Delayed one year by the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020 European Championship is in the history and financial books after being among the most difficult soccer tournaments ever organized. (More Football News)
An event planned within strict health rules, that survived a near-tragedy involving a hugely popular player, Denmark’s Christian Eriksen, on just the second day, and ended with fan violence at the final, has been hailed a success.
The quality of play and emotional power of soccer to create shared experiences between fans and nations should ensure Euro 2020 is an enduring positive memory.
The vision sold by UEFA leaders in 2012 was a celebration of European soccer with fans criss-crossing 13 host countries on low-cost flights to watch games in packed stadiums.
The reality was 24 national teams emerging from their (mostly) biosecure bubbles to play in 11 cities for routinely fewer than 12,000 fans, and few if any of those able to travel internationally.
Yet, this was a victory in a pandemic that trashed the plans of sports organizers worldwide.
"I will remember it as the beginning of normality and the return of fans," UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin told British broadcaster BBC last week.
Fans did indeed return, and to a degree that frightened some observing the Italy-England final on Sunday in London.
The official attendance of 67,173 was likely not the true total at 90,000-capacity Wembley Stadium.
Hundreds of ticketless England fans broke through security barriers — and were fought by other English fans — to see their team’s first tournament final for 55 years.
Virus-respecting protocols also were widely ignored at the stadium and in heavy-drinking gatherings in the city.
"Devastating," wrote World Health Organization epidemiologist Maria Van Kerkhove on her Twitter account. "Am I supposed to be enjoying watching transmission happening in front of my eyes?"
The tournament released emotions pent up during months of lockdowns and restrictions on normal life from COVID-19.
And when Italy goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma saved teenager Bukayo Saka’s penalty to decide the shootout late on Sunday night, it marked when European soccer’s calendar cleared the congestion created by those three months lost last year.
It also ensured UEFA’s commercial revenues for the tournament, expected to be around 2 billion euros ($2.4 billion), that helps fund developing soccer at all levels across 55 member countries.
Here's a look back at an unusual tournament:
TACKLING THE VIRUS
A serious virus outbreak in any team was UEFA's biggest concern. A special rule let games be postponed up to 48 hours if replacements were needed for infected or quarantined players.
Strict protocols helped limit positive cases to a few scattered across several teams early in the tournament.