UEFA Euro 2020 JUNE 12 - JULY 12 The European Championships, postponed for a year by the coronavirus pandemic but retaining the Euro 2020 title – is set to be hosted in 11 cities across Europe. London’s Wembley Stadium will stage the showpiece finale on July 11 WINNING FEELING: Germany – with most match wins at tournament – face tough task with reigning European champions Portugal and world champions France in same group Germany Tournament wins: 26 France 20 Spain 19 Portugal 18 Netherlands 17 Italy 16 Czech Republic 13 Russia 12 England 10 Harry Kane, ENG Top goalscorer in Euro 2020 qualifying with 12 goals Portugal captain Cristiano Ronaldo is Europe’s all-time leading international marksman Host cities Hampden Park, Glasgow 51,000 Wembley Stadium, London Capacity: 90,000 EstadioLa Cartuja, Seville 60,000 Johan Cruyff Arena, Amsterdam 54,000 Allianz Arena, Munich 70,000 Parken Stadium, Copenhagen 38,000 Stadio Olimpico, Rome 68,000 Puskas Arena, Budapest 68,000 National Arena, Bucharest 54,000 Krestovsky Stadium, St Petersburg 61,000 Olympic Stadium, Baku 69,000 adidas Uniforia Official Euro 2020 match ball Competition schedule 24 teams contest total of 51 matches over four weeks 0 FIFA rank (Oct 2020) June A 29 7 17 13 11 Turkey Italy Rome, Italy 12 Wales Switzerland Baku, Azerbaijan 16 Turkey Wales Baku Italy Switzerland Rome 20 Switzerland Turkey Baku Italy Wales Rome P W D L F A Pts 1 2 3 4 June B 10 54 1 38 12 Denmark Finland Copenhagen, Denmark Belgium Russia St Petersburg, Russia 16 Finland Russia St Petersburg 17 Denmark Belgium Copenhagen 21 Russia Denmark Copenhagen Finland Belgium St Petersburg P W D L F A Pts 1 2 3 4 June C 16 24 23 62 13 Netherlands Ukraine Amsterdam, Neth. Austria N. Macedonia Bucharest, Rom. 17 Netherlands Austria Amsterdam Ukraine N. Macedonia Bucharest 21 N. Macedonia Netherlands Amsterdam Ukraine Austria Bucharest P W D L F A Pts 1 2 3 4 June D  4 14 44 40 13 England Croatia London, England 14 Scotland Czech Rep. Glasgow, Scotland 18 Croatia Czech Rep. Glasgow England Scotland London 22 Croatia Scotland Glasgow Czech Rep. England London P W D L F A Pts 1 2 3 4 June E 6 18 21 36 15 Spain Sweden Seville, Spain Poland Slovakia St Petersburg 19 Sweden Slovakia St Petersburg 20 Spain Poland Seville 24 Slovakia Spain Seville Sweden Poland St Petersburg P W D L F A Pts 1 2 3 4 June F 37 5 2 12 15 Hungary Portugal Budapest, Hungary France Germany Munich, Germany 19 Hungary France Budapest Portugal Germany Munich 23 Portugal France Budapest Germany Hungary Munich P W D L F A Pts 1 2 3 4 Top two from each group plus four best third-placed teams progress to knockout stage If scores level after 90 minutes, knockout stage matches go into extra-time. Matches remaining level decided on penalties Second stage June Seville 27 B1 A/D/E/F3 London 26 A1 C2 Bucharest 28 F1 A/B/C3 Copenhagen 28 D2 E2 Quarter-finals July 2 Munich July 2 St. Petersburg Semi-final July 6 London FINAL July 11 London Semi-final July 7 London Quarter-finals July 3 Rome July 3 Baku Second stage June Glasgow 29 E1 A/B/C/D3 London 29 D1 F2 Budapest 27 C1 D/E/F3 Amsterdam 26 A2 B2 Roll call of champions Since first championship in 1960, 10 teams have lifted Henri Delaunay Trophy, with Spain and Germany winning three times each. Portugal claimed success in 2016, beating France 1960 USSR 1964 Spain 1968 Italy 1972 West Germany 1976 Czechoslovakia 1980 West Germany 1984 France 1988 Netherlands Wembley Stadium, London Original stadium, with its famous twin towers, hosted Olympic Games in 1948, England’s 1966 FIFA World Cup Final triumph over Germany and iconic Euro 96 tournament. New stadium, opened in 2007 on same site, staged UEFA Champions League Finals in 2011 and 2013 MONEY LEAGUE Euro 2020 champions will take home around €34m in prize money Denmark 1992 Germany 1996 France 2000 Greece 2004 Spain 2008 Spain 2012 Portugal 2016 Source: UEFA Pictures: AP, Getty Images © GRAPHIC NEWS