2003 UEFA European Under-17 Championship

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2003 UEFA Under-17 Championship
Campeonato Europeu de Futebol Sub-17 de 2003
Tournament details
Host country Portugal
Dates 7 – 17 May
Teams 8
Final positions
Champions  Portugal (5th title)
Runners-up  Spain
Third place  Austria
Fourth place  England
Tournament statistics
Matches played 16
Goals scored 44 (2.75 per match)
Top scorer(s) Spain David Rodríguez (6 goals)
Best player Portugal Miguel Veloso[1]
2002
2004

The 2003 UEFA European Under-17 Championship was the second edition of UEFA's UEFA European Under-17 Championship. Portugal hosted the championship, during 7–17 May. The format of the competition changed, and only 8 teams entered the competition. Host Portugal defeated Spain in the final to win the competition for the fifth time.

Portugal and Spain qualified for the 2003 FIFA U-17 World Championship held in Finland.

Qualification

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Qualification for the final tournament of the 2003 UEFA European Under-17 Championship consisted of two rounds: a Qualifying round and an Elite round. In the qualifying round, 44 national teams competed in 11 groups of four teams, with each group winner and the ten best runner-ups advancing to the elite round. There, the 21 first-round qualifiers plus the teams who were given a bye (Spain, England, Russia, Finland, Serbia and Montenegro, Polonia and Hungary), were distributed in seven groups of four teams. The winner of each group qualified for the final tournament.

Qualified teams

The following 8 teams qualified for the final tournament.

Note: All appearance statistics include only U-17 era (since 2002).

Country Qualified as Previous appearances in tournament
 Portugal Hosts 1 (2002)
 Spain Group 1 winner 1 (2002)
 Denmark Group 2 winner 1 (2002)
 Austria Group 3 winner 0 (debut)
 Israel Group 4 winner 0 (debut)
 Hungary Group 5 winner 1 (2002)
 England Group 6 winner 1 (2002)
 Italy Group 7 winner 0 (debut)

Venues

The final tournament was played in seven venues located in seven different cities, Viseu, Nelas, Chaves, Mangualde, Vila Real, Santa Comba Dão and Santa Marta de Penaguião. The Estádio do Fontelo was the largest stadium with a tournament capacity of 12,000 seats, and served as both the opening ceremony and the final venue.

The table below lists stadium capacity for the final tournament, which may not correspond to their effective maximum capacity.

Viseu Chaves
Estádio do Fontelo Municipal Eng. Manuel Branco Teixeira
Capacity: 12,000 Capacity: 12,000
No image available.svg No image available.svg
Santa Comba Dão Nelas
Estádio Dr. Orlando Mendes Estádio Municipal de Nelas
Capacity: 10,000 Capacity: 7,500
No image available.svg No image available.svg
Vila Real Mangualde Santa Marta de Penaguião
Complexo Desportivo Monte da Forca Estádio Municipal de Mangualde Municipal de Santa Marta de Penaguião
Capacity: 6,000 Capacity: 1,500 Capacity: 500
No image available.svg No image available.svg No image available.svg

Squads

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Each participating national association had to submit a final list of 21 players (three of whom must be goalkeepers). All players must have been born on or after 1 January 1986.

Match officials

Country Referee Matches refereed
Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina Novo Panic Denmark 2–0 Hungary (group A)
Israel 1–2 England (group B)
Portugal 2–1 Spain (Final)
Moldova Moldova Veaceslav Banari Israel 0–3 Spain (group B)
Denmark 0–2 Austria (group A)
Slovenia Slovenia Damir Skomina Portugal 3–2 Denmark (group A)
Italy 4–0 Israel (group B)
Portugal 2–2 England (Semi-final)
Sweden Sweden Stefan Johannesson England 0–0 Italy (group B)
Hungary 0–2 Portugal (group A)
England 0–1 Austria (Third-place)
Turkey Turkey Kuddusi Müftüoglu Spain 2–0 Italy (group B)
Portugal 1–0 Austria (group A)
Ukraine Ukraine Sergiy Berezka Austria 1–0 Hungary (group A)
England 2–2 Spain (group B)
Spain 5–2 Austria (Semi-final)

Group stage

Group A

Teams GP W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Portugal 3 3 0 0 6 2 4 9
 Austria 3 2 0 1 3 1 2 6
 Denmark 3 1 0 2 4 5 -1 3
 Hungary 3 0 0 3 0 5 -5 0

7 May 2003
16:00 CET
Portugal  3 – 2  Denmark
João Pedro Goal 34'
Paulo Machado Goal 40'
Curto Goal 55'
Report Goal 32'42' Torry

7 May 2003
18:00 CET
Austria  1 – 0  Hungary
Saurer Goal 78' Report
Nelas
Referee: Sergiy Berezka (UKR)

9 May 2003
16:00 CET
Portugal  1 – 0  Austria
Curto Goal 14' Report
Santa Comba Dão
Referee: Kuddusi Müftüoglu (TUR)

9 May 2003
18:00 CET
Denmark  2 – 0  Hungary
Storm Goal 33'
Jakobsen Goal 50'
Report
Mangualde
Referee: Novo Panic (BIH)

11 May 2003
17:30 CET
Hungary  0 – 2  Portugal
Report Goal 50' Bruno Gama
Goal 62' Vieirinha

11 May 2003
17:30 CET
Denmark  0 – 2  Austria
Report Goal 42' Mayer
Goal 83' Horvath
Nelas
Referee: Veaceslav Banari (MVA)

Group B

Teams GP W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Spain 3 2 1 0 7 2 5 7
 England 3 1 2 0 4 3 1 5
 Italy 3 1 1 1 4 2 2 4
 Israel 3 0 0 3 1 9 -8 0

7 May 2003
16:00 CET
Israel  1 – 2  England
Rafaelov Goal 47' (pen.) Report Goal 51' Bowditch
Goal 54' Milner
Santa Marta de Penaguião
Referee: Novo Panic (BIH)

7 May 2003
18:00 CET
Spain  2 – 0  Italy
Cases Goal 28'
Nadal Goal 35'
Report
Vila Real
Referee: Kuddusi Müftüoglu (TUR)

9 May 2003
15:30 CET
Israel  0 – 3  Spain
Report Goal 33' Silva
Goal 36' David
Goal 47' Cases
Chaves
Referee: Veaceslav Banari (MDA)

9 May 2003
18:00 CET
England  0 – 0  Italy
Report

11 May 2003
17:30 CET
England  2 – 2  Spain
Taylor Goal 47'
Milner Goal 51'
Report Goal 9' Nadal
Goal 27' Jurado
Vila Real
Referee: Sergiy Berezka (UKR)

11 May 2003
17:30 CET
Italy  4 – 0  Israel
Pozzi Goal 32'46'
Lupoli Goal 35'78'
Report

Knockout stage

Knockout map

Semi-finals Final
14 May – Viseu
  Portugal (p)  2 (3)  
  England  2 (2)  
 
17 May – Viseu
      Portugal  2
    Spain  1
Third place
14 May – Mangualde 17 May - Santa Comba Dão
  Spain  5   England  0
  Austria  2     Austria  1

Semifinals


14 May 2003
16:00 CET
Spain  5 – 2  Austria
David Goal 4'12'37'68'
Cases Goal 16'
Report Goal 59' Fuchs
Goal 62' Stankovic

Third Place Playoff

17 May 2003
15:30 CET
 England 0 – 1 Austria 
Report Goal 53' Pirker
Santa Comba Dão
Referee: Sergiy Berezka (UKR)

Final

17 May 2003
18:30 CET
 Portugal 2 – 1 Spain 
Márcio Sousa Goal 22'47' Report Goal 42' David
Estádio do Fontelo, Viseu
Referee: Novo Panic (BIH)
Portugal
Spain
GK 12 Mário Felgueiras
RB 2 João Dias Booked 60'
CB 4 Miguel Veloso (c)
CB 14 Paulo Ricardo
LB 3 Tiago Gomes
CM 6 Paulo Machado
CM 17 João Coimbra Substituted off 70'
MO 10 Márcio Sousa Substituted off 77'
RW 7 Vieirinha
LW 15 João Pedro Substituted off 52'
CF 9 Carlos Saleiro
Substitutions:
GK 1 Pedro Freitas
LB 13 Vítor Vinha
CB 5 Tiago Costa
MF 8 João Moutinho Substituted in 77'
LW 11 Hélder Barbosa
RW 16 Bruno Gama Substituted in 52'
FW 18 Manuel Curto Substituted in 70'
Manager:
António Violante
GK 13 Antonio Adán
RB 2 Manuel Ruz Substituted off 72'
CB 5 Sergio Sánchez
CB 14 César Arzo Booked 81'
LB 3 Raúl Llorente
DM 8 Markel Bergara Substituted off 63'
MF 16 José Cases Substituted off 49'
MF 11 Jurado (c)
MF 10 David Silva
LW 7 Sisi
CF 9 David Rodríguez
Substitutions:
GK 1 Roberto Jiménez
DF 4 Marcos Martín
DF 17 César Collado Substituted in 72'
MF 6 Marcos Tébar Substituted in 49'
MF 15 Eneko Urien
FW 12 Manu Alejandro
FW 18 Xisco Nadal Substituted in 63'
Manager:
Juan Santisteban

Goalscorers

6 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal

References