West Germany West Germany commenced their UEFA Euro 1972 campaign in
Qualifying Group 8 where they faced three other teams in a home-and-away round-robin tournament. Their first fixture was against
Turkey at the
Müngersdorfer Stadion in Cologne on 17 October 1970. gave Turkey the lead in the 15th minute but
Gerd Müller equalised with a
penalty kick eight minutes before half-time. The second half was goalless and the match ended 1–1. West Germany's next opponents were
Albania with their first match being played at the
Qemal Stafa Stadium in Tirana on 17 February 1971. Müller scored the only goal of the game late in the first half to secure a 1–0 victory for West Germany. The next qualifying match for West Germany was the return fixture against Turkey which took place at the
İnönü Stadı in Istanbul on 25 April 1971. Müller scored his third and fourth goals of the qualifying stage, two minutes either side of half time, and
Horst Köppel made it 3–0 midway through the second half. West Germany then faced Albania at the
Wildparkstadion in Karlsruhe on 12 June 1971 where first-half goals from
Günter Netzer and
Jürgen Grabowski secured a 2–0 win for the hosts. The final opponents in Group 8 for West Germany were
Poland with the first match taking place at the
Stadion Dziesięciolecia in Warsaw on 10 October 1971.
Robert Gadocha gave Poland the lead midway through the first half but Müller equalised a minute later. He doubled his tally 19 minutes into the second half before Grabowski's goal twenty minutes before the end of the match ensured a 3–1 win for West Germany. The return match was played on 17 November 1971 at the
Volksparkstadion in Hamburg, which ended goalless. West Germany finished their qualifying campaign top of Group 8 and progressed to the
quarter-finals. There, West Germany faced their
1966 FIFA World Cup Final opponents
England and the first match of the two-legged tie was played at
Wembley Stadium in London on 29 April 1972 in front of 96,800 spectators. In rainy conditions, West Germany dominated the game while England defended deeply and committed numerous
fouls. In the 27th minute,
Bobby Moore lost possession of the ball, allowing
Uli Hoeneß to shoot from around , his strike taking a deflection off
Norman Hunter and beating
Gordon Banks in the England goal.
Emlyn Hughes saw his half-volley strike the top of the West Germany crossbar before
Francis Lee equalised for England in the 76th minute; a shot from
Martin Peters was kept out by
Sepp Maier but Lee converted the rebound from close range. West Germany regained the lead seven minutes later. Moore fouled
Sigfried Held and although Banks got a hand to the resulting penalty from Netzer, the ball spun into the net. With two minutes remaining, Held won the ball from Hughes, passed to Hoeneß who then gave it to Müller whose low shot beat Banks to give West Germany a 3–1 victory. The return match was held two weeks later at the
Olympiastadion in Berlin. In another match marred by fouls from both teams, each side had limited opportunities to score.
Martin Chivers saw his shot cleared off the goalline by
Horst-Dieter Höttges while both Netzer and Held missed chances. In the second half,
Hans-Georg Schwarzenbeck cleared the ball from the West Germany goalmouth under pressure from
Rodney Marsh. The game ended goalless and with a 3–1 aggregate victory, West Germany progressed to the semi-final where they faced the host team
Belgium. The match was held at the
Bosuilstadion in Antwerp on 14 June 1972 in front of a crowd of 55,669.
Helmut Schön, the West Germany
manager, described the pitch as "an unplayable stone desert" but despite that, his side took the lead midway through the first half through Müller. Netzer crossed the ball into the centre and Müller rose to head the ball past
Christian Piot, the Belgium goalkeeper who had attempted to punch the ball clear. The second half saw Maier make saves from both
Georges Heylens and
Léon Semmeling but with less than 20 minutes remaining, Müller scored, once again from a Netzer pass, to make it 2–0 to West Germany. In the 83rd minute,
Jean Dockx's pass found
Odilon Polleunis who held off
Herbert Wimmer and struck the ball into the roof of the West Germany goal. Late in the match, Belgium's
Erwin Vandendaele headed a
Raoul Lambert corner wide of goal and the game ended 2–1 to West Germany who qualified for their first European Championship final.
Soviet Union The Soviet Union's first match in
their qualifying group were
Cyprus who they faced at the
GSP Stadium in Nicosia on 15 November 1970. Early goals from
Viktor Kolotov and
Gennady Yevryuzhikhin gave the Soviet Union a 2–0 lead but
Nikos Charalambous reduced the deficit for Cyprus just before half-time.
Vitaly Shevchenko scored five minutes after the interval and with no further goals, the match ended 3–1. The Soviet Union's next match was against
Spain and took place at the
Central Lenin Stadium in Moscow on 30 May 1971. The first half was goalless and Kolotov gave the Soviet Union the lead in the 79th minute before Shevchenko doubled his side's advantage four minutes later.
Carles Rexach halved the deficit for Spain with two minutes of the match remaining but it ended 2–1 to the Soviet Union. They faced Cyprus in the return match nine days later at the Central Lenin Stadium where they secured a 6–1 victory, with a goal each from Kolotov and
Anatoliy Banishevskiy, and a brace from both Yevryuzhikhin and
Vladimir Fedotov, while
Stefanis Michael scored the consolation goal for Cyprus. The Soviet Union's third and final group opponent were
Northern Ireland who they faced at the Central Lenin Stadium on 22 September 1971.
Vladimir Muntyan scored the only goal of the game just before half-time to give the Soviet Union a 1–0 win. The two sides met again three weeks later, this time at
Windsor Park in Belfast.
Jimmy Nicholson scored in the 13th minute to give the hosts the lead but
Anatoliy Byshovets equalised 15 minutes before half time, and with a goalless second half, the match was drawn 1–1. The Soviet Union ended the round-robin tournament top of Group 4 and qualified for the quarter-finals. The Soviet Union adopted a very defensive approach to the game, although
Eduard Kozynkevych's strike hit the Yugoslavia crossbar in the first half. After the interval, a combination of profligate finishing and numerous saves from the Soviet Union goalkeeper
Yevhen Rudakov resulted in the game ending goalless. The second leg was held two weeks later at the Central Lenin Stadium. Played in warm and sunny conditions, Yugoslavia had the first chance to score but
Mladen Ramljak's cross failed to be converted by any of his three teammates in the Soviet Union penalty area. After missing numerous opportunities to take the lead, the Soviet Union scored early in the second half when Kolotov took the ball past two defenders and struck the ball under Yugoslavia goalkeeper
Enver Marić. Banishevskiy doubled his side's advantage in the 74th minute with a shot from inside the box, before Kozynkevych headed into an empty net after Marić had left his goal unattended. The Soviet Union won the match and the tie 3–0 to progress to the semi-final. There, they faced
Hungary with the match taking place at
Émile Versé Stadium at the same time as the Belgium–West Germany game. As a result, it was attended by fewer than 2,000 people, the smallest crowd at a European Championship finals match. The pitch was saturated and first-half opportunities to score were limited to
Sándor Zámbó's shot and an
István Kocsis free kick both being saved by Rudakov. Eight minutes after half-time, the Soviet Union took the lead.
Anatoly Baidachny won a corner and took it himself: the ball was headed cleared by
Miklós Páncsics but fell to
Anatoliy Konkov whose shot took a deflection off
Péter Juhász and ended in the Hungary goal. Although Hungary had late chances to score, Zámbó's free kick was kept out by Rudakov and
Július Szöke struck the rebound into the
side netting. The match ended 1–0 and the Soviet Union progressed to their third final in four European Championships. ==Match==