Euro 2020 Update

Hampden Park Euro 2020 is due to take place from June 11 to July 11 in 12 cities across the continent and UEFA has repeatedly insisted that it intends to stage the tournament as planned.

However, Bilbao, Dublin and Glasgow are reportedly at risk of losing hosting rights to matches at this summer’s rescheduled championships amid uncertainty over whether fans will be able to attend games.

UEFA met with representatives of the 12 host associations/organisers in January to discuss operational matters relating to the tournament. Amid ongoing uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, UEFA said that the deadline for the submission of plans to accommodate fans inside stadiums has been moved to early April.



With this deadline fast approaching, there are ‘rumblings’ among people with so-called knowledge of tournament planning, that Bilbao, Dublin and Glasgow face the prospect of being dropped by UEFA over the “lack of guarantees” surrounding fan attendance.

UEFA has however reiterated its intention to stage the tournament across 12 cities. The governing body said in a statement that ‘since the tournament was announced, staged across 12 countries, it has remained UEFA’s intention to stage it in 12 countries.’

There have been growing calls for London’s Wembley Stadium to host more matches at Euro 2020 as the COVID-19 vaccination roll-out continues apace across England. The UK government then announced last week in its ‘roadmap for reopening’ that sports fans could return to stadiums by May 17, with all restrictions on social contact potentially being lifted by June 21 in a move that would further calls for England to be awarded more games.

The plan to reopen stadiums does not apply to Scotland, meaning that fan attendance plans for Euro 2020 games at Glasgow’s Hampden Park remain unclear. The stadium is due to host three group-stage games and a last-16 fixture.

It is thought that UEFA could possibly consider Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, as well as grounds in Manchester or Liverpool, should Hampden Park or Dublin’s Aviva Stadium be dropped from the host venue list. The Irish government recently reported that it is “too early” to say when restrictions could be eased in the Ireland.

Doubts also remain over Bilbao’s plans for fan attendance, with the Basque government urging a cautious approach to reopening sports stadium to fans.

UKs Prime Minister has said that England would be open to hosting more matches this coming summer if needed. Health Secretary Matt Hancock recently playing down the idea that England could stage the entirety of the tournament.

As well as London, Glasgow, Dublin and Bilbao, Euro 2020 games are due to be held in Amsterdam, Munich, Rome, Copenhagen, Budapest, Bucharest, Saint Petersburg and Baku.

Wembley Stadium