Group matches The opening game of tournament featured
France and
Denmark. The sides played out a very close encounter until
Michel Platini's goal on 78 minutes gave the hosts a 1–0 victory. The opening game also saw a premature end to the tournament for Danish midfielder
Allan Simonsen, who suffered a broken leg. Platini then scored hat-tricks against both
Belgium and
Yugoslavia as the French recorded maximum points in Group 1. Denmark took second place in the group with victories over Belgium and Yugoslavia, while Belgium finished third with two points. Yugoslavia, despite going out with no points, gave the hosts a fright in their last group game when they took a 1–0 lead into half-time and then reduced France's 3–1 lead to one goal six minutes from time. The games in Group 1 were unusually high-scoring, and featured 23 goals over the six matches. Group 2 provided fewer goals, but produced a huge surprise as
West Germany failed to qualify for the semi-finals after a 1–0 defeat in their last match to
Spain with a late goal by
Antonio Maceda, and a late
Portugal win by
Nené against
Romania that sent the holders out.
Semi-finals and final The first semi-final between France and Portugal is often considered one of the best matches in the history of the European Championship.
Jean-François Domergue opened the scoring for France but Portugal equalised through
Rui Jordão on 74 minutes. The game went to extra time and Jordão scored again in the 98th minute to give the Portuguese a shock lead, but the French rallied and Domergue equalised with six minutes left. Then, in the dying moments of the match and with a penalty shoot-out looming, Platini scored his eighth goal of the championship to give France a memorable 3–2 victory. The other semi-final between Spain and Denmark saw two evenly matched sides draw 1–1 after extra time, as
Søren Lerby's goal after only seven minutes was cancelled out by Maceda’s strike an hour later. The match went to a penalty shoot-out, and Spain converted all five of their penalties to win 5–4 and reach the final for the first time since
1964. The final was played to a capacity crowd at the
Parc des Princes in
Paris. Just before the hour mark, Platini scored from a free-kick to put France ahead following a mistake by Spanish goalkeeper
Luis Arconada. France were reduced to ten players when
Yvon Le Roux was sent off, but Spain were unable to equalise, and
Bruno Bellone's goal in injury time made the final score 2–0. France had won their first major championship in world football. ==Qualification==