UEFA Euro 2020 statistics
The following article outlines statistics for UEFA Euro 2020, which took place across Europe from 11 June to 11 July 2021 after being postponed by a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1] Goals scored during penalty shoot-outs are not counted, and matches decided by a penalty shoot-out are considered draws.
Goalscorers
[edit]There were 142 goals scored in 51 matches, for an average of 2.78 goals per match.
The tournament had the highest goal average since UEFA Euro 1976, prior to the introduction of the group stage.[3] Eleven own goals were scored in the tournament, two more than at all the previous tournaments combined.[4] With his goals in this tournament, Cristiano Ronaldo became the top goalscorer at the European Championship with 14 goals.[5]
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
- Marko Arnautović
- Christoph Baumgartner
- Michael Gregoritsch
- Saša Kalajdžić
- Stefan Lainer
- Kevin De Bruyne
- Thomas Meunier
- Luka Modrić
- Mislav Oršić
- Mario Pašalić
- Nikola Vlašić
- Tomáš Holeš
- Martin Braithwaite
- Andreas Christensen
- Thomas Delaney
- Jordan Henderson
- Harry Maguire
- Luke Shaw
- Joel Pohjanpalo
- Antoine Griezmann
- Paul Pogba
- Leon Goretzka
- Robin Gosens
- Attila Fiola
- András Schäfer
- Ádám Szalai
- Nicolò Barella
- Leonardo Bonucci
- Wout Weghorst
- Ezgjan Alioski
- Goran Pandev
- Karol Linetty
- Raphaël Guerreiro
- Diogo Jota
- Artem Dzyuba
- Aleksei Miranchuk
- Callum McGregor
- Milan Škriniar
- César Azpilicueta
- Aymeric Laporte
- Mikel Oyarzabal
- Viktor Claesson
- Breel Embolo
- Mario Gavranović
- İrfan Kahveci
- Artem Dovbyk
- Oleksandr Zinchenko
- Kieffer Moore
- Aaron Ramsey
- Connor Roberts
1 own goal
- Simon Kjær (against England)
- Lukas Hradecky (against Belgium)
- Mats Hummels (against France)
- Wojciech Szczęsny (against Slovakia)
- Rúben Dias (against Germany)
- Raphaël Guerreiro (against Germany)
- Martin Dúbravka (against Spain)
- Juraj Kucka (against Spain)
- Pedri (against Croatia)
- Denis Zakaria (against Spain)
- Merih Demiral (against Italy)
Source: UEFA[2]
Assists
[edit]4 assists
3 assists
2 assists
1 assist
- Konrad Laimer
- Marcel Sabitzer
- Louis Schaub
- Eden Hazard
- Dries Mertens
- Thomas Vermaelen
- Mateo Kovačić
- Andrej Kramarić
- Luka Modrić
- Mislav Oršić
- Ivan Perišić
- Tomáš Holeš
- Tomáš Kalas
- Andreas Cornelius
- Mikkel Damsgaard
- Mathias Jensen
- Joakim Mæhle
- Jens Stryger Larsen
- Mason Mount
- Kalvin Phillips
- Bukayo Saka
- Raheem Sterling
- Kieran Trippier
- Jere Uronen
- Antoine Griezmann
- Lucas Hernandez
- Kylian Mbappé
- Paul Pogba
- Mats Hummels
- Ádám Szalai
- Francesco Acerbi
- Nicolò Barella
- Ciro Immobile
- Rafael Tolói
- Nathan Aké
- Przemysław Frankowski
- Kamil Jóźwiak
- Maciej Rybus
- Piotr Zieliński
- Diogo Jota
- Cristiano Ronaldo
- Artem Dzyuba
- Marek Hamšík
- Róbert Mak
- José Gayà
- Ferran Torres
- Alexander Isak
- Remo Freuler
- Kevin Mbabu
- Xherdan Shaqiri
- Granit Xhaka
- Hakan Çalhanoğlu
- Oleksandr Karavayev
- Ruslan Malinovskyi
- Roman Yaremchuk
- Oleksandr Zinchenko
- Joe Morrell
Source: UEFA[6]
Clean sheets
[edit]5 clean sheets
3 clean sheets
2 clean sheets
1 clean sheet
Source: UEFA[7]
Awards
[edit]Golden Boot
[edit]Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal and Patrik Schick of Czech Republic scored five goals each, but Ronaldo had one assist and thus received the Golden Boot award.[8]
Man of the Match
[edit]Source: UEFA[9]
Scoring
[edit]- Overview
- Total number of goals scored: 142
- Average goals per match: 2.78
- Total number of braces: 14
Karim Benzema (2), Kasper Dolberg, Emil Forsberg, Harry Kane, Robert Lewandowski, Manuel Locatelli, Romelu Lukaku, Cristiano Ronaldo (2), Patrik Schick, Haris Seferovic, Xherdan Shaqiri, Georginio Wijnaldum - Total number of penalty kicks awarded: 16
- Total number of penalty kicks scored: 8
Cristiano Ronaldo for Portugal against Hungary and France (2)
Memphis Depay for Netherlands against Austria
Emil Forsberg for Sweden against Slovakia
Patrik Schick for Czech Republic against Croatia
Artem Dzyuba for Russia against Denmark
Karim Benzema for France against Portugal
Romelu Lukaku for Belgium against Italy - Total number of penalty kicks missed or saved: 8
Pierre-Emile Højbjerg for Denmark against Finland
Gareth Bale for Wales against Turkey
Ezgjan Alioski for North Macedonia against Ukraine
Ruslan Malinovskyi for Ukraine against North Macedonia
Gerard Moreno for Spain against Poland
Álvaro Morata for Spain against Slovakia
Ricardo Rodríguez for Switzerland against France
Harry Kane for England against Denmark - Penalty kick success rate: 50%
- Own goals scored: 11
Merih Demiral, Wojciech Szczęsny, Mats Hummels, Rúben Dias, Raphaël Guerreiro, Lukas Hradecky, Martin Dúbravka, Juraj Kucka, Pedri, Denis Zakaria, Simon Kjær
- Timing
- First goal of the tournament: Merih Demiral (o.g.) for Italy against Turkey
- First brace of the tournament: Romelu Lukaku for Belgium against Russia
- Last goal of the tournament: Leonardo Bonucci for Italy against England
- Last brace of the tournament: Harry Kane for England against Ukraine
- Fastest goal in a match from kickoff: 2nd minute (1:22[10])
Emil Forsberg for Sweden against Poland - Fastest goal in a match after coming on as a substitute: 1 minute
Ferran Torres for Spain against Slovakia (introduced in the 66th minute) - Latest goal in a match without extra time: 90+5th minute
Connor Roberts for Wales against Turkey - Latest goal in a match with extra time: 120+1st minute
Artem Dovbyk for Ukraine against Sweden - Latest winning goal in a match without extra time: 90+4th minute
Viktor Claesson for Sweden against Poland - Latest winning goal in a match with extra time: 120+1st minute
Artem Dovbyk for Ukraine against Sweden - Shortest time difference between two goals scored by the same team in a match: 2 minutes
Karim Benzema for France against Switzerland
- Teams
- Most goals scored by a team: 13
Italy, Spain - Fewest goals scored by a team: 1
Finland, Scotland, Turkey - Most goals conceded by a team: 10
Ukraine - Fewest goals conceded by a team: 2
England - Best goal difference: +9
England, Italy - Worst goal difference: –7
Turkey - Most goals scored in a match by both teams: 8
Croatia (3–5) Spain - Most goals scored in a match by one team: 5
Spain against Slovakia
Spain against Croatia - Most goals scored in a match by the losing team: 3
Croatia against Spain - Biggest margin of victory: 5 goals
Slovakia (0–5) Spain - Most clean sheets achieved by a team: 5
England - Fewest clean sheets achieved by a team: 0
Croatia, Germany, Hungary, North Macedonia, Poland, Slovakia, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine - Most clean sheets given by an opposing team: 2
Finland, Germany, Scotland, Slovakia, Turkey, Ukraine, Wales - Fewest clean sheets given by an opposing team: 0
Belgium, France, Italy, Poland - Most consecutive clean sheets achieved by a team: 5
England - Most consecutive clean sheets given by an opposing team: 2
Finland, Scotland, Slovakia, Turkey, Wales
- Individual
- Most goals scored by an individual: 5
Cristiano Ronaldo, Patrik Schick - Most assists provided by an individual: 4
Steven Zuber - Most goals and assists produced by an individual: 6
Cristiano Ronaldo (5 goals, 1 assist) - Most clean sheets achieved by a goalkeeper: 5
Jordan Pickford - Fewest clean sheets achieved by a goalkeeper: 0
Heorhiy Bushchan, Uğurcan Çakır, Stole Dimitrievski, Martin Dúbravka, Péter Gulácsi, Dominik Livaković, Manuel Neuer, Anton Shunin, Yann Sommer, Wojciech Szczęsny - Most consecutive clean sheets achieved by a goalkeeper: 5
Jordan Pickford - Most goals scored by one player in a match: 2
Romelu Lukaku for Belgium against Russia, Patrik Schick for Czech Republic against Scotland, Cristiano Ronaldo for Portugal against Hungary, Manuel Locatelli for Italy against Switzerland, Xherdan Shaqiri for Switzerland against Turkey, Georginio Wijnaldum for Netherlands against North Macedonia, Emil Forsberg for Sweden against Poland, Robert Lewandowski for Poland against Sweden, Karim Benzema for France against Portugal, Cristiano Ronaldo for Portugal against France, Kasper Dolberg for Denmark against Wales, Karim Benzema for France against Switzerland, Haris Seferovic for Switzerland against France, Harry Kane for England against Ukraine - Oldest goal scorer: 37 years and 321 days
Goran Pandev for North Macedonia against Austria - Youngest goal scorer: 20 years and 353 days
Mikkel Damsgaard for Denmark against Russia
Attendance
[edit]- Overall attendance: 1,099,278
- Average attendance per match: 21,554
- Highest attendance: 67,173 – Italy vs England[11]
- Lowest attendance: 5,607 – Croatia vs Czech Republic[12]
Wins and losses
[edit]- Most wins: 5 – England, Italy
- Fewest wins: 0 – Hungary, North Macedonia, Poland, Scotland, Turkey
- Most losses: 3 – Denmark, North Macedonia, Turkey, Ukraine
- Fewest losses: 0 – England, France, Italy, Spain
- Most draws: 4 – Spain
- Fewest draws: 0 – Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Netherlands, North Macedonia, Russia, Slovakia, Turkey, Ukraine
- Most points in the group stage: 9 – Belgium, Italy, Netherlands
- Fewest points in the group stage: 0 – North Macedonia, Turkey
Discipline
[edit]Summary
[edit]- Total number of yellow cards: 151
- Average yellow cards per match: 2.96
- Total number of red cards: 6
- Average red cards per match: 0.12
- First yellow card of the tournament: Çağlar Söyüncü for Turkey against Italy
- First red card of the tournament: Grzegorz Krychowiak for Poland against Slovakia
- Fastest yellow card from kick off: 2nd minute – Marko Arnautović for Austria against Italy
- Fastest yellow card after coming on as a substitute: 1 minute – Scott McKenna for Scotland against Croatia (introduced in the 33rd minute)
- Latest yellow card in a match without extra time: 90+5th minute – Rodri for Spain against Poland
- Latest yellow card in a match with extra time: 120+1st minute – Aleksandar Dragović for Austria against Italy, Artem Dovbyk for Ukraine against Sweden, Mario Gavranović for Switzerland against Spain
- Fastest dismissal from kick off: 55th minute – Ethan Ampadu for Wales against Italy, Matthijs de Ligt for Netherlands against Czech Republic
- Fastest dismissal of a substitute: 31 minutes – Harry Wilson for Wales against Denmark (introduced in the 59th minute)
- Latest dismissal in a match without extra time: 90th minute – Harry Wilson for Wales against Denmark
- Latest dismissal in a match with extra time: 99th minute – Marcus Danielson for Sweden against Ukraine
- Shortest time difference between two yellow cards given to the same player: 40 minutes – Grzegorz Krychowiak for Poland against Slovakia (booked in the 22nd minute and again in the 62nd minute)
- Most yellow cards (team): 12 – Italy
- Most red cards (team): 2 – Wales
- Fewest yellow cards (team): 3 – Netherlands, Scotland
- Most yellow cards (player): 3 – Grzegorz Krychowiak, Harry Maguire
- Most red cards (player): 1 – Grzegorz Krychowiak, Ethan Ampadu, Harry Wilson, Matthijs de Ligt, Marcus Danielson, Remo Freuler
- Most yellow cards (match): 7 – France vs Switzerland
- Most red cards (match): 1 – Poland vs Slovakia, Italy vs Wales, Wales vs Denmark, Netherlands vs Czech Republic, Sweden vs Ukraine, Switzerland vs Spain
- Fewest yellow cards (match): 0 – Belgium vs Russia, Scotland vs Czech Republic, Ukraine vs Austria, Finland vs Belgium, Ukraine vs England
- Most cards in one match: 7 – France vs Switzerland (7 yellow cards)
Sanctions
[edit]By match
[edit]Source: UEFA[citation needed]
By referee
[edit]Referee | Nation | Pld | Pen. | Red cards | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Felix Brych | Germany | 5 | 0 | 8 | 0 | — |
Cüneyt Çakır | Turkey | 3 | 0 | 5 | 1 | — |
Carlos del Cerro Grande | Spain | 2 | 0 | 5 | 1 | — |
Andreas Ekberg | Sweden | 1 | 0 | 3 | 0 | — |
Orel Grinfeld | Israel | 1 | 0 | 3 | 1 | — |
Ovidiu Hațegan | Romania | 2 | 2 | 5 | 0 | 1 second yellow, 1 straight red |
Sergei Karasev | Russia | 3 | 1 | 10 | 0 | 1 straight red |
István Kovács | Romania | 1 | 0 | 4 | 0 | — |
Björn Kuipers | Netherlands | 4 | 0 | 16 | 1 | — |
Danny Makkelie | Netherlands | 4 | 0 | 14 | 1 | — |
Antonio Mateu Lahoz | Spain | 3 | 0 | 6 | 3 | — |
Michael Oliver | England | 3 | 1 | 8 | 0 | 1 straight red |
Daniele Orsato | Italy | 3 | 1 | 14 | 1 | 1 straight red |
Fernando Rapallini | Argentina | 3 | 0 | 12 | 3 | — |
Daniel Siebert | Germany | 3 | 1 | 8 | 1 | 1 straight red |
Artur Soares Dias | Portugal | 2 | 0 | 5 | 1 | — |
Anthony Taylor | England | 3 | 0 | 9 | 1 | — |
Clément Turpin | France | 2 | 0 | 6 | 1 | — |
Slavko Vinčić | Slovenia | 3 | 0 | 8 | 1 | — |
Source: UEFA[citation needed]
By team
[edit]Team | Red cards | Suspensions | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Austria | 0 | 6 | — | Arnautović vs Netherlands |
Belgium | 0 | 4 | — | — |
Croatia | 0 | 7 | — | Lovren vs Spain |
Czech Republic | 0 | 7 | — | Bořil vs Netherlands |
Denmark | 0 | 5 | — | — |
England | 0 | 6 | — | — |
Finland | 0 | 4 | — | — |
France | 0 | 8 | — | — |
Germany | 0 | 7 | — | — |
Hungary | 0 | 6 | — | — |
Italy | 0 | 12 | — | — |
Netherlands | 1 | 3 | De Ligt vs Czech Republic (straight red) | — |
North Macedonia | 0 | 8 | — | — |
Poland | 1 | 8 | Krychowiak vs Slovakia (second booking) | Krychowiak vs Spain |
Portugal | 0 | 4 | — | — |
Russia | 0 | 5 | — | — |
Scotland | 0 | 3 | — | — |
Slovakia | 0 | 6 | — | — |
Spain | 0 | 6 | — | — |
Sweden | 1 | 5 | Danielson vs Ukraine (straight red) | — |
Switzerland | 1 | 11 | Freuler vs Spain (straight red) | Xhaka vs Spain |
Turkey | 0 | 7 | — | — |
Ukraine | 0 | 4 | — | — |
Wales | 2 | 9 | Ampadu vs Italy (straight red) Wilson vs Denmark (straight red) | Ampadu vs Denmark |
Source: UEFA[13]