Euro 2024: Germany Beats Turkey To Host Tournament

Germany has
beaten Turkey to host Euro 2024 after a vote by Uefa's executive committee on
Thursday.
The two
countries made final bid presentations before voting took place in Nyon,
Switzerland.
The decision
means Germany will stage the European Championship for the first time as a
unified country, with West Germany having hosted the 1988 tournament.
Turkey is
yet to host a major international football tournament.
It has seen
previous attempts to host the Euros in 2008, 2012 and 2016 fail, as well as the
2020 Summer Olympics. Germany staged the 2006 World Cup.
Euro 2024
will return to a single-host format after Euro 2020 is held across Europe,
including Germany.
Before
announcing the winner, Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin said Germany and
Turkey had made "very strong bids".
After
announcing the winner, he added: "The procedure was transparent. The
voting was democratic. Every democratic decision is the right decision so I can
only say I am looking forward to seeing a fantastic Euro in 2024."
Euro 2024
will feature 24 teams, taking place in June and July, with 51 games scheduled
for up to 32 days.
Berlin will
stage the final, while matches will also take place in Cologne, Dortmund,
Dusseldorf, Frankfurt, Gelsenkirchen, Hamburg, Leipzig, Munich and Stuttgart.
Former
Germany captain Philipp Lahm, an ambassador for his country's bid, said:
"We have amazing stadiums, fans who love football, first and foremost we
have people who love celebrating with other Europeans.
"We
will organise a huge football party in Germany."
Germany and
Turkey were the only countries in the running for Euro 2024 and, in the build
up, an evaluation report by Uefa stated Turkey's bid had risks.
The report
added that Turkey's lack of an action plan in the area of human rights and
limited hotel capacity in many cities were matters "of concern". It
also labelled the scale of transport infrastructure work required "a
risk".
However, it
did say the Turkish bid was "in line with the long-term objectives of
Uefa."
FROM .bbc.com/sport/football/
No comments