2009 UEFA European Under-21 Championship

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2009 UEFA Under-21 Championship
2009 UEFA European Under-21 Championship
U21-Europamästerskapet för herrar 2009
Tournament details
Host country Sweden
Dates 15 June – 29 June
Teams 8 (finals)
51 (qualifying)
Venue(s) 4 (in 4 host cities)
Final positions
Champions  Germany (1st title)
Runners-up  England
Tournament statistics
Matches played 15
Goals scored 38 (2.53 per match)
Attendance 163,090 (10,873 per match)
Top scorer(s) Sweden Marcus Berg (7 goals)
Best player Sweden Marcus Berg
2007
2011

The 2009 UEFA European Under-21 Championship began on 15 June 2009, and was the 17th UEFA European Under-21 Championship. This was the first tournament after the competition reverted to a two-year format, following the single-year 2006-07 competition, which allowed the change to odd-numbered years. Sweden hosted the final tournament in June 2009; therefore, their under-21 team qualified automatically. 51 of the 52 other nations in UEFA's jurisdiction, including Montenegro and Serbia who competed separately for the first time, went through a series of qualifiers to decide the seven other teams to join Sweden at the finals. Andorra did not take part.[1] Players born on or after 1 January 1986 were eligible to play in this competition.[2]

Qualification

Qualification groups

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The 51 nations were divided into ten qualification groups, with group matches scheduled from 31 May 2007 until 10 September 2008. The draw for the qualifying round was made on 13 February 2007 in Stockholm, Sweden.[1]

Group 1

 Italy
 Croatia
 Greece
 Albania
 Azerbaijan
 Faroe Islands

Group 2

 Czech Republic
 Ukraine
 Turkey
 Armenia
 Liechtenstein

Group 3

 Portugal
 England
 Bulgaria
 Republic of Ireland
 Montenegro

Group 4

 Spain
 Russia
 Poland
 Georgia
 Kazakhstan

Group 5

 Netherlands
  Switzerland
 Norway
 Macedonia
 Estonia

Group 6

 Denmark
 Slovenia
 Lithuania
 Finland
 Scotland

Group 7

 Belgium
 Slovakia
 Iceland
 Austria
 Cyprus

Group 8

 Serbia
 Hungary
 Belarus
 Latvia
 San Marino

Group 9

 Germany
 Israel
 Moldova
 Northern Ireland
 Luxembourg

Group 10

 France
 Romania
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Wales
 Malta

Play-offs

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The ten group winners and four best runners-up from the group stage met in play-offs to determine the seven qualifying nations; the play-off matches were in October 2008.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Germany Germany 2–1 France France 1–1 1–0
Denmark Denmark 0–2 Serbia Serbia 0–1 0–1
Turkey Turkey 1–2 Belarus Belarus 1–0 0–2
Austria Austria 3–3(p) Finland Finland 2–1 1–2
Wales Wales 4–5 England England 2–3 2–2
Italy Italy 3–1 Israel Israel 0–0 3–1
Switzerland Switzerland 3–4(a.e.t.) Spain Spain 2–1 1–3

Qualified teams

The finals' tournament draw took place on 3 December 2008 at the Svenska Mässan exhibition centre, Gothenburg.[3] Prior to the final draw, Sweden had been seeded first in Group A as hosts of the tournament, while Spain were seeded first in Group B.[4]

Final draw

Pot A

Pot B

Pot C

The first pot contained the top seeds, these would have been host nation Sweden and the reigning champions, The Netherlands. However, The Netherlands did not qualify meaning that the team with the best qualifying record, Spain, took their place. Sweden and Spain were then automatically assigned to A1 and B1 respectively. The second pot contained the teams with the next two best records in qualifying: these were England and Italy. England were drawn into position B3 and Italy into A3. The final pot contained the other four qualified teams: Serbia, Finland, Germany and Belarus. Belarus were drawn first into position A2, Germany went into B2, Serbia into A4 and Finland into B4.

Venues

Örjans Vall, seen from the entrance.

The following venues were chosen to hold the final tournament matches:[5]

Stadium Location Normal capacity Tournament capacity
Swedbank Stadion Malmö 24,000 21,000
Gamla Ullevi Göteborg 18,800 16,700
Olympia Helsingborg 17,000 12,000
Örjans Vall Halmstad 15,500 8,000

Sponsorship issues

The Max restaurant at Borås Arena.
File:Swedbank stadion 29 june 2009.jpg
Swedbank Stadion without the Swedbank Stadion logo.

Following the refusal of the Swedish hamburger chain Max to close their restaurant at Borås Arena during the tournament (as they are not an official UEFA sponsor), UEFA disqualified Borås Arena from hosting games during the tournament. There is a contract between UEFA and the city and between UEFA and its sponsors saying that the UEFA sponsors shall have monopoly around the arena. A city cannot force Max to close down even if it happened to sign a contract with someone saying so, as Max have a tenancy agreement with the city.[6][7][8]

On 2 September 2008, the Swedish Football Association nominated Örjans Vall in Halmstad as a replacement venue for Borås Arena,[9] and they officially became the fourth host city a few days later.[10] They were awarded the three group stage games that were to be hosted by Borås Arena, while the second semi-final was moved from Borås to Helsingborg and Olympia.[11]

Swedbank Stadion was referred to as Malmö New Stadium during the tournament, as Swedbank - which owns the naming rights to the stadium - are not official UEFA sponsors.[12]

Squads

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Matches

All times are Central European Summer Time (UTC+2).

Group stage

Group A

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Italy 3 2 1 0 4 2 +2 7
 Sweden 3 2 0 1 9 4 +5 6
 Serbia 3 0 2 1 1 3 −2 2
 Belarus 3 0 1 2 2 7 −5 1

16 June 2009
18:15
Sweden  5 – 1  Belarus
Martynovich Goal 34' (o.g.)
Berg Goal 38'44'81'
Svensson Goal 89'
Report Kislyak Goal 33'

16 June 2009
20:45
Italy  0 – 0  Serbia
Report
Olympia, Helsingborg
Attendance: 7,158
Referee: Pedro Proença (Portugal)

19 June 2009
16:00
Sweden  1 – 2  Italy
Toivonen Goal 89' Report Balotelli Goal 23'
Acquafresca Goal 53'
Olympia, Helsingborg
Attendance: 11,618
Referee: Tony Chapron (France)

19 June 2009
18:15
Belarus  0 – 0  Serbia
Report
Malmö New Stadium, Malmö
Attendance: 3,313
Referee: Cüneyt Çakır (Turkey)

23 June 2009
20:45
Serbia  1 – 3  Sweden
Kačar Goal 27' Report Berg Goal 7'15' (pen.)
Toivonen Goal 29'
Malmö New Stadium, Malmö
Attendance: 19,820
Referee: Pedro Proença (Portugal)

23 June 2009
20:45
Belarus  1 – 2  Italy
Kislyak Goal 45' Report Acquafresca Goal 45+3' (pen.)75'
Olympia, Helsingborg
Attendance: 3,014
Referee: Claudio Circhetta (Switzerland)

Group B

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 England 3 2 1 0 5 2 +3 7
 Germany 3 1 2 0 3 1 +2 5
 Spain 3 1 1 1 2 2 0 4
 Finland 3 0 0 3 1 6 −5 0

15 June 2009
18:15
England  2 – 1  Finland
Cattermole Goal 15'
Richards Goal 53'
Report Sparv Goal 33' (pen.)
Örjans Vall, Halmstad
Attendance: 6,828
Referee: Cüneyt Çakır (Turkey)

15 June 2009
20:45
Spain  0 – 0  Germany
Report
Gamla Ullevi, Gothenburg
Attendance: 15,827
Referee: Tony Chapron (France)

18 June 2009
18:15
Germany  2 – 0  Finland
Höwedes Goal 59'
Dejagah Goal 61'
Report
Örjans Vall, Halmstad
Attendance: 6,011
Referee: Peter Rasmussen (Denmark)

18 June 2009
20:45
Spain  0 – 2  England
Report Campbell Goal 67'
Milner Goal 73'
Gamla Ullevi, Gothenburg
Attendance: 16,123
Referee: Bjorn Kuipers (Netherlands)

22 June 2009
20:45
Finland  0 – 2  Spain
Report Torrejón Goal 29'
León Goal 55'
Gamla Ullevi, Gothenburg
Attendance: 8,093
Referee: Bjorn Kuipers (Netherlands)

22 June 2009
20:45
Germany  1 – 1  England
Castro Goal 5' Report Rodwell Goal 30'
Örjans Vall, Halmstad
Attendance: 7,414
Referee: Peter Rasmussen (Denmark)

Knockout stage

Semi-finals Final
26 June – Helsingborg
  Italy 0  
  Germany 1  
 
29 June – Malmö
      Germany 4
    England 0
26 June – Gothenburg
  England (p) 3 (5)
  Sweden 3 (4)  

Semi-finals

26 June 2009
18:00
England  3 – 3 (a.e.t.)  Sweden
Cranie Goal 1'
Onuoha Goal 27'
Bjärsmyr Goal 38' (o.g.)
Report Berg Goal 68'81'
Toivonen Goal 75'
  Penalties  
Milner Penalty missed
Hart Penalty scored
Cattermole Penalty scored
Johnson Penalty scored
Walcott Penalty scored
Gibbs Penalty scored
5 – 4 Penalty missed Berg
Penalty scored Elm
Penalty scored Bjärsmyr
Penalty scored Lustig
Penalty scored R. Bengtsson
Penalty missed Molins
Gamla Ullevi, Gothenburg
Attendance: 16,385
Referee: Cüneyt Çakır (Turkey)

26 June 2009
20:45
Italy  0 – 1  Germany
Report Beck Goal 48'
Olympia, Helsingborg
Attendance: 8,094
Referee: Pedro Proença (Portugal)

Final

29 June 2009
20:45
Germany  4 – 0  England
Castro Goal 23'
Özil Goal 48'
Wagner Goal 79'84'
Report
Malmö New Stadium, Malmö
Attendance: 18,769
Referee: Bjorn Kuipers (Netherlands)
Germany
England
Germany
GERMANY:
GK 1 Manuel Neuer
RB 2 Andreas Beck
CB 4 Benedikt Höwedes
CB 5 Jérôme Boateng
LB 3 Sebastian Boenisch Booked 65'
DM 15 Mats Hummels Substituted off 83'
RM 14 Fabian Johnson Substituted off 69'
CM 20 Gonzalo Castro
CM 8 Sami Khedira (c)
LM 10 Mesut Özil Substituted off 89'
CF 13 Sandro Wagner Booked 84'
Substitutions:
MF 16 Daniel Schwaab Substituted in 69'
MF 6 Dennis Aogo Substituted in 83'
DF 19 Marcel Schmelzer Substituted in 89'
Coach:
Germany Horst Hrubesch
England
ENGLAND:
GK 22 Scott Loach
RB 2 Martin Cranie Substituted off 79'
CB 17 Micah Richards
CB 6 Nedum Onuoha Substituted off 46'
LB 19 Kieran Gibbs
DM 12 Fabrice Muamba Substituted off 78'
CM 4 Lee Cattermole
CM 10 Mark Noble (c)
RW 7 James Milner
LW 11 Adam Johnson
CF 14 Theo Walcott
Substitutions:
DF 18 Michael Mancienne Substituted in 46'
MF 15 Jack Rodwell Substituted in 78'
MF 8 Craig Gardner Substituted in 79'
Coach:
England Stuart Pearce

Man of the Match:
Mesut Özil (Germany)

Assistant referees:
Joël De Bruyn (Belgium)
György Ring (Hungary)
Fourth official:
Pedro Proença (Portugal)

Goalscorers

Match ball

The match ball for the competition is called the Adidas Terrapass, which was unveiled at the tournament draw in Gothenburg on 3 December. The ball is bright blue and yellow, the colours of the Swedish flag. It features 12 watermarks including one containing a map of Europe and one of the tournament logo. It is composed of 14 thermally bonded panels, which are claimed to improve the ball's accuracy and swerve.

References

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External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons