UK and Ireland to host Euro 2028 as Italy, Turkey awarded Euro 2032
Welsh retired professional footballer, heading the delegation of UK and Ireland Gareth Bale (3rdL), flanked by UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin (C), poses with fans as they hold the pennant after United Kingdom and Ireland were elected to host the Euro 2028 fooball tournament during a ceremony at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon on October 10, 2023. Seven years after awarding Euro-2024 to Germany, UEFA announced on October 10, 2023 the hosts for the next two editions: The United Kingdom and Ireland are due to host the tournament together in 2028, followed by the unprecedented tandem of Italy and Turkey in 2032. (Photo by Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP)
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The
United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland will co-host Euro 2028, while Italy and
Turkey will be joint hosts of the 2032 tournament, UEFA announced on Tuesday.
Both
bids ran unopposed but still needed official approval from European football's
governing body, which they received at a meeting in Switzerland.
Turkey
last week withdrew from the bidding process for Euro 2028, clearing the path
for Britain and Ireland, who shelved plans to bid to host the 2030 World Cup to
focus on staging the European Championship.
Turkey,
which has bid unsuccessfully to stage every Euro going back to 2008, was
initially a candidate for both 2028 and 2032.
However,
in July it agreed to join Italy in a bid for the 2032 edition, without saying
at the time if it would pull out of the running for 2028.
England,
which hosted the women's Euro last year, last hosted a major men's tournament
in 1996, when the European Championship involved just 16 teams.
It
also hosted the final of the 24-team Euro 2020, delayed by a year due to the
pandemic and held in venues across Europe, at Wembley.
Between
them, England and Scotland hosted 12 games during that tournament.
Italy
also hosted matches in Rome at Euro 2020 but has not hosted a tournament on its
own since the 1990 World Cup.
It
hosted the final stages of the four-team Euro in 1968 and the eight-team
tournament in 1980.
Turkey,
which hosted this year's Champions League final in Istanbul in June, has never
been awarded a major international competition.


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