France As tournament hosts, France automatically qualified for
UEFA Euro 1984 Group 1 where they faced
Denmark,
Belgium and
Yugoslavia in a round-robin tournament where each team played every other team once. France's first group match was against Denmark at the
Parc des Princes in Paris on 12 June 1984. As the first half was drawing to a close, a
tackle between Denmark's
Allan Simonsen and
Yvon Le Roux left the Danish player with a broken leg and forced his side to
substitute him for
John Lauridsen. Goalless at half time, the Denmark goalkeeper
Ole Qvist made two separate saves from
Michel Platini headers but with twelve minutes remaining, France took the lead.
Ivan Nielsen's attempt to intercept a pass resulted in the ball falling to Platini whose shot from outside the Denmark
penalty area deflected off
Søren Busk's head and flew into the goal. In the 87th minute,
Manuel Amoros reacted to
fouls by both Lauridsen and
Jesper Olsen, first by throwing the ball at Olsen and then headbutting him in the face: he was
sent off by
Volker Roth, the German
referee, and the match ended 1–0. In their second group game, France faced Belgium at the
Stade de la Beaujoire in
Nantes on 16 June 1984. In warm conditions, France dominated the match with
Georges Grün making a goal-line clearance in the first thirty seconds. In the fourth minute,
Patrick Battiston's shot struck the crossbar and the ball fell to Platini who sidestepped a defender before striking it into the corner of Belgium's goal. Belgium then missed numerous chances to score:
Jan Ceulemans saw his header cleared off the goal-line by
Luis Fernandez,
Michel De Wolf's shot hit the crossbar and
Erwin Vandenbergh's header went wide of France's goal.
Alain Giresse doubled France's lead in the 33rd minute,
chipping the ball over
Jean-Marie Pfaff, the Belgium goalkeeper, after playing a
one-two with
Jean Tigana. In the 44th minute,
Didier Six took the ball round Pfaff and crossed it to Giresse. He passed back to Fernandez who headed it into the Belgium goal to make it 3–0 at half time. In the 74th minute,
Bernard Genghini pass to Six who was fouled by Pfaff. Platini took the resulting
penalty, striking it into the middle of the goal to make it 4–0. With a minute remaining, Platini completed his
hat-trick with a header which went in off the goalpost from Giresse's
free kick, and France won 5–0. The final group match for France was against Yugoslavia at the
Stade Geoffroy-Guichard in
Saint-Étienne on 19 June 1984. Yugoslavia took the lead in the 31st minute after
Miloš Šestić beat Tigana and Giresse, exchanged passes with
Safet Sušić before striking the ball into the top corner of the France goal. Giresse's shot then hit the crossbar but the first half ended 1–0 to Yugoslavia. Thirteen minutes after the interval,
Jean-Marc Ferreri dispossessed
Ljubomir Radanović and passed to Platini who struck the ball under
Zoran Simović, the Yugoslavia goalkeeper, to level the score. Three minutes later, Battiston's cross found Platini who scored with a diving header to give France the lead.
Joël Bats then saved an attempt from
Mehmed Baždarević before Platini completed his second hat-trick of the tournament when he scored with a direct free kick which looped over the
wall and into the top corner of the Yugoslavia goal. With ten minutes remaining,
Stjepan Deverić was fouled by
Maxime Bossis in the France box and
Dragan Stojković scored the resulting penalty after a retake. France won the game 3–2 to finish their qualifying group top and progressed to the semi-finals. O'Brien describes the first twenty minutes of "one of the most unforgettable internationals of all time" as "dismayingly poor". Midway through the half, Platini was fouled by
Jaime Pacheco and
Jean-François Domergue struck the resulting free kick from over the wall and into the top corner of the Portugal goal, and France held a 1–0 lead at half-time. Early in the second half, Bento made saves against Fernandez and Giresse before
Fernando Chalana played the ball into the France penalty area and found
Jordão who headed it past Bats to equalise in the 74th minute. Bento then made saves to deny Platini and Six and regular time ended with the score at 1–1, sending the match into
extra time. Both sides had opportunities to score, but midway through the first period of additional time, Chalana played a cross to Jordão who miskicked his volley into the ground but the ball bounced over Bats and into the France goal to give Portugal a 2–1 lead. Portugal adopted a defensive approach but with six minutes remaining, Domergue scored his and France's second goal, lifting the ball over Bento after play continued despite Platini being brought down by
João Pinto. In the final minute, Tigana took possession of the ball, held off João Pinto, before passing to Platini who was out from goal: he turned and struck the ball into the roof of the Portugal net. France won the match 3–2 and secured passage to their first European Championship final.
Spain Spain were drawn into
group 7 of the UEFA Euro 1984 qualifying phase, where they faced the
Netherlands, the
Republic of Ireland,
Iceland and
Malta in a home-and-away round-robin tournament. In front of the tournament's smallest crowd of 16,972, Spain took the lead midway through the first half.
Nicolae Ungureanu conceded possession to
Juan Señor who passed to
Ricardo Gallego. The Romania goalkeeper
Silviu Lung pulled him down and
Francisco Carrasco scored the resulting penalty to make it 1–0. The scores were level 13 minutes later when
Marcel Coraș passed to
László Bölöni who struck the ball into the near corner of Spain's goal.
Mircea Rednic then shot wide from . After a second half of limited opportunities to score, the match ended 1–1. Spain's opponents for their second group match were
Iberian rivals Portugal who they played at the Stade Vélodrome on 17 June 1984.
Manuel Bento, the Portugal goalkeeper, made saves from
Santillana and Gallego in the first half which ended goalless. Soon after the interval, Bento dropped a shot from Santillana but recovered in time to prevent
Rafael Gordillo from scoring. In the 52nd minute,
Álvaro passed to
António Sousa who chipped the ball over
Luis Arconada, the Spain goalkeeper, to give Portugal the lead. Chalana went close to doubling his side's lead but his shot struck the Spain crossbar. With 17 minutes to go, Carraasco's corner was not cleared by the Portugal defence and after
Andoni Goikoetxea headed it goalbound, Santillana eventually scored to make it 1–1. Bento made a late save from Carrasco, and the match ended in a draw.
(pictured in 1983) scored the only goal in Spain's group victory over West Germany. In their final group game which was held at the Parc des Princes in Paris on 20 June 1984, Spain's opponents were West Germany. West Germany started the game strongly: an early header from
Hans-Peter Briegel struck the Spain crossbar,
José Antonio Camacho cleared the ball off his own goal-line, Arconada's lengthy run ended with him shooting just wide of the post, another Briegel header hit the underside of the bar and
Andy Brehme hit the post, while Goikoetxea was substituted through injury for
Salva García after tackling
Rudi Völler from behind. Before half-time,
Uli Stielike fouled
Salva García in the West Germany penalty area but Carrasco's penalty kick was saved by
Toni Schumacher.
Klaus Allofs missed two chances to score early in the second half before Schumacher blocked a shot from Carrasco and
Antonio Maceda's header was cleared off the West Germany goal-line by Stielike. Arconada then saved a strike from
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge "with superhuman speed" before denying
Lothar Matthäus'
half-volley. With less than a minute remaining,
Pierre Littbarski's shot was off-target and Spain attacked en masse. Matthäus fouled Francisco and from the resulting free kick, Maceda scored with a low header after Schumacher failed to gather the ball. The match ended 1–0 and Spain ended the qualification phase top of the group, although tied with Portugal on points and goal difference, with a superior number of goals scored, and progressed to the semi-finals. Qvist made an early save from a Carrasco header before Denmark took the lead in the seventh minute.
Frank Arnesen's cross was pushed onto the Spain crossbar by Arconada after a header from
Preben Elkjær but
Søren Lerby scored from the rebound to make it 1–0 to Denmark. The second half saw chances for both sides, with Denmark, in particular, being profligate in front of goal. Midway through the second half, Gordillo's cross eventually found Maceda who struck the ball into the bottom corner to level the score. Arnesen was then substituted for Olsen and although Denmark had two late chances to score, regular time ended 1–1 and the match went into extra time. Spain increased the pressure and
Klaus Berggreen was sent off two minutes into the second period of additional time for a pull on Camacho. Arcando then saved from both Elkjær's free kick and Nielsen's follow-up shot and extra time ended with the scores still level, taking the match to a penalty shoot-out. Both sides scored their first four kicks:
Kenneth Brylle, Olsen,
Michael Laudrup and Lerby for Denmark; Santillana, Señor,
Santiago Urquiaga and
Víctor Muñoz for Spain. Elkjær took Denmark's fifth penalty and struck the ball over the crossbar.
Manuel Sarabia, a second-half substitute, scored Spain's fifth penalty to secure his side's 5–4 victory and progression to their first European Championship final since the
1964 tournament.
Summary ==Match==