Euro2020

Rossi: Our match of the year is this one against Slovakia

Hungary’s head coach has called up 26 players to his squad to travel to Montenegro for a friendly on 5th September and to host Slovakia in a Euro 2020 qualifier four days later.

Rossi has given a place in his squad to uncapped Dávid Sigér and has recalled the now-fit Roland Sallai and Ádám Lang. FC DAC 1904 Dunajská Streda midfielder Zsolt Kalmár misses out on selection due to a minor knee operation in recent days which would mean he wouldn’t be fit for both matches. Ádám Nagy is also injured but has a chance of recovering in time, hence why the Bristol City midfielder is named in Rossi’s 26.

“We’ve selected this squad on the same basis as we have previous ones and of course, we’ve taken into account that a team has already taken shape which has proved itself, so it wouldn’t make sense to make many changes. There are some (of our players) who started their new season weeks ago, while there are others who only started their club’s championships last weekend. Despite Ádám Nagy’s injury, we’re counting on him and naturally we trust he’ll be available for selection for the match against Slovakia, because this will be our most important match of the year. Our victories achieved thus far will only remain valuable if we gain three points against Slovakia too”, Rossi admitted.

Few days before this 2020 European Championship qualifier, the squad will play a friendly match in Montenegro, with a win there also important.

“Although it woud be ideal to give players a chance in this match who haven’t played as much as others thus far, we will also try out a few new tactical elements to our play, but independently of this, a win in this game is our aim. There is much to play for in this game because I’d like to Hungary to be able to be proud of us after this match too”, Rossi concluded.

The latest Hungary squad:

Goalkeepers:

Dénes Dibusz (Ferencváros TC)
Péter Gulácsi (RB Leipzig)
Ádám Kovácsik (Mol Fehérvár FC)

Defenders:

Botond Baráth (Sporting Kansas KC)
Barnabás Bese (Le Havre)
János Ferenczi (Debreceni VSC)
Tamás Kádár (Dinamo Kiev)
Mihály Korhut (Aris Thessaloniki)
Ádám Lang (Omonia Nicosia)
Gergő Lovrencsics (Ferencváros TC)
Willi Orban (RB Leipzig)

Midfielders:

Daniel Gazdag (Budapest Honvéd)
Dávid Holman (Slovan Bratislava)
László Kleinheisler (NK Osijek)
István Kovács (Mol Fehérvár FC)
Ádám Nagy (Bristol City FC)
Máté Pátkai (Mol Fehérvár FC)
Dávid Sigér (Ferencváros TC)
Dominik Szoboszlai (RB Salzburg)

Forwards:

Balázs Dzsudzsák (al-Ittihad)
Filip Holender (FC Lugano)
Dominik Nagy (Legia Warsaw)
Krisztián Németh (Sporting Kansas)
Roland Sallai (SC Freiburg)
Ádám Szalai (TSG Hoffenheim)
Roland Varga (Ferencváros TC)

The squad members will gather in Telki on Monday 1st September and will travel to Podgorica, the venue of the match against Montenegro, on Wednesday 4th September.

September’s schedule for those countries in Hungary’s European Championship qualifying group (all times in CET):

Thursday 5th September:
20.45: Montenegro v Hungary (friendly match)

Friday 6th September:
20:45 Wales v Azerbaijan
20:45: Slovakia v Croatia

Sunday 9th September:
18:00: Azerbaijan v Croatia
20:45: Hungary v Slovakia
20:45: Wales v Belarus (friendly match)

EURO 2020: ticket application deadline draws near

Applications for EURO 2020 match tickets – among them those in Budapest – can be made up until 12 July. Given that this represents the greatest opportunity of getting tickets, here we provide the most important information regarding ticket applications.

Budapest will be one of the co-hosts in the largest European Championships to date in 2020, meaning that the best footballers on the continent will be within arms-reach, and those purchasing tickets will be able to see these players compete in the flesh at the tournament.

Ticket applications for EURO 2020 can be made at the uefa.com/uefaeuro-2020/ticketing/ website until 14:00 on 12 July.

If you don’t apply in this first round of ticket sales you stand the chance of missing out on the European Championship, since those applying later will have only a 1 in 400 chance of successfully receiving tickets.

Should there be a greater number of applications than there are tickets available, tickets will be allocated to fans by way of a ballot. Tickets are available in three price categories at every venue. Ticket prices for the Budapest matches are €125, €75 and €30.

In the interest of increasing your chances of being allocated tickets, it is worth designating more than one price category. Thus, if you are not allocated tickets in your first-choice price category you can participate in the ballot for other price category tickets. You do not need to pay for tickets immediately, it will suffice if you have been allocated them.

Lucky fans who are allocated tickets will have around ten days in which to pay for them.

One fan can apply for a maximum of four tickets per match. The name of the purchaser will appear on the tickets, and stadium stewards will check whether you are entitled to enter the arena.

Should you apply for tickets and not be allocated any, you will be the first to be informed about further opportunities should extra tickets for the given match become available.

More news about EURO2020!

Hungary defeats Wales in Euro 2020 qualifier

UEFA EURO 2020: Demand for Budapest tickets among highest so far!

puskás

Overall, more than four-and-a-half million requests have been received by UEFA for EURO 2020 tickets in the first week of applications.

UEFA EURO 2020 will be the largest European Championship ever held, with twelve host cities in twelve countries co-hosting the event. Interest in the tournament has been huge, and in the first week of tickets becoming available, UEFA has received more than 4.5 million ticket requests in its system. According to UEFA, the greatest interest so far has been shown in England, Germany, Russia, Hungary, the Netherlands and Denmark. The final, to be played in Wembley, has received the highest number of ticket requests for a single match.

It is UEFA’s expressed goal that football gets closer to the fans at the 2020 European Championship than ever before, thus there are twelve host cities in twelve countries instead of in just one or two, one of them being Budapest’s soon-to-be-ready new Puskás Aréna. Should Hungary qualify for EURO 2020, they will be guaranteed to play two of their three group-stage matches in Budapest.

UEFA is selling 3 million tickets for the tournament, which starts on 12 July 2020. The first period of ticket sales began on 12 June and lasts until 12 July this summer, and this sales period represents the best chance fans have of being allocated tickets. Ticket requests can be made up until 14:00 on 12 July, at https://euro2020.tickets.uefa.com/lottery/welcome_en.html

Should the number of ticket requests for a given match exceed the amount of tickets available, tickets will be allocated by way of a ballot from those registering their interest in tickets. There’s no need to rush though, as your chances of success are independent of when you registered your interest. Tickets allocated but not paid for will be re-allocated to fans who were unsuccessful in the original ballot. Fans will know by mid-August at the latest if they have been successful in the ballot.

Alongside ticket requests, UEFA is also accepting applications to be a EURO 2020 volunteer. If you would like to enjoy the experience of a lifetime, you can enter your application at https://www.uefa.com/uefaeuro-2020/about/volunteers/

Hungary defeats Wales in Euro 2020 qualifier

hungary wales 2020

A late Máté Patkai goal gave Hungary a deserved three points against an underwhelming Wales team in the Groupama Aréna in Budapest on Tuesday evening, a result which keeps Marco Rossi’s team top of Euro 2020 qualifying group E.

In a game largely dominated by the home team and littered with missed chances by both sides, it was Pátkai’s intervention when presented with a clear sight of goal following good work from Ádám Szalai that made the crucial difference and put Hungary in pole position in a tough group comprising World Cup silver-medallists Croatia and UEFA Euro 2016 participants Slovakia as well as semi-finalists from that year, Wales.

Rossi was banned from sitting on the bench for this match due to his dismissal against Azerbaijan on Saturday but he wasn’t afraid to make several changes from that winning side, Máté Pátkai and Filip Holender coming in for László Kleinheisler and Dominik Nagy. Hungary started with confidence and a dangerous inswinging Dzsudzsák corner in the third minute had Wales goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey scrambling to tip clear at his far right post. The hosts couldn’t press home this initial advantage though and instead Wales settled into the game, Tom Lawrence flicked back-heel forcing a regulation save from Hungary’s goalkeeper Péter Gulácsi after a low, skidding, right-wing cross from Joe Allen.

hungary wales 2020
Photo: MTI/Kovács Tamás

Next to go close were the hosts when Dzsudzsák’s free-kick from the right side of their attacking half was headed half-clear to Dominik Szoboszlai 14 metres out, whose header at goal drifted just wide of the right post. Another raucous home crowd were roaring on this young, vibrant team in their usual inspiring way and their heroes were responding, Lovrencsics shifting the ball to Dzsudzsák in the right channel who in turn slid in Ádám Szalai who’d made a well-timed run into the right side of the Wales penalty area. The burly Hoffenheim striker had space and time to slide the ball invitingly across the six-yard box but the onrushing Filip Holender couldn’t quite arrive in time to divert the ball into the waiting net.

An open, entertaining first half continued when new Manchester United signing James danced down the right and slipped a pass inside to Tom Lawrence who shot low left-footed from ten metres but disappointly straight at a grateful Gulácsi. Dzsudzsák then swung in a dangerous left-wing cross which fell to Szalai but he couldn’t adjust in time to shoot on goal, although he did still earn a corner for his efforts. At the other end, Joe Allen will wish he’d done better with a wayward shot from distance in the 35th minute but in truth it was the home team dominating proceedings, Szoboszlai heading Dzsudzsák’s inswinging, right-wing corner just wide of the near post just a minute later.

hungary wales 2020
Photo: MTI/Illyés Tibor

James and David Brooks brought a little mirth upon themselves from the crowd after failing to decide who’d be taking a free-kick before yet another searching cross from Hungary’s captain Dzsudzsák somehow evaded Szoboszlai arriving at the near left post. That was the last sight of goal in the first period and a brief malaise continued after the restart before Cosimo Inguscio’s team – the Italian assistant coach standing in for suspended head coach Marco Rossi, who was dismissed during the 3-1 defeat of Azerbaijan last Saturday – put together a neat move in the 56th minute, one which only ended with Lovrencics crossing from the right and a half-clearance arriving at Szoboszla, who controlled the ball well enough but could only half-volley the ball narrowly over the right side of Hennessey’s goal.

Wales’ best chance of a goal always seemed likely to come from their quicker forwards on the counter-attack and their opportunity arose on the hour mark when David Brooks broke forward and released Tom Lawrence down the right channel. He laid the ball on a silver platter for Gareth Bale who was first to arrive in the penalty area but the Real Madrid CF star could only scuff his shot tamely up into the air for Gulácsi to gather.

A subdued Wales were really there for the taking and with 15 minutes Hungary nearly made their supremacy in possession count. Substitute László Kleinheisler stung the palms of Hennessey with a rasping drive from 25 metres and they were again close to finally taking the lead from the resulting corner, only for the referee to judge the ball had not crossed the goal line following a goalmouth meléé.

At the other end Gulácsi struck lucky when his attempted clearance looped onto the roof of his own net after being charged down and Lady Luck was stay faithful to Hungary moments later when Szalai’s turn and control saw the ball roll free to midfielder Máté Pátkai, whose first-time shot from 11 metres arrowed past Hennessey, inside his near left post and rippled the back of the net.

Another replacement Roland Varga’s 86th-minute inswinging free-kick from the left missed both Szalai’s head and the inside of the far right post as Hungary rode the crest of a wave and looked likely to score again with every attack. Varga slid the ball low across the box but again to no avail and Ashley William’s hook across the Hungary box was somehow missed by a waiting Bale at the back post as both teams piled on the pressure in the closing minutes. Bale did finally get an effort on goal in added time but his header from ten metres was straight at Gulácsi, the ball and therefore the three points nestling neatly in his gloves.

This latest win – their fifth in a row at home – keeps Hungary at the top of Euro 2020 qualifying group E, their nine points three more than Slovakia and Croatia who both have six. Hungary’s next qualifier is on 9th September at home against Slovakia.

Here is the Hungary Men’s squad for June double-header

Sensational comeback! Hungary beats Croatia

Uncapped duo János Ferenczi and Bence Pávkovics have received call-ups to Marco Rossi’s latest Hungarian men’s national squad ahead of June’s UEFA European Championship qualifiers away in Azerbaijan and at home against Wales.

Press release – Attila Fiola also features in the 32-man list after his recovery from serious injury, while potential debutants Krisztofer Vida, Donát Zsótér and Dániel Gazdag are also named.

Europe’s domestic league seasons are drawing to a close now so Hungary head coach Marco Rossi has named the provisional squad for his team’s next two fixtures slightly earlier than usual. Thirty-two players can celebrate initial selection now, of which 26 will comprise the eventual squad tasked with gaining points away against Azerbaijan on 8th June and in the Groupama Aréna in Budapest against Wales three days later.

Hungary Men’s Squad (surnames first):

Goalkeepers:

Dibusz Dénes (Ferencvárosi TC)
Gróf Dávid (Budapest Honvéd)
Gulácsi Péter (RB Leipzig)
Kovácsik Ádám (Mol-Vidi FC)

Defenders:

Baráth Botond (Sporting Kansas KC)
Bese Barnabás (Le Havre)
Ferenczi János (DVSC)
Fiola Attila (Mol-Vidi FC)
Kádár Tamás (Dinamo Kiev)
Korhut Mihály (Áris Salonika)
Lovrencsics Gergő (Ferencvárosi TC)
Pávkovics Bence (DVSC)
Vinícius Paulo (Mol-Vidi FC)
Orbán Willi (RB Leipzig)

Midfielders:

Gazdag Dániel (Budapest Honvéd)
Holman Dávid (Slovan Bratislava)
Kalmár Zsolt (DAC)
Kleinheisler László (NK Osijek)
Kovács István (Mol-Vidi FC)
Nagy Ádám (FC Bologna)
Pátkai Máté (Mol-Vidi FC)
Szoboszlai Dominik (RB Salzburg)

Forwards:

Bódi Ádám (DVSC)
Dzsudzsák Balázs (ai-Ittihad)
Eppel Márton (Kairat Almati)
Holender Filip (Budapest Honvéd)
Nagy Dominik (Legia Warsaw)
Németh Krisztián (Sporting Kansas KC)
Szalai Ádám (TSG Hoffenheim)
Varga Roland (Ferencvárosi TC)
Vida Kristopher (DAC)
Zsótér Donát (Újpest FC)

Sensational comeback! Hungary beats Croatia – VIDEO, Photos

Ticket prices for Budapest UEFA EURO 2020 matches set at EUR 30-125

Puskás Stadium, new, building

Ticket prices for 2020 UEFA European Football Championship matches to be played in Budapest have been set at EUR 30-125, UEFA said on Sunday.

Centrally-positioned category 1 tickets will go for EUR 125; category 2 tickets, mainly in the corners, for EUR 75; and category 3 tickets, behind the goals, for EUR 30.

UEFA EURO 2020 will be staged between June 12 and July 12, 2020 in Amsterdam, Baku, Bilbao, Bucharest, Budapest, Copenhagen, Dublin, Glasgow, London, Munich, Rome and Saint Petersburg.

Budapest will host Group F matches on June 16, 20 and 24. It will host a Round of 16 match on June 28. All matches will take place in the 67,000-seat Puskás Ferenc Stadium, of which construction is in the finishing stages.

During a visit to Puskás Ferenc Stadium on Sunday, UEFA chairman Aleksander Ceferin said the venue is “quite impressive”.

Puskás Stadium construction passes scrutiny of UEFA head

“It’s new, it’s modern, it has some tradition,” he said.

Some 2.5 million tickets are expected to be sold for UEFA EURO 2020.

Puskás Stadium construction passes scrutiny of UEFA head

ceferin budapest hungary csányi orbán

Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) chairman Aleksander Ceferin expressed his satisfaction with the construction of Budapest’s Puskás Ferenc Stadium during a visit to the site on Sunday.

The Hungarian Football Association (MLSZ) said its chairman, Sándor Csányi, and state secretary Balázs Fürjes, had an informal meeting with Ceferin in the stadium.

Ceferin said he was waiting with great anticipation for the stadium to open in November.

Puskás Stadium, Hungary’s biggest, is scheduled to host four Euro 2020 matches.

Sensational comeback! Hungary beats Croatia – VIDEO, Photos

Sensational comeback! Hungary beats Croatia

A scrappy but hugely valuable winning goal from Máté Pátkai kickstarted Hungary’s UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying campaign as Marco Rossi’s men defeated Croatia 2-1 in the Groupama Aréna in Budapest last night.

Ante Rebić had given the visitors’ an early lead but Ádám Szalai’s low finish from a tight angle restored parity before the half-time break and Pátkai’s intervention completed a stirring comeback in front of another capacity crowd at the stadium of Hungarian league leaders Ferencváros.

Hungary head coach Rossi opted to ring the changes after last Thursday’s 2-0 defeat away in Slovakia, the most prominent of which saw Balázs Dzsuzsák start on the right wing in his 100th appearance for the national team, an occasion marked by the gift of a framed shirt from MLSZ President Dr Sándor Csányi before the kick-off.

Botond Baráth, Máté Pátkai, Dominik Nagy and Dominik Szoboszlai were the other men to come in as the hosts lined up in a 4-2-3-1 formation against a team with three points already on the board after Croatia’s 2-1 away win over Azerbaijan three days earlier.

Perhaps Hungary paid just a little too much respect to their illustrious opponents in the first few minutes, Luka Modrić’s free-kick from the right channel being headed over by Dejan Lovren nine metres outin the fourth minute before Ivan Perisić cut inside two minutes later and unleashed a low drive which Guácsi did well to get his full body behind and gather.

In the very next passage of play, Borna Barisić’s left-wing cross evaded Botond Baráth but Andrej Kramarić could only divert the ball narrowly over the crossbar.

Back came Hungary though and a right-wing free-kick earned by Szalai, taken by Balázsi Dzsudzsák and headed back across goal by Orbán found its way to Szalai, but the Hoffenheim striker was crowded out before he could fire a shot at goal.

Szalai Hungary football
Ádám Szalai, photo: MTI

Hungary were giving as good as they were getting but there was always the chance of being hit on the counter-attack by this lightning-quick Croatia team. So it proved in the 13th minute when Modrić’s low right-wing cross was taken off the toes of Perisić by Kramarić and helped on to the unmarked Ante Rebic ten metres from the Hungary, the Eintracht Frankfurt forward calmly slotting the ball past Gulácsi’s outstretched left foot and into the bottom right corner of the net.

Modric Croatia Hungary
Photo: MTI

It looked an uphill struggle for the hosts to stay in the game as the 2018 FIFA World Cup silver medallists threatened to score more but to their credit, Rossi’s men composed themselves, stayed solid and gradually started to pose danger again.

This culminated in a deserved 34th-minute equaliser when neat interplay over 40 metres between Lovrencsics, Szalai and Dzsudzsák resulted in the latter feeding the ball down the central-right channel for Hungary’s lone striker to latch on to. Finally supplied with a sight of goal, Szalai rifled through Croatia goalkeeper Lovre Kalanic into the net from a narrow angle.

Almost immediately, the home team were unfortunate not to be awarded a free-kick on the edge of the area when a Croatian defender stepped on the right heel of Dominik Nagy, the Legia Warsaw winger forced to leave the pitch in agony and on a stretcher.

Ferencváros attacker Roland Varga replaced him and he was to go close to edging Hungary into the lead in first-half added time, a smart training-ground corner routine seeing captain Dzsudzák’s eventual cross half-cleared to Varga, only for his half-volley to bounce just wide of the left post.

The first 15 minutes of the second half were a very even affair but that situation was punctured by Szoboszlai’s loss of possession 30 metres from his own goal, Croatia moving the ball on well to Perisić but his shot from seven metres rolled disappointingly wide.

Croatia’s failure to convert their possession and chances into goals meant wholehearted Hungary could always harbour hopes of taking the lead and these became reality in the 76th minute when Dzsudzsák’s inswinging corner from the right was contested by Pátkai at the back post, the loose ball being gleefully hooked into the net by the Videoton midfielder a matter of metres from goal.

Rossi’s charges didn’t rest on their laurels though and an almighty scramble in Croatia’s six-yard box almost saw substutute Zsolt Kalmár double Hungary’s advantage, only for his two close-range efforts to be blocked by frantic defenders.

The visitors’ evening was summed up in added time when a Baráth clearing header fell invitingly to FIFA 2018 Player of the Year Modrić on the edge of the penalty area, but the midfield maestro could only skew a half-volley wide of Gulácsi’s right post.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4TKgcfrUyPM

The final whistle blew soon after, an ecstatic home crowd rightly lauding the players who have handed their team their first three points of the qualifying group and signalled Rossi’s squad will be right in the fight for UEFA Euro 2020 qualification.

Sensational comeback! Hungary beats Croatia
Photo: MTI

Hungarian football’s 2019 diary

hungarian national team 2018

With the Hungarian men’s league championship back underway this weekend, we take a quick look at what’s in the diary for Hungarian football in the year of 2019, with UEFA Euro 2020 qualifiers, youth-level elite rounds and the Women’s Champions League final in Budapest featuring prominently.

February:

  • 21st: Women’s European Championship qualifying draw in Nyon. The matches will take place between 26th August 1019 and 22nd September 2020
  • 20th and 27th: Hungarian Cup 9th round
  • 23rd: FÖRCH Women’s Hungarian Cup semi-finals
  • 23rd-24th: Men’s and Women’s Futsal Hungarian Cup Final Four

March:

  • 8th: Tickets on sale for the Women’s Champions League final
  • 10th: Women’s Jet-Sol Liga restart
  • 21st: Slovakia-Hungary, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 20th-26th.: Men’s U19 Elite round, Croatia
  • 21st-27th: Women’s U17 Elite round, Hungary
  • 24th: Hungary-Croatia, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 26th March-1st April: Men’s U17 Elite round, Hungary
  • 26th-31st March: U19 futsal UEFA Euro qualifiers, Tbilisi

April:

  • 2nd-8th: Women’s U19 Elite round, Spain

May:

  • 16th: FÖRCH Women’s Hungarian Cup final
  • 18th: Women’s Champions League final, Budapest, Groupama Aréna
  • 18th/19th: Women’s futsal championship final, 1st match
  • 18th/19th: Women’s futsal championship final, 2nd match
  • 25th: Hungarian Cup final
  • 25th/26th: Expected dates for the 1st matches of the Jet-Sol Liga championship final and bronze-medal match series
  • 30th/31st: Futsal men’s championship final, 1st match

The Jet-Sol Liga champions will be crowned at the end of spring. Currently, Ferencváros lead the table with MTK in the second spot.

June:

  • 1st/2nd: Expected dates for the 2nd matches of the Jet-Sol Liga championship final and bronze-medal match series
  • 1st/2nd: Women’s futsal championship final, 3rd match
  • 3rd: Futsal men’s championship final, 2nd match
  • 6th: Expected dates for the 3rd matches (if needed) of the Jet-Sol Liga championship final and bronze-medal match series
  • 6th/7th: Futsal men’s championship final, 3rd match
  • 8th/9th: Women’s futsal championship final, 4th match if needed
  • 8th: AzerbaijanHungary, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 10th: Men’s futsal championship final, 4th match if needed
  • 11th: Hungary-Wales, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 13th/14th: Men’s futsal championship final, 5th match if needed
  • 15th/16th: Women’s futsal championship final, 5th match if needed

Hungary’s national teams are also counting on their fans’ support in their autumn European Championship qualifiers.

September:

  • 9th: Hungary-Slovakia, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier

October:

  • 2nd-8th: Women’s U17 (in Hungary) and U19 (in Turkey) Euro qualifying mini-tournaments for progress to the Elite round
  • 9th-15th: Men’s U19 (in Hungary) Euro qualifying mini-tournament for progress to the Elite round
  • 10th: Croatia-Hungary, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 13th: Hungary-Azerbaijan, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier
  • 22nd-27th: Futsal World Cup-qualifying tournament, Italy
  • 25th-30th: Men’s U17 (in Belarus) Euro qualifying mini-tournament for progress to the Elite round

November:

  • 19th: Wales-Hungary, UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier

Photo: MLSZ

UEFA Euro 2020: Zoltán Gera is Budapest Ambassador!

GERA euro2020 Budapest Hungary

The Hungarian Football Federation (MLSZ) announced on Tuesday that the official ambassador of UEFA Euro 2020 venue Budapest will be none other than 97-time Hungary international forward Zoltán Gera.

UEFA is organising what will likely be their biggest tournament ever, the 2020 Men’s European Championship. Of the 12 venue cities, eight will be capital cities, Budapest naturally being one of them. The brand-new Puskás Stadium, due to be completed and handed over later this year, will host three group matches and one 2nd-round knockout tie.

“Hungarian supporters are, in all senses, the winners in Budapest’s hosting (of Euro 2020 matches) because a good few of Europe’s best teams will play in Budapest.

The cream on top of the cake would of course be for the Hungarian national team to be amongst these teams. This is what we, the technical staff, and the players are workng on. We’re going to draw everything we can out of ourselves in order to be successful and put this cream on top of the cake”, Gera, who scored what many fans around the world deemed to be the goal of the Euro 2016 tournament in Hungary’s 3-3 group-stage draw with eventual winners Portugal and is now one of the national team’s backroom staff, told mlsz.hu.

Budapest euro2020It’s interesting to note that 14 countries have thus far hosted the men’s European Championship but that almost as many – 12 – will be joint hosts in 2020. Furthermore, last year, the World Swimming Championships were hosted in Hungary’s capital and this year the Women’s Champions League final will find its home here, but the European men’s football championship is an even bigger event and will be one of the biggest that Budapest has ever hosted.

Indeed, Euro 2020, to be held 60 years after the inaugural tournament, will be a true football festival with each host city offering its own atmosphere and culture to the party.

“Most of my thoughts at Ferencváros and the national team are on my daily work. At the same time, from now on, it will always thrill me to think that I am one of the ambassadors of the 2020 European Championship. The task is a huge honour for me”,

Gera, former star player and now assistant coach of the Hungarian men’s national team and Ferencváros, admitted with a wide smile on his face.

Largest ever European Championship being co-hosted by Budapest

puskás stadium budapest hungary football

The Puskás Stadium will the only completely new stadium among the 12 host venues for UEFA Euro 2020. Some 1,000 volunteers will work during the tournament in the Hungarian capital city, which is also playing host to the UEFA Women’s Champions League final in 2019.

Representatives of the Hungarian Football Federation leading the organisation of the two events informed the national sports media about tasks related to the upcoming large-scale events at a background discussion organised by the Hungarian Sports Journalists’ Association (MSÚSZ). The purpose of the discussion was to get the representatives of the largest Hungarian media outlets acquainted as early as possible with important information about the co-hosted 2020 European Championship as well as about this year’s Women’s Champions League final.

At the event held in the MSÚSZ office building, Vilmos Szabó, project leader of the 2020 European Championship, and István Forgács, the project leader of the 2019 Women’s Champions League, shared their experiences so far and introduced the audience to the upcoming tasks.

Speaking at the discussion, UEFA Communications Director David Farrelly said that except for the one in Copenhagen, all host stadiums will have a capacity in excess of 50,000, meaning that UEFA are preparing to sell a record three million tickets for the tournament. This is substantially more than the amount sold for Euro 2016 in France when a then-record of 2.4 million were sold.

UEFA will be selling more than a quarter of a million tickets just for matches in Budapest, of which they would like to sell 70% to Hungarian fans.

In relation to this, it is important to know that most of the tickets will be sold during the first phase of ticket sales in summer 2019. Those who wish to wait to see which teams qualify for the European Championship will most probably miss out.

UEFA has never organised such a large-scale tournament as Euro 2020.

Until now the tournament has either been hosted by a single country, or (twice) joint-hosted by two countries, but for the 60th anniversary of the inaugural championship UEFA is bringing the event to all parts of the continent. Up until now, only 15 countries have hosted the event, whilst 12 countries will co-host Euro 2020, seven of which – Hungary included – haven’t previously held the honour.

Farrelly emphasised that for smaller nations such as Hungary or his country Ireland, it is a wonderful opportunity to host European Championship matches for the first time, and aside from hosting the best teams on the continent, in the event of successfully qualifying for the tournament, will appear in front of a home crowd at Euro 2020.

Budapest is also playing host to the most important match in the calendar of the women’s game in 2019 when it hosts the UEFA Women’s Champions League final at the Groupama Aréna on 18 May, the encounter between the two best European women’s club sides on the continent being a fantastic opportunity for Hungary to develop and popularise the women’s game.

The Women’s Champions League final in 2019 is the first to be held at a time and venue independent of the men’s Champions League final.

Similar to this season’s Women’s Champions League final, the organisers are counting on the help of volunteers for the four European Championship matches in Hungary. Some 1,000 volunteers will be selected from among applications by the Hungarian Football Federation. The tournament provides a great opportunity for volunteers to actively participate at the European Championship, as they will be helping media staff and the

work of the organisers, as well as ensuring that fans have an unforgettable experience at the stadium and the Fan Zone. The Fan Zone will hopefully be full to capacity with football fans for every match held in Budapest, as will the Puskás Ferenc Stadium which is being built on schedule and due to be completed later this year, and will be the only brand-new stadium co-hosting the tournament.


BUDAPEST LOGO FOR UEFA EURO 2020 UNVEILED

Hungary’s capital Budapest has revealed its UEFA EURO 2020 host city logo – with UEFA president Aleksander Čeferin promising it will be a “fantastic host” at a tournament that will unite Europe, check out HERE.

Photo: MLSZ

Euro 2020 qualifiers: Hungary face Croatia, Wales, Azerbaijan and Slovakia

football hungary

Croatia’s national eleven is top favourite in qualification group E for the 2020 European Championship, Marco Rossi, Hungary’s national coach, said on Sunday.

Group E features Croatia, Wales, Slovakia, Hungary and Azerbaijan, with the top two teams automatically qualifying for Euro 2020.

“Croatia is by far the best squad in the group. As for the others, it will be mainly up to us what results we achieve,”

Rossi told the website of the Hungarian Football Association (MLSZ).

“The Croats don’t need to be introduced to anyone, the runner-up in this year’s World Cup represents a different quality than the other four teams. Hungary will probably wage a tough battle with Wales and Slovakia for the second place. Nor should we underrate the Azeri team,” the Italian coach of the Hungarian team said.

MLSZ President Sándor Csányi said that “Hungary and Hungarian fans will in any case benefit from the European Championship because Budapest will co-host the tournament.”

Ryan Giggs told BBC Sport Wales:

“I think Croatia are favourites and the rest of the teams are competitive. “We’ve shown glimpses of it, now we have to show it consistently going into the qualifiers,” he said.

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Full Euro 2020 qualifiers draw

Group A: England, Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Montenegro, Kosovo.

Group B: Portugal, Ukraine, Serbia, Lithuania, Luxembourg.

Group C: Netherlands, Germany, Northern Ireland, Estonia, Belarus.

Group D: Switzerland, Denmark, Republic of Ireland, Georgia, Gibraltar.

Group E: Croatia, Wales, Slovakia, Hungary, Azerbaijan.

Group F: Spain, Sweden, Norway, Romania, Faroe Islands, Malta.

Group G: Poland, Austria, Israel, Slovenia, Macedonia, Latvia.

Group H: France, Iceland, Turkey, Albania, Moldova, Andorra.

Group I: Belgium, Russia, Scotland, Cyprus, Kazakhstan, San Marino.

Group J: Italy, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Finland, Greece, Armenia, Liechtenstein.

Budapest logo for UEFA Euro 2020 unveiled

Hungary’s capital Budapest has revealed its UEFA EURO 2020 host city logo – with UEFA president Aleksander Čeferin promising it will be a “fantastic host” at a tournament that will unite Europe.

Hungary’s pride at its distinguished football history was clear for all to see as the capital Budapest unveiled its UEFA EURO 2020 host city logo. The Ministry of Home Affairs hosted the unveiling ceremony on Wednesday and UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin was present for the occasion.

Budapest is one of 13 cities across Europe which will stage EURO matches in four years’ time, a tournament which will mark 60 years of the EURO, and will host three group stage matches and a round-of-16 encounter. The aim for 2020 is to build bridges between nations and fans so each host city’s individual logo features a famous bridge from that city. The Budapest logo portrays the renowned Széchenyi Chain Bridge which spans the River Danube leading to the Henri Delaunay trophy.

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“It is our duty to connect all the fans of Europe because, although we may different from each other, we share the same European values”, said Mr Čeferin, who revealed at the event that his great-grandfather was Hungarian. “Budapest will be a fantastic host”, he added, emphasising the “enormous efforts” being made by the Hungarian Football Federation (MLSZ) to develop the country’s football at all levels.

MLSZ president Sándor Csányi also expressed his pride. “I truly believe that UEFA EURO 2020 will inspire younger generations to join the football family,” he said. “Not just in Hungary, but all over Europe”.

He also expressed his delight that Hungary can be a host of the European Championship, something which can give a serious boost to the sport’s development and believes that the infrastructure put in place and the technical developments since 2010 can be thanked if the chance for the Hungary team to participate in the 2020 European Championships becomes reality. This hope of his is strengthened by the heartening fact that at U17 and U19 level both men’s and women’s teams have progressed to the Elite rounds of their age groups’ European Championship qualifiers. This is further emphasised by Hungary head coach Bernd Storck’s work which supports the receipt of opportunities for more and more young players to play at full international level.

euro2020, photo: MTI

Budapest’s mayor István Tarlós underlined the passion that Budapest and Hungary holds for sport. “The capital will welcome visitors and football fans with great pleasure”, he reflected. He also stated that Budapest is one of the world’s most beautiful cities which, thanks to years of recent development, is becoming a more and more popular tourist destination and is attaining a higer and higher ranking in terms of the most enjoyable cities to live in. The mayor also reminded everyone of Budapest’s new stadia and said he would be satisfied if, in 2020, the Hungary team could repeat its feat of winning Euro bronze in 1964.

Also in front of the cameras were Antal Dunai, an Olympic football gold medallist with Hungary in 1968, and recently-retired international Roland Juhász, who was capped 95 times by his country and earned his final cap in Tuesday’s friendly against Sweden, both being unanimously of the opinion that “UEFA EURO is an unforgettable, unique experience for every football player and fan”.

 

It was in Geneva in September 2014 that it was decided that Hungary’s capital Budapest would be amongst the 13 cities which would host Euro 2020 matches, the plan being that the three group matches and one round-of-16 fixture will be held in the New Ferenc Puskás stadium currently in the process of being built.

Twenty teams will qualify for Euro 2020, four of which will come from the Nations’ League tournament bein held in season 2018-19.

Photo: MLSZ