Historie
Fußball - Europameisterschaften
1960 |
1. SOWJETUNION (Lew Jaschin, Igor Netto, Wiktor Ponedelnik, Juri Woinowv, Thecheli, Walentin Iwanow, Anatoli Krutikow, Bubukin, Anatoli Masljonkin, Metreweli, Meschki) |
1964 |
1. SPANIEN (José Angel Iribar, Ignacio Zoco, Fernando Olivella, José Maria Fusté, Isacio Calleja, Feliciano Munoz Rivilla, Amaro Amancio, Jesus Pereda, Martinez Marcelino, Luiz Suàrez, Carlos Lapetra, -Zaballa, Villa, Reja Jeverino Francisco Gento) |
1968 |
1. ITALIEN (Sandro Salvadore, Dino Zoff, Luigi Riva, Roberto Rosato, Aristide Guarneri, Giacinto Facchetti, Pietro Anastasi, Giancarlo de Sisti, Angelo Domenghini, Alessandro Mazzola, Tarcisio Burgnich, Giorgio Ferrini, Castano, Antonio Juliano, Giovanni Lodetti, Pierino Prati, Giancarlo Bercellino, Enrico Albertosi, Lido Vieri, Mario Bertini, Armando Picchi, Gianni Rivera) |
1972 |
1. DEUTSCHLAND (Franz Beckenbauer, Sepp Maier, Georg Schwarzenbeck, Jupp Heynckes, Günter Netzer, Herbert Wimmer, Gerd Müller, Horst-Dieter Höttges, Erwin Kremers, Paul Breitner, Uli Hoeneß, Jürgen Grabowski, Heinz Flohe, Siegfried Held) |
1976 |
1. TSCHECHOSLOWAKEI (Anton Ondrus, Ivo Viktor, Karel Dobias, Jozéf Capkovic, Marian Masny, Josef Moder, Jan Svehlik, Jan Pivarnik, Antonin Panenka, Zdenek Nehoda, Koloman Gögh, Ladislav Jurkemik, Alexander Vencel, Dusan Gallis, Jaroslav Pollak, Biros, Frantisek Stambacher, Frantisek Vesely, Herda, Michalik) |
1980 |
1. DEUTSCHLAND (Uli Stielike, Harald Schumacher, Hans-Peter Briegel, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Karl-Heinz Förster, Horst Hrubesch, Klaus Allofs, Bernd Schuster, Bernard Dietz, Manfred Kaltz, Hans Müller, Bernd Förster, Miroslav Votava, Bernd Cullman, Calle Del'Haye, Lothar Matthäus, Felix Magath) |
1984 |
1. FRANKREICH (Yvon Le Roux, Maxime Bossis, Patrick Battiston, Jean Francois Domergue, Joel Bats, Luis Fernandez, Bruno Bellone, Bernard Lacombe, Alain Giresse, Michel Platini, Jean Tigana, -Didier Six, Philippe Bergeroo, Manuel Amoros, Thierry Thusseau, Jean-Marc Ferrari, Bernard Genghini, Daniel Bravo, Dominique Rocheteau, Albert Rust) |
1988 |
1. NIEDERLANDE (Johnny Bosman, Berri van Aerle, Frank Rijkaard, Gerald Vanenburg, Erwin Koeman, Marco van Basten, Aron Winter, Arnold Mühren, Hans van Breukelen, Ronald Koeman, Adrie van Tiggelen, Jan Wouters, Wim Kieft, John van't Schip, Ruud Gullit, -Joop Hiele, Wilbert Survijn, Jacob "Sjaak" Troost, Wilhelmus Koevermans, Hendrik Krüzen) |
1992 |
1. DÄNEMARK (Peter Schmeichel, John Sivebæk, Kent Nielsen, Lars Olsen, Henrik Andersen, Kim Christofte, John Jensen, Johnny Mølby, Flemming Povlsen, Lars Elstrup, Brian Laudrup, Torben Piechnik, Henrik Larsen, Torben Frank, Bent Christensen, Mogens Krogh, Claus Christiansen, Kim Vilfort, Peter Nielsen, Morten Bruun) |
1996 |
1. DEUTSCHLAND (Andreas Köpke, Oliver Kahn, Oliver Reck, Stefan Reuter, Thomas Helmer, Matthias Sammer, Markus Babbel, Jürgen Kohler, René Schneider, Marco Bode, Steffen Freund, Andreas Möller, Mehmet Scholl, Thomas Häßler, Mario Basler, Christian Ziege, Thomas Strunz, Dieter Eilts, Fredy Bobic, Stefan Kuntz, Jürgen Klinsmann, Oliver Bierhoff, Jens Todt) |
2000 |
1. FRANKREICH (Bernard Lama, Vincent Candela, Bixente Lizarazu, Patrick Vieira, Laurent Blanc, Youri Djorkaeff, Didier Deschamps, Marcel Desailly, Nicolas Anelka, Zinedine Zidane, Robert Pires, Thierry Henry, Sylvain Wiltord, Johan Micoud, Lilian Thuram, Fabien Barthez, Emmanuel Petit, Frank Leboeuf, Christian Karembeu, David Trezeguet, Christophe Dugarry, Ulrich Rame) |
2004 |
1.
GRIECHENLAND (Antonis Nikolopidis, Kostas Chalkias, Theofanis Katergiannakis, Georgios Seitaridis, Stylianos Venetidis, Nikolaos Dabizas, Traianos Dellas, Panagiotis Fissas, Ioannis Goumas, Michalis Kapsis, Angelos Basinas, Theodoros Zagorakis, Stylianos Giannakopoulos, Vassilios Tsiartas, Pantelis Kafes, Georgios Georgiadis, Georgios Karagounis, Konstantinos Katsuranis, Vassilios Lakis, Angelos Charisteas, Themistoklis Nikolaidis, Zisis Vryzas, Dimitrios Papadopoulos) |