How to watch Euro 2020 and everything you need to know about the European tournament
By Ben Morse and Alaa Elassar, CNN
It has been delayed by a year, but that seems to have only ramped up the excitement levels for the 2020 European football championships, and the final game is Sunday.
The Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) Euro 2020 final will be held at London’s Wembley Stadium.
Still called Euro 2020 despite now being held in 2021, the all-European tournament was postponed from last summer because of the coronavirus pandemic.
England reached its first men’s major tournament final in 55 years after after beating Denmark 2-1 in a gripping encounter Wednesday at Wembley.
READ: Goldman Sachs bets England will beat Italy this weekend, but…
The national team will face Italy on Sunday after the Azzurri beat Spain on penalties. The Italians have looked strong throughout the tournament, but England hopes a home-field advantage will inspire it to a historic victory. About 65,000 fans are expected.
The UEFA Referees Committee announced that Dutchman Björn Kuipers would referee Sunday’s final. This will be Kuipers’ seventh UEFA competition final, according to European football’s governing body.
The final — which will begin at 8 p.m. in London (3 p.m. ET) — will be available to watch worldwide.
Here’s where you can watch the action:
Austria: ORF/OE24
Belgium: VRT/RTBF
Croatia: HRT/Sportklub
Czech: Republic Česká televize
Denmark: DKDR/NENT Group Denmark
Finland: YLE
France: M6/TF1/beIN Sports
Germany: ARD/ZDF/MagentaTV
Hungary: MTVA
Italy: RAI/Sky Italia
Netherlands: NOS
North Macedonia: MKRTV/Sportklub
Poland: TVP
Portugal: RTP/SIC/Sport TV Portugal/TVI
Russia: Channel One/Match TV/RTR
Slovakia: RTV Slovakia
Spain: Mediaset Spain
Sweden: SVT/TV4
Switzerland: SRG
Turkey: TRT
Ukraine: Media Group Ukraine
United Kingdom: BBC/ITV
Others:
Australia: Optus Sport
Brazil: Globosat/SporTV
India & Indian Sub-Continent: Sony
Indonesia: MNC/Mola TV/RCTI
Kenya: Star Times/SuperSport/Canal+ Afrique/KTN
Nigeria: Top Sports/NTA/Star Times/SuperSport/Canal+ Afrique/Silverbird TV/ONTV
South Africa: SuperSport
United Arab Emirates: beIN Sports
US: ESPN/Univision
Click here to view the full list
A tournament for the history books
The championships kicked off Friday, June 11, when Italy and Turkey met in the tournament’s opening match in Rome’s Stadio Olimpico.
For the first time, the competition was hosted across the continent in some of Europe’s biggest and most famous stadiums, rather than hosted by one or two nations.
Alongside London and Rome, the other host cities included Baku, St. Petersburg, Copenhagen, Budapest, Amsterdam, Bucharest, Glasgow, Seville and Munich.
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Bilbao in Spain and Dublin in Ireland had been scheduled to host matches, but after local authorities didn’t permit fans to attend games because of Covid-19 restrictions, UEFA chose to relocate Bilbao’s matches to Seville and Dublin’s fixtures to St. Petersburg.
There were 24 teams playing across 51 matches in the 11 host cities over the past month, with some familiar nations among the favorites.
England reached its first men’s major tournament final since winning the World Cup in 1966 after beating Denmark.
For Denmark, which won Euro 1992, this has been an extraordinary tournament. The team, and nation, was shaken when its talisman Christian Eriksen collapsed on the field during its opening group game against Finland.
The power, strength and resilience shown by the Danish players as Eriksen recovered will inevitably go on to define this tournament and both teams paid tribute to the playmaker before the semifinal.
Italy awaits and is likely to present England with it sternest test yet at Euro 2020.
“We know it’s going to be a very tough game against Italy,” England’s Harry Kane told the UEFA website. “We’ve had a great tournament so far. One more game to go at home, and we can’t wait.”
Goldman Sachs predicts England has a 58% chance of defeating Italy in the Euro 2020 final.
The-CNN-Wire
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CNN’s John Sinnott and Paul R. La Monica contributed to this report.