2014 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship explained

Tourney Name:UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship
Year:2014
Other Titles:U19-EM i fotball for kvinner 2014
Country:Norway
Dates:15–27 July
Num Teams:8
Venues:6
Cities:6
Count:1
Matches:15
Goals:36
Top Scorer: Vivianne Miedema
(6 goals)
Player: Vivianne Miedema[1]
Prevseason:2013
Nextseason:2015

The UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship 2014 Final Tournament was held in Norway from 15 to 27 July 2014. The first qualification matches were played on 21 September 2013.

A competition record of 48 participating nations was set. For the first time Albania, Malta and Montenegro enter the competition.[2]

The Netherlands won the final over Spain 1–0.

Tournament structure

The regulations make up for the following tournament structure:

Teams entering in this roundTeams advancing from previous roundCompetition format
First qualifying round
(44 teams)
  • 44 teams from associations ranked 4–53
11 groups of 4 teams, hosted by one nation, seeded into four pots by UEFA coefficient
Second qualifying round
(24 teams)
  • 11 group winners from 1st qualifying round
  • 10 best runners-up from 1st qualifying round
6 groups of 4 teams, hosted by one nation, seeded into four pots by UEFA coefficient
Final tournament
(8 teams)
  • (hosts)
  • 6 group winners from 2nd qualifying round
  • best group runners-up from 2nd qualifying round
2 groups of 4 teams, semi-finals, final

Venues

The matches were played in six cities, Ullevaal National Stadium was the final venue.[3]

Qualification

There were two separate rounds of qualifications held before the final tournament.

Qualifying round

See main article: article. In the qualifying round 44 teams were drawn into 11 groups. The group winners and ten best runners-up of each group advance. The draw was held on 20 November 2012.[4]

Elite round

See main article: article. In the elite round the 21 teams from the first qualifying round were joined by top seeds Germany, England and Spain. The 24 teams of this round were drawn into six groups of four teams. The group winners and the runners-up team with the best record against the sides first and third in their group advanced to the final tournament.

Group stage

The seven teams advancing from the second qualifying round joined host nation Norway. Ireland qualified as best runners-up.[5] The draw of groups was held on 29 April in Oslo.[6]

The top two teams of each group advance to the semi-finals.[7]

Tie-breakingIf two or more teams were equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following tie-breaking criteria were applied:[8]
  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;

If, after having applied criteria 1 to 3, teams still had an equal ranking, criteria 1 to 3 were reapplied exclusively to the matches between the teams in question to determine their final rankings. If this procedure did not lead to a decision, criteria 4 to 7 were applied.If only two teams were tied (according to criteria 1–7) after having met in the last match of the group stage, their ranking would be determined by a penalty shoot-out.

All times are in Central European Summer Time .

Group A

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Group B

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Knockout stage

In the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out are used to decide the winner if necessary.[7] [8]

For the first time in the competition history Ireland has reached the semi-finals.[9] Their semi-final against the Netherlands was a rematch of the pairing in the second qualifying round, which ended in a goalless draw. With a 4–0 win the Netherlands reached the final for the first time.

Semifinals

----

Final


SPAIN:
GK13Sara Serrat
DF2Celia Jiménez (c)
DF3Marta Turmo
DF4Garazi Murua
DF5Nuria Garrote
MF9Maitane López
MF6Leire Baños
MF14Sonia Fraile
FW8María Caldentey
FW12Nahikari García
MF16Andrea Sánchez
Substitutes:
FW17Alba Redondo
Manager:
Jorge Vilda

NETHERLANDS:
GK1Jennifer Vreugdenhil
DF3Dominique Janssen
DF4Danique Kerkdijk
DF7Jeslynn Kuijpers
DF8Inessa Kaagman (c)
DF12Lucie Akkerman
MF5Danielle Kuikstra
MF10Jill Roord
FW6Kim Mourmans
FW9Vivianne Miedema
FW14Laura Strik
Substitutes:
MF17Sharon Bruinenberg
FW13Simone Kets
DF2Cornelia Peels
Manager:
Andre Koolhof
MATCH OFFICIALS

Goalscorers

6 goals
2 goals
1 goal
Own goals

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: UEFA.com Golden Player 2014: Vivianne Miedema. UEFA.com.
  2. Web site: Record field for 2013/14 Women's U19s. UEFA. 8 November 2012. 6 November 2012.
  3. http://www.fotball.no/Landslag_og_toppfotball/Landslag/Aldersbestemt_jenter/Aldersbestemt-jenter/J19/2014/Disse-lagene-kommer-til-J19-EM-i-Norge/ "Disse lagene kommer til J19-EM i Norge"
  4. Web site: 2013/14 Women's U19 first qualifying round draw. UEFA. 29 July 2013. 20 November 2012.
  5. Web site: Germany, France out as finals lineup is confirmed. UEFA. 11 April 2014. 10 April 2014.
  6. Web site: England paired with Sweden in Norway finals draw. UEFA. 30 April 2014. 29 April 2014.
  7. Web site: Regulations of the UEFA European Women's Under-19 Championship 2013/14. UEFA.com.
  8. Web site: Regulations of the UEFA European Under-19 Championship 2013/14. UEFA.com. PDF. 19 June 2014.
  9. Web site: Preview: Norway v Spain, Ireland v Netherlands. UEFA. 24 July 2014. 23 July 2014.