Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Germany had a wide choice of stadiums that satisfied UEFA's minimum capacity requirement of 30,000 seats for European Championship matches. [17] The Olympiastadion in Berlin was the largest stadium at UEFA Euro 2024. The stadium hosted the final of the tournament, as well as three group stage matches, a round of 16 matches, and a quarterfinal.
Merkur Spiel-Arena (stylized in all caps), previously known as the Esprit Arena (until 2 August 2018), the LTU Arena (until June 2009), and also called the Düsseldorf Arena (during the 2011 Eurovision Song Contest and the UEFA Euro 2024), is a retractable roof football stadium in Düsseldorf, Germany.
Euro 2024 kicks off in Munich on Friday 14 June with Scotland playing Germany, and ends with the final in Berlin on Sunday 14 July. Many fans will want to travel to Germany.
The seventeen European Championship tournaments have been won by ten national teams: Spain have won four titles, Germany have won three titles, Italy and France have won two titles, and the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, the Netherlands, Denmark, Greece and Portugal have won one title each. To date, Spain is the only team to have won consecutive ...
Arena AufSchalke (German pronunciation: [aˈʁeːnaː ʔaʊfˈʃalkə]), currently known as Veltins-Arena (pronounced [ˈfɛltɪnsʔaˌʁeːnaː]) for sponsorship reasons, is a retractable roof and pitch, football stadium in Gelsenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
Euro 2024 host Germany moved onto the quarterfinals of the tournament after beating Denmark 2-0 in a pulsating encounter at the BVB Stadion in Dortmund on Saturday.
In 2011, the venue hosted the World Culture Festival organized by the Art of Living where 70,000 people meditated for peace. [6] In 2018, the venue hosted the 2018 European Athletics Championships. In 2024, the venue hosted the UEFA Euro 2024 final.
1974 FIFA World Cup venue, UEFA Euro 1988 venue, 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup Final venue, 2006 FIFA World Cup venue, UEFA Euro 2024 venue 1980 UEFA Cup final venue, 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup final venue: 1925: 67 Merkur Spiel-Arena: 47,000 [16] Düsseldorf Germany: Fortuna Düsseldorf UEFA Euro 2024 venue Stadium uses retractable seating ...