Qualification for Euro 2008 started in August 2006, just over a month after the end of the
2006 FIFA World Cup. The qualifying tournament was contested by national teams from each of
UEFA's member associations except
Austria and
Switzerland, who had automatically qualified for the final tournament as hosts, and
Montenegro, who came into existence too late to be admitted to UEFA.
England was the only seeded team not to qualify for the tournament proper, whereas
Russia was the only unseeded one to qualify. The tournament also marked the debuts of Austria and
Poland. The draw for the final tournament took place on 2 December 2007, and saw
Group C immediately labelled as the "
group of death", with
Italy,
France,
Romania and the
Netherlands competing for the two qualifying places. In contrast,
Germany and
Portugal were deemed to have an easy draw, as the tournament structure meant they could not meet Italy, France, the Netherlands or
Spain until the final. In the group stage,
Croatia, Spain and the Netherlands all qualified with maximum points. Austria and Switzerland were not expected to progress, despite the advantage of being the hosts. In
Group A, the Swiss lost their captain,
Alexander Frei, to injury in their first game and became the first team to be eliminated from the tournament, after losing their first two matches. Switzerland managed to beat the group winner Portugal in their last game. In
Group B, Austria managed to set up a decisive final game against Germany, dubbed "Austria's final". However, they lost by one goal, making Euro 2008 the first European Championship not to have one of the host nations present in the knockout stage. In an exciting final game in Group A, an injury- and suspension-hit
Turkey came back from 2–0 down to beat the
Czech Republic 3–2, after an uncharacteristic handling mistake by
Petr Čech, in the last few minutes, left
Nihat Kahveci with the simplest of finishes. In the same game, goalkeeper
Volkan Demirel was shown a red card for pushing Czech striker
Jan Koller to the ground. The Turks joined Portugal as the qualifiers from Group A. France were the high-profile victims of Group C, recording just one point from a goalless draw against Romania in their opening game. Italy beat the French, on the final day, to finish on four points and join the Netherlands in the quarter-finals. Finally, in
Group D,
Greece failed to reproduce the form of their shock
2004 win, and ended the tournament with no points. Russia qualified at the expense of
Sweden, after beating them in a final game decider, joining Spain in the knockout stage. Torrential rain during the Group A match between Switzerland and Turkey on 11 June resulted in the pitch at
St. Jakob-Park in
Basel requiring to be re-laid. The new pitch was installed in advance of the quarter-final match between Portugal and Germany on 19 June. In the quarter-finals, the Portuguese team was unable to give their coach,
Luiz Felipe Scolari, a fitting send-off – following the mid-tournament announcement that Scolari would be leaving to join English club
Chelsea – losing in an exciting game against Germany. Turkey continued their streak of last-gasp wins, equalising at the end of extra-time against Croatia and advancing on penalties. Coached by Dutchman
Guus Hiddink, Russia eliminated the Netherlands with two extra-time goals. The last quarter-final match saw Spain defeat Italy on penalties, after a goalless draw in regular time. Turkey's progress was halted by Germany in the semi-finals. Turkey entered the game with nine of their squad members missing due to injury or suspension, but still scored the first goal. Later, they levelled the score at 2–2, before Germany scored the winning goal in the final minute. The world television feed of the match was intermittently lost during the match, which prevented the broadcast of Germany's second goal. This was due to a thunderstorm at the broadcasting relay station in Austria, despite the game being played in Switzerland. Swiss Television
SRG SSR still had a feed, because of their own broadcasting facilities at the venue. During the lost world feed, German and Austrian television
ZDF and
ORF started to broadcast the feed of German-speaking Swiss channel
SF 1. This act ensured that the German goal was actually broadcast in Germany although not in Turkey. Spain won the second semi-final against Russia by three goals to nil, through second-half goals from
Xavi,
Daniel Güiza and
David Silva, earning Spain their first appearance in a major final for 24 years. In the final, held at
Vienna's
Ernst-Happel-Stadion, Spain became European champions for the second time after
Fernando Torres' first-half goal proved enough to defeat Germany. Though Germany had a strong start, Spain started to look more dangerous after they had settled. After half an hour, Xavi played a pass in behind the Germany back line towards Torres, who outmuscled a hesitant
Philipp Lahm and clipped the ball over the diving
Jens Lehmann and just inside the far post. That goal proved to be the only goal of the game, which Spain dominated despite Germany having the majority of the possession, and Spain were crowned UEFA Euro 2008 champions. ==Qualification==