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  1. The 2008 UEFA European Football Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Euro 2008 or simply Euro 2008, was the 13th UEFA European Championship, a quadrennial football tournament contested by the member nations of UEFA (the Union of European Football Associations).

  2. EURO 2008: All you need to know. Spain shone, with the final scoreline deceptive; wind back to the finals in Austria and Switzerland. Best of EURO. 01:58. Live 01/01/2023. Best goals of EURO...

    • Who Won Euro 2008?
    • Who Were The Top Scorers at Euro 2008?
    • Where Was Euro 2008 held?
    • Who Managed The Winning Team at Euro 2008?
    • Who Was The Winning Captain at Euro 2008?
    • What Was The Format For Euro 2008?
    • How Many Teams Featured at Euro 2008?
    • How Did Euro 2008 Qualifying Work?
    • Who Was in The Euro 2008 Squad of The Tournament?
    • Who Scored The First Goal at Euro 2008?

    Spain beat Germany 1-0 in the UEFA EURO 2008 final in Vienna on 29 June 2008, but Fernando Torres's goal on 33 minutes was perhaps the least La Roja deserved from a game they utterly dominated. In the course of the decider at the Ernst-Happel-Stadion in Vienna, Spain had seven shots on target while Joachim Löw's side mustered just one. Fielded as a...

    David Villa missed Spain's final win against Germany through injury but had the tiny consolation of ending the tournament as EURO 2008's four-goal top scorer. The Valencia striker kicked off with a hat-trick in a 4-1 victory over Russia (which he called "the best game of my life") and hit a late winner in the next game against Sweden. He scored a n...

    Neighbours Austria and Switzerland co-hosted the 2008 UEFA European Championship, with four venues in each nation. Basel's St.Jakob-Park staged the opening game, with Berne (Stade de Suisse), Geneva (Stade de Genève) and Zurich (Letzigrund) also hosting games in Switzerland. Vienna's Ernst-Happel-Stadion was Austria's main venue – and the arena use...

    Luis Aragonés led Spain to glory at EURO 2008. Famous for his long association with Atlético Madrid – as a player and a coach – he took charge in July 2004 when aged 65 and remoulded the team to chime with the 'tiki-taka' short-passing style then prevalent at Barcelona. He stepped down in the wake of the EURO 2008 victory, proud of a job well done,...

    Iker Casillas became the first goalkeeper to captain a team to the EURO title in 2008. The Real Madrid No1 was still just 27 at the finals but boasted huge experience at the highest levels, including two UEFA Champions League crowns, though he admitted to a few nerves before the final. "I feel responsible for my team-mates and 44 million people," h...

    Staged from 7 June to 29 June, EURO 2008 deployed a similar format to the previous three editions of the tournament, with the top two sides in each of the four four-team groups (three points for a win, one for a draw) moving into the knockout phase. As a new experiment, teams in Groups A and B were separated from teams in Groups C and D until the f...

    There were 16 sides at the final tournament, while 50 UEFA member countries participated in qualifying (excluding co-hosts Austria and Switzerland).

    With Austria and Switzerland qualifying automatically as hosts, the remaining 50 UEFA nations entered a qualifying competition which involved seven groups (six made up of seven teams, one made up of eight teams). The seven group winners and runners-up qualified for the finals directly.

    Spain's Xavi Hernández was named Player of the Tournament, UEFA technical director Andy Roxburgh commenting: "He was extremely influential in the whole possession, passing, penetrating kind of game that Spain played." UEFA’s 23-man squad of the tournament was: GK: Gianluigi Buffon (Italy) GK: Iker Casillas (Spain) GK: Edwin van der Sar (Netherlands...

    Substitute Václav Svĕrkoš of the Czech Republic silenced the home crowd at St. Jakob-Park by scoring the first goal of EURO 2008, as Switzerland lost the 7 June opening game. The low finish was the first of three international goals for the then 24-year-old, who had been the Czech league's 15-goal top scorer in 2007/08 with Baník Ostrava. However, ...

  3. EURO 2008: todo lo que necesitas saber. España brilló y volvió a reinar en Europa en un campeonato que volvió a contar con una fase final en Austria y Suiza. Lo mejor de la EURO. 02:22. En...

  4. The UEFA Euro 2008 final was the final match of Euro 2008, the thirteenth edition of the European Football Championship, UEFA's competition for national football teams. The match was played at Ernst-Happel-Stadion, Vienna, Austria, on 29 June 2008, and was contested by Germany and Spain.

    • UEFA Euro 2008
    • Ernst-Happel-Stadion , Vienna
  5. ¿Quién ganó la EURO 2008? EURO 2008: España - Alemania 1-0. España superó a Alemania por 1-0 en la final de la UEFA EURO 2008 disputada en Viena el 29 de junio de 2008, cuando Fernando...

  6. UEFA EURO - Así fue la UEFA EURO 2008 - Noticias. Así fue la UEFA EURO 2008. domingo, 1 de septiembre de 2013. Resumen del artículo. UEFA.com repasa la 13ª edición del torneo, cuando...