1960 European Nations' Cup final tournament

The final tournament of the 1960 European Nations' Cup was a single-elimination tournament involving the four teams that qualified from the quarter-finals. There were two rounds of matches: a semi-final stage leading to the final to decide the champions. The final tournament began with the semi-finals on 6 July and ended with the final on 10 July at the Parc des Princes in Paris. The Soviet Union won the tournament with a 2–1 victory over Yugoslavia.[1]

All times Central European Time (UTC+1)

Format

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Any game in the final tournament that was undecided by the end of the regular 90 minutes was followed by thirty minutes of extra time (two 15-minute halves). If scores were still level, a coin toss would be used in all matches but the final. If the final finished level after extra time, a replay would take place at a later date to decide the winner.

Teams

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Team Method of
qualification
Date of
qualification
  Czechoslovakia Quarter-final winner 27 March 1960
  France (host) Quarter-final winner 22 May 1960
  Soviet Union Quarter-final winner 28 May 1960
  Yugoslavia Quarter-final winner 29 May 1960

Bracket

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Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 July – Marseille
 
 
  Czechoslovakia0
 
10 July – Paris
 
  Soviet Union3
 
  Soviet Union (a.e.t.)2
 
6 July – Paris
 
  Yugoslavia1
 
  France4
 
 
  Yugoslavia5
 
Third place play-off
 
 
9 July – Marseille
 
 
  Czechoslovakia2
 
 
  France0

Semi-finals

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France vs Yugoslavia

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France  4–5  Yugoslavia
Report
Attendance: 26,370
 
 
 
 
 
 
France
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Yugoslavia
GK 1 Georges Lamia
RB 2 Jean Wendling
LB 4 Bruno Rodzik
RH 3 Robert Herbin
CH 5 Jean-Jacques Marcel
LH 6 René Ferrier
OR 10 François Heutte (c)
IR 8 Lucien Muller
CF 9 Maryan Wisniewski
IL 7 Michel Stievenard
OL 11 Jean Vincent
Manager:
Albert Batteux
 
GK 1 Milutin Šoškić
RB 2 Vladimir Durković
LB 3 Fahrudin Jusufi
RH 4 Ante Žanetić
CH 5 Branko Zebec (c)
LH 6 Željko Perušić
OR 7 Tomislav Knez
IR 8 Dražan Jerković
CF 9 Milan Galić
IL 10 Dragoslav Šekularac
OL 11 Bora Kostić
Managers:
Ljubomir Lovrić
Dragomir Nikolić
Aleksandar Tirnanić

Czechoslovakia vs Soviet Union

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Czechoslovakia  0–3  Soviet Union
Report
Attendance: 25,184
Referee: Cesare Jonni (Italy)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Czechoslovakia
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Soviet Union
GK 1 Viliam Schrojf
RB 2 František Šafránek
LB 3 Ján Popluhár
RH 4 Ladislav Novák (c)
CH 5 Titus Buberník
LH 6 Josef Masopust
OR 7 Josef Vojta
IR 8 Anton Moravčík
CF 9 Andrej Kvašňák
IL 10 Vlastimil Bubník
OL 11 Milan Dolinský
Manager:
Rudolf Vytlačil
 
GK 1 Lev Yashin
RB 2 Givi Chokheli
LB 4 Anatoly Krutikov
RH 5 Yuriy Voynov
CH 3 Anatoli Maslyonkin
LH 6 Igor Netto (c)
OR 7 Slava Metreveli
IR 9 Viktor Ponedelnik
CF 10 Valentin Bubukin
IL 8 Valentin Ivanov
OL 11 Mikheil Meskhi
Manager:
Gavriil Kachalin

Third place play-off

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Czechoslovakia  2–0  France
Report
Attendance: 9,438
Referee: Cesare Jonni (Italy)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Czechoslovakia
 
 
 
 
 
 
France
GK 1 Viliam Schrojf
RB 2 František Šafránek
LB 3 Ján Popluhár
RH 4 Ladislav Novák (c)
CH 5 Titus Buberník
LH 6 Josef Masopust
OR 7 Ladislav Pavlovič
IR 8 Josef Vojta
CF 9 Pavol Molnár
IL 10 Vlastimil Bubník
OL 11 Milan Dolinský
Manager:
Rudolf Vytlačil
 
GK 1 Jean Taillandier
RB 2 Bruno Rodzik
LB 4 André Chorda
RH 5 Jean-Jacques Marcel
CH 3 Robert Jonquet (c)
LH 6 Robert Siatka
OR 7 François Heutte
IR 8 Yvon Douis
CF 9 Maryan Wisniewski
IL 10 Michel Stievenard
OL 11 Jean Vincent
Manager:
Albert Batteux

Final

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Soviet Union  2–1 (a.e.t.)  Yugoslavia
Report
Attendance: 17,966
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Soviet Union
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Yugoslavia
GK 1 Lev Yashin
RB 2 Givi Chokheli
CB 4 Anatoly Krutikov
LB 3 Anatoli Maslyonkin
RH 5 Yuriy Voynov
LH 6 Igor Netto (c)
OR 8 Valentin Ivanov
IR 7 Slava Metreveli
CF 9 Viktor Ponedelnik
IL 10 Valentin Bubukin
OL 11 Mikheil Meskhi
Manager:
Gavriil Kachalin
 
GK 1 Blagoje Vidinić
RB 2 Vladimir Durković
CB 5 Jovan Miladinović
LB 3 Fahrudin Jusufi
RH 4 Ante Žanetić
LH 6 Željko Perušić
OR 7 Željko Matuš
IR 10 Dragoslav Šekularac
CF 8 Dražan Jerković
IL 9 Milan Galić
OL 11 Bora Kostić (c)
Managers:
Ljubomir Lovrić
Dragomir Nikolić
Aleksandar Tirnanić

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Ponedelnik heads Soviet Union to glory". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 1 October 2003. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
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