blogspot.de/2013/02/uefa-deploys-additional-assistant.html#.UWqAhMrx93g . dead .
  5. Web site: Under-21 finals lineup complete. 16 October 2012. 19 October 2012. UEFA.com.
  6. Web site: Spain and Israel top seeds for Under-21 draw. 19 October 2012. 19 October 2012. UEFA.com.
  7. Web site: Spain draw Germany, Israel get England. 28 November 2012 . UEFA.com.
  8. Web site: Morata wins Golden Boot in Spanish clean sweep. UEFA.com. 18 June 2013. 18 June 2013.
  9. Web site: U21 tournament ball unveiled in Tel Aviv. 28 November 2012 . UEFA.com.
  10. Web site: PSC boycott site . 2012-12-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121221050412/http://psc.iparl.com/lobby/63 . 2012-12-21 . dead .
  11. Web site: 'Move the European Under-21 Championship to England from Israel' – MPACUK . 2013-02-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130601120008/http://www.mpacuk.org/story/030213/move-european-under-21-football-championship-england-israel.html . 2013-06-01 . dead .
  12. http://www.thejc.com/news/world-news/91690/uefa-postpones-match-after-tel-aviv-bomb-blast 'Uefa postpones match after Tel Aviv bomb blast' – The Jewish Chronicle
  13. Web site: Freddie Kanouté's petition with names listed in support . 2012-12-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121203042726/http://www.kanoute.com/EUROPEAN-FOOTBALLERS-DECLARE-SUPPORT-FOR-PALESTINE_ad-id!35-ol!en-l!en.ks . 2012-12-03 . dead .
  14. Web site: "Boycotts criticised" . 2012-12-09 . 2012-12-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121209121807/http://cifwatch.com/tag/frederic-kanoute/ . dead .
  15. http://gulfnews.com/sport/football/drogba-denies-backing-pro-palestinian-petition-1.1114591 "Didier Drogba denies signing petition"