Croatia at the UEFA European Football Championship

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This is a record of Croatia's results at the UEFA European Football Championship. The European Championship is one of the major competitive international football tournaments, first played in 1960, whose finals stage has been held every four years, with the 14th staging of the competition occurring in 2012.

The Croatia national football team did not enter the competition until 1996, having been part of SFR Yugoslavia up until the qualifying stages for the 1992 edition. Croatia has competed in the qualifying competition every time since, for a total of five tournaments, although has failed to qualify for the finals proper on one occasion, in 2000 (played in Belgium and the Netherlands). The team's best performance was reaching the quarter-finals twice - in 1996 and 2008, losing to Germany and Turkey respectively.

The tournament consists of two parts, the qualification phase and the final phase (officially called the UEFA European Football Championship Finals). The qualification phase, which currently take place over the two years preceding the Finals, is used to determine which teams qualify for the Finals. The current format of the Finals involves 16 teams competing for the title, at venues within the host nation (or nations) over a period of three weeks.

Records

UEFA European Championship record
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA Squad Pld W D L GF GA
France 1960 Part of  Yugoslavia
23x15px 1964
Italy 1968
Belgium 1972
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1976
Italy 1980
France 1984
West Germany 1988
Sweden 1992
England 1996 Quarter-final 7th 4 2 0 2 5 5 Squad 10 7 2 1 22 5
Belgium Netherlands 2000 Did Not Qualify 8 4 3 1 13 9
Portugal 2004 Group Stage 13th 3 0 2 1 4 6 Squad 10 6 2 2 14 5
Austria Switzerland 2008 Quarter-final 5th 4 3 1 0 5 2 Squad 12 9 2 1 28 8
Poland Ukraine 2012 Group Stage 10th 3 1 1 1 4 3 Squad 12 8 2 2 21 7
France 2016 Qualification in progress 8 4 3 1 16 5
Total Quarter-final 4/14 14 6 4 4 18 16 53 34 12 8 98 36
*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks; correct as of 6 September 2015 (Norway v. Croatia)

Results

1996 England

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2000 Belgium/Netherlands

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2004 Portugal

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2008 Austria/Switzerland

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In the qualifiers, Croatia was drawn into Group E of Euro 2008's qualifications, along with Andorra, England, Estonia, Macedonia, Israel and Russia.

Over the course of qualifying, Croatia racked up nine wins, two draws, and one loss. Croatia's loss was a 2–0 defeat at Skopje, Macedonia. Croatia and Romania became the final teams to record their first loss, both on the November 17, 2007 matchday, in a qualification cycle where every team suffered at least one defeat. Croatia gathered numerous headlines after knocking England out on the final matchday, with a 3–2 victory at Wembley Stadium.[1]

Croatian striker Eduardo was the second-highest goalscorer in qualifications with 10 goals, trailing Northern Ireland's David Healy.

In a match that sparked much controversy and disappointment,[2] Croatia were considered the unluckiest team of the tournament as they eventually lost to Turkey in the quarter-finals after a daunting match in Vienna. In the 119th minute, Ivan Klasnić scored to put Croatia ahead but Turkey scored a last kick equaliser courtesy of Semih Şentürk to take the match to a penalty shootout. Croatia eventually lost 1–3 on penalties, with Modric, Rakitic and Petric each missing their respective spot kicks to hand Turkey an unbelievable victory. As many shock roamed around Croatia as a nation, Slaven Bilić went on to say "This defeat will haunt us for the rest of our lives". It was the final International game for long standing captain Niko Kovač who announced his retirement from international football midway during the tournament.

2012 Poland/Ukraine

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2016 France

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List of matches

Euro Round Opponent Score Result Venue Scorers
1996 Group stage  Turkey 1–0 W Nottingham Vlaović
 Denmark 3–0 W Sheffield Šuker (2), Boban
 Portugal 0–3 L Nottingham &
Quarter-final  Germany 1–2 L Manchester Šuker
2004 Group stage   Switzerland 0–0 D Leiria &
 France 2–2 D Leiria Rapaić, Pršo
 England 2–4 L Lisbon N. Kovač, Tudor
2008 Group stage  Austria 1–0 W Vienna Modrić
 Germany 2–1 W Klagenfurt Srna, Olić
 Poland 1–0 W Klagenfurt Klasnić
Quarter-final  Turkey 1–1 D Vienna Klasnić
2012 Group stage  Republic of Ireland 3–1 W Poznań Mandžukić(2), Jelavić
 Italy 1–1 D Poznań Mandžukić
 Spain 0–1 L Gdańsk &

See also

References

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External links