UEFA Euro 2012 squads

The following is a list of squads for each national team competing at the Euro 2012 in Poland and Ukraine. The tournament started on 8 June and the final took place in Kiev on 1 July 2012.

Each national team had to submit a squad of 23 players, three of whom must be goalkeepers, by 29 May 2012.[1] If a player was injured severely enough to prevent his participation in the tournament before his team's first match, he could be replaced by another player.[2]

Club memberships are correct as of 201112 season. Caps and goals correct as of 18 June 2012. Ages are correct as of 8 June 2012, the opening day of the tournament.

Group A

Poland

Coach: Franciszek Smuda

On 2 May 2012, Smuda named a provisional list of 26 players for the tournament, along with a seven-man reserve list.[3] Łukasz Fabiański withdrew from the squad on 26 May 2012 with a shoulder injury and was replaced by Grzegorz Sandomierski from the reserve list; Smuda named his 23-man final squad the following day.[4]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Wojciech Szczęsny 18 April 1990 (aged 22) 11 0 England Arsenal
2 DF Sebastian Boenisch 1 February 1987 (aged 25) 9 0 Germany Werder Bremen
3 DF Grzegorz Wojtkowiak 26 January 1984 (aged 28) 19 0 Poland Lech Poznań
4 DF Marcin Kamiński 15 January 1992 (aged 20) 3 0 Poland Lech Poznań
5 MF Dariusz Dudka 9 December 1983 (aged 28) 65 2 France Auxerre
6 MF Adam Matuszczyk 14 February 1989 (aged 23) 20 1 Germany Fortuna Düsseldorf
7 MF Eugen Polanski 17 March 1986 (aged 26) 11 0 Germany Mainz 05
8 MF Maciej Rybus 19 August 1989 (aged 22) 22 1 Russia Terek Grozny
9 FW Robert Lewandowski 21 August 1988 (aged 23) 45 15 Germany Borussia Dortmund
10 MF Ludovic Obraniak 10 November 1984 (aged 27) 26 5 France Bordeaux
11 MF Rafał Murawski 9 October 1981 (aged 30) 46 1 Poland Lech Poznań
12 GK Grzegorz Sandomierski 5 September 1989 (aged 22) 3 0 Poland Jagiellonia Białystok
13 DF Marcin Wasilewski 9 June 1980 (aged 31) 51 2 Belgium Anderlecht
14 DF Jakub Wawrzyniak 7 July 1983 (aged 28) 26 0 Poland Legia Warsaw
15 DF Damien Perquis 4 October 1984 (aged 27) 10 1 France Sochaux
16 MF Jakub Błaszczykowski (c) 14 December 1985 (aged 26) 54 10 Germany Borussia Dortmund
17 FW Artur Sobiech 12 June 1990 (aged 21) 5 1 Germany Hannover 96
18 MF Adrian Mierzejewski 4 November 1986 (aged 25) 25 1 Turkey Trabzonspor
19 MF Rafał Wolski 10 November 1992 (aged 19) 3 0 Poland Legia Warsaw
20 DF Łukasz Piszczek 3 June 1985 (aged 27) 27 0 Germany Borussia Dortmund
21 MF Kamil Grosicki 8 June 1988 (aged 24) 14 0 Turkey Sivasspor
22 GK Przemysław Tytoń 4 January 1987 (aged 25) 8 0 Netherlands PSV Eindhoven
23 FW Paweł Brożek 21 April 1983 (aged 29) 36 8 Turkey Trabzonspor

Greece

Coach: Portugal Fernando Santos

Santos named his first shortlist, composed of players based abroad, on 10 May 2012, and the second, composed of Greece-based players on 17 May 2012, totalling a 25-player provisional list.[5] On 28 May 2012, Santos announced his 23-man squad.[6]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Kostas Chalkias 30 May 1974 (aged 38) 32 0 Greece PAOK
2 MF Giannis Maniatis 12 October 1986 (aged 25) 13 0 Greece Olympiacos
3 DF Giorgos Tzavelas 26 November 1987 (aged 24) 8 0 France AS Monaco
4 DF Stelios Malezas 11 March 1985 (aged 27) 2 0 Greece PAOK
5 DF Kyriakos Papadopoulos 23 February 1992 (aged 20) 12 3 Germany Schalke 04
6 MF Grigoris Makos 18 January 1987 (aged 25) 13 0 Greece AEK Athens
7 FW Georgios Samaras 21 February 1985 (aged 27) 58 8 Scotland Celtic
8 DF Avraam Papadopoulos 3 December 1984 (aged 27) 34 0 Greece Olympiacos
9 FW Nikos Liberopoulos 4 August 1975 (aged 36) 76 13 Greece AEK Athens
10 MF Giorgos Karagounis (c) 6 March 1977 (aged 35) 120 9 Greece Panathinaikos
11 FW Kostas Mitroglou 12 March 1988 (aged 24) 14 0 Greece Atromitos
12 GK Alexandros Tzorvas 12 August 1982 (aged 29) 16 0 Italy Palermo
13 GK Michalis Sifakis 9 September 1984 (aged 27) 15 0 Greece Aris Thessaloniki
14 FW Dimitris Salpingidis 18 August 1981 (aged 30) 60 9 Greece PAOK
15 DF Vasilis Torosidis 10 June 1985 (aged 26) 48 6 Greece Olympiacos
16 MF Georgios Fotakis 29 October 1981 (aged 30) 12 2 Greece PAOK
17 FW Theofanis Gekas 23 May 1980 (aged 32) 62 22 Turkey Samsunspor
18 MF Sotiris Ninis 3 April 1990 (aged 22) 22 2 Greece Panathinaikos
19 DF Sokratis Papastathopoulos 9 June 1988 (aged 23) 31 0 Germany Werder Bremen
20 DF José Holebas 27 June 1984 (aged 27) 7 0 Greece Olympiacos
21 MF Kostas Katsouranis 21 June 1979 (aged 32) 95 9 Greece Panathinaikos
22 MF Kostas Fortounis 16 October 1992 (aged 19) 5 0 Germany 1. FC Kaiserslautern
23 MF Giannis Fetfatzidis 21 December 1990 (aged 21) 13 3 Greece Olympiacos

Russia

Coach: Netherlands Dick Advocaat

On 11 May 2012, Advocaat named a provisional list of 26 players for the tournament.[7] Vasili Berezutski and Roman Shishkin withdrew on 20 and 24 May respectively, Berezutski with a thigh injury and Shishkin due to a stomach complaint.[8][9] Advocaat named his final squad on 25 May 2012; Kirill Nababkin was named having not been included in the provisional party.[10]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Igor Akinfeev 8 April 1986 (aged 26) 51 0 Russia CSKA Moscow
2 DF Aleksandr Anyukov 28 September 1982 (aged 29) 64 1 Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg
3 DF Roman Sharonov 8 September 1976 (aged 35) 8 0 Russia Rubin Kazan
4 DF Sergei Ignashevich 14 July 1979 (aged 32) 74 5 Russia CSKA Moscow
5 DF Yuri Zhirkov 20 August 1983 (aged 28) 51 0 Russia Anzhi Makhachkala
6 MF Roman Shirokov 6 July 1981 (aged 30) 21 6 Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg
7 MF Igor Denisov 17 May 1984 (aged 28) 25 0 Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg
8 MF Konstantin Zyryanov 5 October 1977 (aged 34) 49 7 Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg
9 MF Marat Izmailov 21 September 1982 (aged 29) 32 2 Portugal Sporting CP
10 FW Andrei Arshavin (c) 29 May 1981 (aged 31) 70 17 England Arsenal
11 FW Aleksandr Kerzhakov 27 November 1982 (aged 29) 60 19 Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg
12 DF Aleksei Berezutski 20 June 1982 (aged 29) 47 0 Russia CSKA Moscow
13 GK Anton Shunin 27 January 1987 (aged 25) 2 0 Russia Dynamo Moscow
14 FW Roman Pavlyuchenko 15 December 1981 (aged 30) 46 20 Russia Lokomotiv Moscow
15 DF Dmitri Kombarov 22 January 1987 (aged 25) 3 0 Russia Spartak Moscow
16 GK Vyacheslav Malafeev 4 March 1979 (aged 33) 25 0 Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg
17 MF Alan Dzagoev 17 June 1990 (aged 21) 19 4 Russia CSKA Moscow
18 FW Aleksandr Kokorin 19 March 1991 (aged 21) 4 0 Russia Dynamo Moscow
19 DF Vladimir Granat 22 May 1987 (aged 25) 0 0 Russia Dynamo Moscow
20 FW Pavel Pogrebnyak 8 November 1983 (aged 28) 32 8 England Fulham
21 DF Kirill Nababkin 8 September 1986 (aged 25) 1 0 Russia CSKA Moscow
22 MF Denis Glushakov 27 January 1987 (aged 25) 9 1 Russia Lokomotiv Moscow
23 MF Igor Semshov 6 April 1978 (aged 34) 56 3 Russia Dynamo Moscow

Note: a 2012 friendly match against Lithuania, recognized by the Russian Football Union but not by FIFA, is not counted.

Czech Republic

Coach: Michal Bílek

Michal Bílek announced his 24-man provisional squad on 14 May 2012.[11] On 28 May 2012, he replaced Daniel Pudil with Vladimír Darida.[12] The following day, he confirmed his 23-man squad, removing Tomáš Grigar.[13]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Petr Čech 20 May 1982 (aged 30) 94 0 England Chelsea
2 DF Theodor Gebre Selassie 24 December 1986 (aged 25) 14 0 Czech Republic Slovan Liberec
3 DF Michal Kadlec 13 December 1984 (aged 27) 38 8 Germany Bayer Leverkusen
4 MF Marek Suchý 29 March 1988 (aged 24) 4 0 Russia Spartak Moscow
5 DF Roman Hubník 6 June 1984 (aged 28) 23 2 Germany Hertha BSC
6 DF Tomáš Sivok 15 September 1983 (aged 28) 30 3 Turkey Beşiktaş
7 FW Tomáš Necid 13 August 1989 (aged 22) 26 7 Russia CSKA Moscow
8 MF David Limberský 6 October 1983 (aged 28) 12 0 Czech Republic Viktoria Plzeň
9 MF Jan Rezek 5 May 1982 (aged 30) 16 3 Cyprus Anorthosis Famagusta
10 MF Tomáš Rosický (c) 4 October 1980 (aged 31) 87 20 England Arsenal
11 MF Milan Petržela 19 June 1983 (aged 28) 11 0 Czech Republic Viktoria Plzeň
12 DF František Rajtoral 12 March 1986 (aged 26) 5 0 Czech Republic Viktoria Plzeň
13 MF Jaroslav Plašil 5 January 1982 (aged 30) 75 6 France Bordeaux
14 FW Václav Pilař 13 October 1988 (aged 23) 13 3 Czech Republic Viktoria Plzeň
15 FW Milan Baroš 28 October 1981 (aged 30) 93 41 Turkey Galatasaray
16 GK Jan Laštůvka 7 July 1982 (aged 29) 1 0 Ukraine Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
17 DF Tomáš Hübschman 4 September 1981 (aged 30) 47 0 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
18 MF Daniel Kolář 27 October 1985 (aged 26) 13 1 Czech Republic Viktoria Plzeň
19 MF Petr Jiráček 2 March 1986 (aged 26) 12 3 Germany VfL Wolfsburg
20 FW Tomáš Pekhart 26 May 1989 (aged 23) 13 0 Germany 1. FC Nuremberg
21 FW David Lafata 18 September 1981 (aged 30) 19 3 Czech Republic FK Jablonec
22 MF Vladimír Darida 8 August 1990 (aged 21) 3 0 Czech Republic Viktoria Plzeň
23 GK Jaroslav Drobný 18 October 1979 (aged 32) 6 0 Germany Hamburger SV

Group B

Netherlands

Coach: Bert van Marwijk

On 7 May 2012, van Marwijk named a provisional list of 36 players for the tournament.[14] However, Erik Pieters was forced to pull out of the squad shortly after the announcement with a foot injury.[15] On 15 May 2012, van Marwijk reduced his squad to 27 players.[16] On 26 May 2012, van Marwijk announced his 23-man squad for the tournament.[17]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Maarten Stekelenburg 22 September 1982 (aged 29) 50 0 Italy Roma
2 DF Gregory van der Wiel 3 February 1988 (aged 24) 35 0 Netherlands Ajax
3 MF John Heitinga 15 November 1983 (aged 28) 80 7 England Everton
4 DF Joris Mathijsen 5 April 1980 (aged 32) 82 3 Spain Málaga
5 DF Wilfred Bouma 15 June 1978 (aged 33) 37 2 Netherlands PSV
6 MF Mark van Bommel (c) 22 April 1977 (aged 35) 79 10 Italy Milan
7 FW Dirk Kuyt 22 July 1980 (aged 31) 90 24 England Liverpool
8 MF Nigel de Jong 30 November 1984 (aged 27) 63 1 England Manchester City
9 FW Klaas-Jan Huntelaar 12 August 1983 (aged 28) 56 31 Germany Schalke 04
10 MF Wesley Sneijder 9 June 1984 (aged 27) 87 24 Italy Internazionale
11 FW Arjen Robben 23 January 1984 (aged 28) 60 17 Germany Bayern Munich
12 GK Michel Vorm 20 October 1983 (aged 28) 9 0 Wales Swansea City
13 DF Ron Vlaar 16 February 1985 (aged 27) 9 1 Netherlands Feyenoord
14 MF Stijn Schaars 11 January 1984 (aged 28) 19 0 Portugal Sporting
15 DF Jetro Willems 30 March 1994 (aged 18) 5 0 Netherlands PSV
16 FW Robin van Persie 6 August 1983 (aged 28) 68 29 England Arsenal
17 MF Kevin Strootman 13 February 1990 (aged 22) 11 1 Netherlands PSV
18 FW Luuk de Jong 27 August 1990 (aged 21) 7 1 Netherlands Twente
19 FW Luciano Narsingh 13 September 1990 (aged 21) 2 0 Netherlands Heerenveen
20 MF Ibrahim Afellay 2 April 1986 (aged 26) 41 5 Spain Barcelona
21 DF Khalid Boulahrouz 28 December 1981 (aged 30) 35 0 Germany VfB Stuttgart
22 GK Tim Krul 3 April 1988 (aged 24) 3 0 England Newcastle United
23 MF Rafael van der Vaart 11 February 1983 (aged 29) 99 19 England Tottenham Hotspur

Denmark

Coach: Morten Olsen

Denmark coach Morten Olsen named a 20-man squad for the tournament on 16 May 2012, with the three remaining berths to be filled.[18] Anders Lindegaard was selected on 19 May.[19] Jores Okore and Nicklas Pedersen were selected on 24 May.[20] On 29 May, Thomas Sorensen was replaced by Kasper Schmeichel due to a back injury.[21]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Stephan Andersen 26 November 1981 (aged 30) 13 0 France Evian
2 MF Christian Poulsen 28 February 1980 (aged 32) 92 6 France Evian
3 DF Simon Kjær 26 March 1989 (aged 23) 27 0 Italy Roma
4 DF Daniel Agger (c) 12 December 1984 (aged 27) 49 6 England Liverpool
5 DF Simon Poulsen 7 October 1984 (aged 27) 21 0 Netherlands AZ
6 DF Lars Jacobsen 20 September 1979 (aged 32) 53 1 Denmark Copenhagen
7 MF William Kvist 24 February 1985 (aged 27) 31 0 Germany VfB Stuttgart
8 FW Christian Eriksen 14 February 1992 (aged 20) 26 2 Netherlands Ajax
9 FW Michael Krohn-Dehli 6 June 1983 (aged 29) 24 6 Denmark Brøndby
10 FW Dennis Rommedahl 22 July 1978 (aged 33) 118 21 Denmark Brøndby
11 FW Nicklas Bendtner 16 January 1988 (aged 24) 51 20 England Arsenal
12 DF Andreas Bjelland 11 July 1988 (aged 23) 6 1 Denmark Nordsjælland
13 DF Jores Okore 11 August 1992 (aged 19) 3 0 Denmark Nordsjælland
14 MF Lasse Schøne 27 May 1986 (aged 26) 12 2 Netherlands NEC
15 DF Michael Silberbauer 7 July 1981 (aged 30) 24 1 Switzerland Young Boys
16 GK Anders Lindegaard 13 April 1984 (aged 28) 5 0 England Manchester United
17 FW Nicklas Pedersen 10 October 1987 (aged 24) 7 0 Netherlands Groningen
18 MF Daniel Wass 31 May 1989 (aged 23) 6 0 France Evian
19 MF Jakob Poulsen 7 July 1983 (aged 28) 24 1 Denmark Midtjylland
20 FW Thomas Kahlenberg 20 March 1983 (aged 29) 38 4 France Evian
21 MF Niki Zimling 19 April 1985 (aged 27) 14 0 Belgium Club Brugge
22 GK Kasper Schmeichel 5 November 1986 (aged 25) 0 0 England Leicester City
23 MF Tobias Mikkelsen 18 September 1986 (aged 25) 6 0 Denmark Nordsjælland

Germany

Coach: Joachim Löw

On 7 May 2012, Löw named a provisional list of 27 players for the tournament.[22] On 28 May 2012, Löw announced his 23-man squad.[23]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Manuel Neuer 27 March 1986 (aged 26) 31 0 Germany Bayern Munich
2 MF İlkay Gündoğan 24 October 1990 (aged 21) 2 0 Germany Borussia Dortmund
3 DF Marcel Schmelzer 22 January 1988 (aged 24) 6 0 Germany Borussia Dortmund
4 DF Benedikt Höwedes 29 February 1988 (aged 24) 8 0 Germany Schalke 04
5 DF Mats Hummels 16 December 1988 (aged 23) 19 1 Germany Borussia Dortmund
6 MF Sami Khedira 4 April 1987 (aged 25) 32 2 Spain Real Madrid
7 MF Bastian Schweinsteiger 1 August 1984 (aged 27) 95 23 Germany Bayern Munich
8 MF Mesut Özil 15 October 1988 (aged 23) 38 9 Spain Real Madrid
9 MF André Schürrle 6 November 1990 (aged 21) 16 7 Germany Bayer Leverkusen
10 MF Lukas Podolski 4 June 1985 (aged 27) 101 44 Germany 1. FC Köln
11 FW Miroslav Klose 9 June 1978 (aged 33) 121 64 Italy Lazio
12 GK Tim Wiese 17 December 1981 (aged 30) 6 0 Germany Werder Bremen
13 MF Thomas Müller 13 September 1989 (aged 22) 32 10 Germany Bayern Munich
14 DF Holger Badstuber 13 March 1989 (aged 23) 25 1 Germany Bayern Munich
15 MF Lars Bender 27 April 1989 (aged 23) 9 1 Germany Bayer Leverkusen
16 DF Philipp Lahm (c) 11 November 1983 (aged 28) 91 5 Germany Bayern Munich
17 DF Per Mertesacker 29 September 1984 (aged 27) 81 1 England Arsenal
18 MF Toni Kroos 4 January 1990 (aged 22) 30 2 Germany Bayern Munich
19 MF Mario Götze 3 June 1992 (aged 20) 15 2 Germany Borussia Dortmund
20 DF Jérôme Boateng 3 September 1988 (aged 23) 25 0 Germany Bayern Munich
21 MF Marco Reus 31 May 1989 (aged 23) 8 2 Germany Borussia Mönchengladbach
22 GK Ron-Robert Zieler 12 February 1989 (aged 23) 1 0 Germany Hannover 96
23 FW Mario Gómez 10 July 1985 (aged 26) 57 25 Germany Bayern Munich

Portugal

Coach: Paulo Bento

Paulo Bento named his final 23-man squad on 14 May 2012.[24] On 23 May, Hugo Viana replaced Carlos Martins after Martins suffered a calf injury.[25]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Eduardo 19 September 1982 (aged 29) 28 0 Portugal Benfica
2 DF Bruno Alves 27 November 1981 (aged 30) 55 5 Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg
3 DF Pepe 26 February 1983 (aged 29) 44 3 Spain Real Madrid
4 MF Miguel Veloso 11 May 1986 (aged 26) 29 2 Italy Genoa
5 DF Fábio Coentrão 11 March 1988 (aged 24) 27 1 Spain Real Madrid
6 MF Custódio 24 May 1983 (aged 29) 4 0 Portugal Braga
7 FW Cristiano Ronaldo (c) 5 February 1985 (aged 27) 95 35 Spain Real Madrid
8 MF João Moutinho 8 September 1986 (aged 25) 48 2 Portugal Porto
9 FW Hugo Almeida 23 May 1984 (aged 28) 44 15 Turkey Beşiktaş
10 FW Ricardo Quaresma 26 September 1983 (aged 28) 35 3 Turkey Beşiktaş
11 FW Nélson Oliveira 8 August 1991 (aged 20) 7 0 Portugal Benfica
12 GK Rui Patrício 15 February 1988 (aged 24) 16 0 Portugal Sporting CP
13 DF Ricardo Costa 16 May 1981 (aged 31) 11 0 Spain Valencia
14 DF Rolando 31 August 1985 (aged 26) 17 0 Portugal Porto
15 MF Rúben Micael 19 August 1986 (aged 25) 8 2 Spain Atlético Madrid
16 MF Raul Meireles 17 March 1983 (aged 29) 61 8 England Chelsea
17 FW Nani 17 November 1986 (aged 25) 59 13 England Manchester United
18 FW Silvestre Varela 2 February 1985 (aged 27) 9 2 Portugal Porto
19 DF Miguel Lopes 19 December 1986 (aged 25) 1 0 Portugal Braga
20 MF Hugo Viana 15 January 1983 (aged 29) 27 1 Portugal Braga
21 DF João Pereira 25 February 1984 (aged 28) 19 0 Portugal Sporting CP
22 GK Beto 1 May 1982 (aged 30) 2 0 Romania CFR Cluj
23 FW Hélder Postiga 2 August 1982 (aged 29) 53 20 Spain Zaragoza

Group C

Spain

Coach: Vicente del Bosque

Vicente del Bosque named a squad to play in a set of warm-up matches on 15 May 2012, but it did not include any Barcelona, Athletic Bilbao, or Chelsea players as the two Spanish sides were preparing for the Copa del Rey final on 25 May, while Chelsea were to take on Bayern Munich in the Champions League final on 19 May.[26] On 21 May 2012, del Bosque called-up Chelsea players Fernando Torres and Juan Mata for the friendly matches.[27] On 27 May, del Bosque gave the final squad list, complete with Barcelona and Athletic Bilbao players.[28]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Iker Casillas (c) 20 May 1981 (aged 31) 137 0 Spain Real Madrid
2 DF Raúl Albiol 4 September 1985 (aged 26) 34 0 Spain Real Madrid
3 DF Gerard Piqué 2 February 1987 (aged 25) 45 4 Spain Barcelona
4 MF Javi Martínez 2 September 1988 (aged 23) 8 0 Spain Athletic Bilbao
5 DF Juanfran Torres 9 January 1985 (aged 27) 1 0 Spain Atlético Madrid
6 MF Andrés Iniesta 11 May 1984 (aged 28) 71 10 Spain Barcelona
7 FW Pedro Rodríguez 28 July 1987 (aged 24) 18 2 Spain Barcelona
8 MF Xavi Hernández 25 January 1980 (aged 32) 115 11 Spain Barcelona
9 FW Fernando Torres 20 March 1984 (aged 28) 98 31 England Chelsea
10 MF Cesc Fàbregas 4 May 1987 (aged 25) 69 10 Spain Barcelona
11 FW Álvaro Negredo 20 August 1985 (aged 26) 12 6 Spain Sevilla
12 GK Víctor Valdés 14 January 1982 (aged 30) 8 0 Spain Barcelona
13 MF Juan Mata 28 April 1988 (aged 24) 19 6 England Chelsea
14 MF Xabi Alonso 25 November 1981 (aged 30) 102 15 Spain Real Madrid
15 DF Sergio Ramos 30 March 1986 (aged 26) 92 6 Spain Real Madrid
16 MF Sergio Busquets 16 July 1988 (aged 23) 45 0 Spain Barcelona
17 DF Álvaro Arbeloa 17 January 1983 (aged 29) 41 0 Spain Real Madrid
18 DF Jordi Alba 21 March 1989 (aged 23) 11 1 Spain Valencia
19 FW Fernando Llorente 26 February 1985 (aged 27) 20 7 Spain Athletic Bilbao
20 MF Santi Cazorla 13 December 1984 (aged 27) 45 6 England Arsenal
21 MF David Silva 8 January 1986 (aged 26) 64 18 England Manchester City
22 MF Jesús Navas 21 November 1985 (aged 26) 20 2 Spain Sevilla
23 GK Pepe Reina 31 August 1982 (aged 29) 25 0 England Liverpool

Italy

Coach: Cesare Prandelli

Cesare Prandelli named a provisional 32-man squad on 13 May 2012, the final day of the 2011–12 Serie A season.[29] On 29 May 2012, Prandelli announced his final squad list,[30] with defender Domenico Criscito not considered due to match-fixing charges.[31]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Gianluigi Buffon (c) 28 January 1978 (aged 34) 120 0 Italy Juventus
2 MF Christian Maggio 11 February 1982 (aged 30) 19 0 Italy Napoli
3 DF Giorgio Chiellini 14 August 1984 (aged 27) 55 2 Italy Juventus
4 DF Angelo Ogbonna 23 May 1988 (aged 24) 3 0 Italy Torino
5 MF Thiago Motta 28 August 1982 (aged 29) 13 1 France Paris Saint-Germain
6 DF Federico Balzaretti 6 December 1981 (aged 30) 12 0 Italy Palermo
7 DF Ignazio Abate 12 November 1986 (aged 25) 5 0 Italy Milan
8 MF Claudio Marchisio 19 January 1986 (aged 26) 26 1 Italy Juventus
9 FW Mario Balotelli 12 August 1990 (aged 21) 14 4 England Manchester City
10 FW Antonio Cassano 12 July 1982 (aged 29) 35 10 Italy Milan
11 FW Antonio Di Natale 13 October 1977 (aged 34) 42 11 Italy Udinese
12 GK Salvatore Sirigu 12 January 1987 (aged 25) 2 0 France Paris Saint-Germain
13 MF Emanuele Giaccherini 5 May 1985 (aged 27) 2 0 Italy Juventus
14 GK Morgan De Sanctis 26 March 1977 (aged 35) 5 0 Italy Napoli
15 DF Andrea Barzagli 8 May 1981 (aged 31) 33 0 Italy Juventus
16 MF Daniele De Rossi 24 July 1983 (aged 28) 78 10 Italy Roma
17 FW Fabio Borini 29 March 1991 (aged 21) 1 0 Italy Roma
18 MF Riccardo Montolivo 18 January 1985 (aged 27) 37 1 Italy Fiorentina
19 DF Leonardo Bonucci 1 May 1987 (aged 25) 20 2 Italy Juventus
20 FW Sebastian Giovinco 26 January 1987 (aged 25) 10 0 Italy Parma
21 MF Andrea Pirlo 19 May 1979 (aged 33) 89 10 Italy Juventus
22 MF Alessandro Diamanti 2 May 1983 (aged 29) 4 0 Italy Bologna
23 MF Antonio Nocerino 9 April 1985 (aged 27) 13 0 Italy Milan

Republic of Ireland

Coach: Italy Giovanni Trapattoni

On 7 May 2012, Giovanni Trapattoni announced his 23-man squad list for Euro 2012, along with a five-man stand-by list.[32] Keith Fahey withdrew with a groin injury on 26 May and was replaced by Paul Green.[33] On 29 May 2012 Kevin Foley was replaced by Paul McShane.[34] The Ireland team was the only squad at the tournament to consist entirely of players from foreign leagues.

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Shay Given 20 April 1976 (aged 36) 125 0 England Aston Villa
2 DF Sean St Ledger 28 December 1984 (aged 27) 30 3 England Leicester City
3 DF Stephen Ward 20 August 1985 (aged 26) 15 2 England Wolverhampton Wanderers
4 DF John O'Shea 30 April 1981 (aged 31) 79 1 England Sunderland
5 DF Richard Dunne 21 September 1979 (aged 32) 76 8 England Aston Villa
6 MF Glenn Whelan 13 January 1984 (aged 28) 42 2 England Stoke City
7 MF Aiden McGeady 4 April 1986 (aged 26) 52 2 Russia Spartak Moscow
8 MF Keith Andrews 13 September 1980 (aged 31) 32 3 England West Bromwich Albion
9 FW Kevin Doyle 18 September 1983 (aged 28) 50 10 England Wolverhampton Wanderers
10 FW Robbie Keane (c) 8 July 1980 (aged 31) 120 53 United States Los Angeles Galaxy
11 MF Damien Duff 2 March 1979 (aged 33) 100 8 England Fulham
12 DF Stephen Kelly 6 September 1983 (aged 28) 30 0 England Fulham
13 DF Paul McShane 6 January 1986 (aged 26) 27 0 England Hull City
14 FW Jonathan Walters 20 September 1983 (aged 28) 10 1 England Stoke City
15 MF Darron Gibson 25 October 1987 (aged 24) 19 1 England Everton
16 GK Keiren Westwood 23 October 1984 (aged 27) 10 0 England Sunderland
17 MF Stephen Hunt 1 August 1981 (aged 30) 39 1 England Wolverhampton Wanderers
18 DF Darren O'Dea 4 February 1987 (aged 25) 14 0 Scotland Celtic
19 FW Shane Long 22 January 1987 (aged 25) 27 7 England West Bromwich Albion
20 FW Simon Cox 28 April 1987 (aged 25) 15 3 England West Bromwich Albion
21 MF Paul Green 10 April 1983 (aged 29) 12 1 England Derby County
22 MF James McClean 22 April 1989 (aged 23) 3 0 England Sunderland
23 GK David Forde 20 December 1979 (aged 32) 2 0 England Millwall

Croatia

Coach: Slaven Bilić

On 10 May 2012, a provisional list of 27 players was announced.[35] On 29 May, the final 23-man squad was announced.[36] On 4 June 2012, Ivica Olić was ruled out with an injury and was replaced by Nikola Kalinić.[37] On 7 June 2012, Ivo Iličević was ruled out with an injury and was replaced by Šime Vrsaljko.[38]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Stipe Pletikosa 8 January 1979 (aged 33) 94 0 Russia Rostov
2 DF Ivan Strinić 17 July 1987 (aged 24) 20 0 Ukraine Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
3 DF Josip Šimunić 18 February 1978 (aged 34) 95 3 Croatia Dinamo Zagreb
4 DF Jurica Buljat 12 September 1986 (aged 25) 2 0 Israel Maccabi Haifa
5 DF Vedran Ćorluka 5 February 1986 (aged 26) 57 3 Germany Bayer Leverkusen
6 MF Danijel Pranjić 2 December 1981 (aged 30) 45 0 Germany Bayern Munich
7 MF Ivan Rakitić 10 March 1988 (aged 24) 44 8 Spain Sevilla
8 MF Ognjen Vukojević 20 December 1983 (aged 28) 42 4 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
9 FW Nikica Jelavić 27 August 1985 (aged 26) 22 3 England Everton
10 MF Luka Modrić 9 September 1985 (aged 26) 57 8 England Tottenham Hotspur
11 DF Darijo Srna (c) 1 May 1982 (aged 30) 94 19 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
12 GK Ivan Kelava 20 February 1988 (aged 24) 0 0 Croatia Dinamo Zagreb
13 DF Gordon Schildenfeld 18 March 1985 (aged 27) 15 0 Germany Eintracht Frankfurt
14 MF Milan Badelj 25 February 1989 (aged 23) 4 1 Croatia Dinamo Zagreb
15 DF Šime Vrsaljko 10 January 1992 (aged 20) 4 0 Croatia Dinamo Zagreb
16 MF Tomislav Dujmović 26 February 1981 (aged 31) 19 0 Spain Real Zaragoza
17 FW Mario Mandžukić 21 May 1986 (aged 26) 32 8 Germany VfL Wolfsburg
18 FW Nikola Kalinić 5 January 1988 (aged 24) 13 5 Ukraine Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
19 MF Niko Kranjčar 13 August 1984 (aged 27) 73 15 England Tottenham Hotspur
20 MF Ivan Perišić 2 February 1989 (aged 23) 13 0 Germany Borussia Dortmund
21 DF Domagoj Vida 29 April 1989 (aged 23) 11 0 Croatia Dinamo Zagreb
22 FW Eduardo 25 February 1983 (aged 29) 50 23 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
23 GK Danijel Subašić 27 October 1984 (aged 27) 4 0 France AS Monaco

Group D

Ukraine

Coach: Oleh Blokhin

On 8 May 2012 Blokhin named a provisional list of 26 players for the tournament.[39] On 29 May 2012 Blokhin announced the final squad for the tournament.[40]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Maksym Koval 9 December 1992 (aged 19) 1 0 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
2 DF Yevhen Selin 9 May 1988 (aged 24) 9 1 Ukraine Vorskla Poltava
3 DF Yevhen Khacheridi 28 July 1987 (aged 24) 14 0 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
4 MF Anatoliy Tymoshchuk 30 March 1979 (aged 33) 119 4 Germany Bayern Munich
5 DF Oleksandr Kucher 22 October 1982 (aged 29) 29 1 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
6 MF Denys Harmash 19 April 1990 (aged 22) 6 0 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
7 FW Andriy Shevchenko (c) 29 September 1976 (aged 35) 111 48 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
8 MF Oleksandr Aliyev 3 February 1985 (aged 27) 28 6 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
9 MF Oleh Husyev 25 April 1983 (aged 29) 75 12 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
10 FW Andriy Voronin 21 July 1979 (aged 32) 74 8 Russia Dynamo Moscow
11 FW Andriy Yarmolenko 23 October 1989 (aged 22) 23 8 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
12 GK Andriy Pyatov 28 June 1984 (aged 27) 29 0 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
13 DF Vyacheslav Shevchuk 13 May 1979 (aged 33) 21 0 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
14 MF Ruslan Rotan 29 October 1981 (aged 30) 59 6 Ukraine Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
15 FW Artem Milevskyi 12 January 1985 (aged 27) 49 8 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
16 FW Yevhen Seleznyov 20 July 1985 (aged 26) 29 5 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
17 DF Taras Mykhalyk 28 October 1983 (aged 28) 29 0 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
18 MF Serhiy Nazarenko 16 February 1980 (aged 32) 53 12 Ukraine Tavriya Simferopol
19 MF Yevhen Konoplyanka 29 September 1989 (aged 22) 22 5 Ukraine Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
20 DF Yaroslav Rakitskyi 3 August 1989 (aged 22) 18 3 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
21 DF Bohdan Butko 13 January 1991 (aged 21) 11 0 Ukraine Illichivets Mariupol
22 FW Marko Dević 27 October 1983 (aged 28) 24 2 Ukraine Metalist Kharkiv
23 GK Oleksandr Horyainov 29 June 1975 (aged 36) 2 0 Ukraine Metalist Kharkiv

Sweden

Coach: Erik Hamrén

Erik Hamrén announced Sweden's 23-man squad on 14 May 2012.[41]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Andreas Isaksson 3 October 1981 (aged 30) 93 0 Netherlands PSV
2 DF Mikael Lustig 13 December 1986 (aged 25) 24 1 Scotland Celtic
3 DF Olof Mellberg 3 September 1977 (aged 34) 114 7 Greece Olympiacos
4 DF Andreas Granqvist 16 April 1985 (aged 27) 18 2 Italy Genoa
5 DF Martin Olsson 17 May 1988 (aged 24) 9 4 England Blackburn Rovers
6 MF Rasmus Elm 17 March 1988 (aged 24) 24 1 Netherlands AZ
7 MF Sebastian Larsson 6 June 1985 (aged 27) 41 5 England Sunderland
8 MF Anders Svensson 17 July 1976 (aged 35) 127 18 Sweden Elfsborg
9 MF Kim Källström 24 August 1982 (aged 29) 92 16 France Lyon
10 FW Zlatan Ibrahimović (c) 3 October 1981 (aged 30) 77 31 Italy Milan
11 FW Johan Elmander 27 May 1981 (aged 31) 63 16 Turkey Galatasaray
12 GK Johan Wiland 24 January 1981 (aged 31) 8 0 Denmark Copenhagen
13 DF Jonas Olsson 10 March 1983 (aged 29) 8 0 England West Bromwich Albion
14 FW Tobias Hysén 9 March 1982 (aged 30) 23 7 Sweden IFK Göteborg
15 DF Mikael Antonsson 31 May 1981 (aged 31) 5 0 Italy Bologna
16 MF Pontus Wernbloom 25 June 1986 (aged 25) 23 2 Russia CSKA Moscow
17 DF Behrang Safari 9 February 1985 (aged 27) 24 0 Belgium Anderlecht
18 MF Samuel Holmén 28 June 1984 (aged 27) 27 2 Turkey İstanbul BB
19 MF Emir Bajrami 7 March 1988 (aged 24) 16 2 Netherlands Twente
20 FW Ola Toivonen 3 July 1986 (aged 25) 24 6 Netherlands PSV
21 MF Christian Wilhelmsson 8 December 1979 (aged 32) 74 9 Saudi Arabia Al-Hilal
22 FW Markus Rosenberg 27 September 1982 (aged 29) 31 6 Germany Werder Bremen
23 GK Pär Hansson 22 June 1986 (aged 25) 2 0 Sweden Helsingborg

England

Coach: Roy Hodgson

Roy Hodgson announced England's 23-man squad on 16 May 2012, along with a five-man stand-by list.[42] The England team is the only squad to consist entirely of players from their domestic league. On 25 May, John Ruddy was ruled out with a broken finger; Jack Butland was called up as his replacement.[43] On 28 May, Gareth Barry was ruled out with a groin injury, being replaced by Phil Jagielka.[44] On 31 May, Frank Lampard was ruled out with a thigh injury and was replaced by Jordan Henderson.[45] On 3 June, Gary Cahill was ruled out with a double fracture of his jaw and Martin Kelly was called up as his replacement.[46]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Joe Hart 19 April 1987 (aged 25) 22 0 England Manchester City
2 DF Glen Johnson 23 August 1984 (aged 27) 40 1 England Liverpool
3 DF Ashley Cole 20 December 1980 (aged 31) 98 0 England Chelsea
4 MF Steven Gerrard (c) 30 May 1980 (aged 32) 96 19 England Liverpool
5 DF Martin Kelly 27 April 1990 (aged 22) 1 0 England Liverpool
6 DF John Terry 7 December 1980 (aged 31) 77 6 England Chelsea
7 FW Theo Walcott 16 March 1989 (aged 23) 28 4 England Arsenal
8 MF Jordan Henderson 17 June 1990 (aged 21) 5 0 England Liverpool
9 FW Andy Carroll 6 January 1989 (aged 23) 7 2 England Liverpool
10 FW Wayne Rooney 24 October 1985 (aged 26) 76 29 England Manchester United
11 MF Ashley Young 9 July 1985 (aged 26) 25 6 England Manchester United
12 DF Leighton Baines 11 December 1984 (aged 27) 8 0 England Everton
13 GK Robert Green 18 January 1980 (aged 32) 12 0 England West Ham United
14 DF Phil Jones 21 February 1992 (aged 20) 5 0 England Manchester United
15 DF Joleon Lescott 16 August 1982 (aged 29) 20 1 England Manchester City
16 MF James Milner 4 January 1986 (aged 26) 30 0 England Manchester City
17 MF Scott Parker 13 October 1980 (aged 31) 17 0 England Tottenham Hotspur
18 DF Phil Jagielka 17 August 1982 (aged 29) 12 0 England Everton
19 MF Stewart Downing 22 July 1984 (aged 27) 34 0 England Liverpool
20 MF Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain 15 August 1993 (aged 18) 5 0 England Arsenal
21 FW Jermain Defoe 7 October 1982 (aged 29) 48 15 England Tottenham Hotspur
22 FW Danny Welbeck 26 November 1990 (aged 21) 9 2 England Manchester United
23 GK Jack Butland 10 March 1993 (aged 19) 0 0 England Birmingham City

France

Coach: Laurent Blanc

Blanc named his first shortlist on 9 May 2012, consisting of 12 players playing abroad.[47] On 15 May 2012 second shortlist of 15 France-based players was announced, while on the same day Tottenham defender Younès Kaboul was ruled out of the tournament with a knee injury, leaving Blanc with a 26-man squad.[48] On 29 May 2012, Blanc announced his final 23-man squad.[49]

# Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 GK Hugo Lloris (c) 26 December 1986 (aged 25) 37 0 France Lyon
2 DF Mathieu Debuchy 28 July 1985 (aged 26) 9 1 France Lille
3 DF Patrice Evra 15 May 1981 (aged 31) 42 0 England Manchester United
4 DF Adil Rami 27 December 1985 (aged 26) 24 1 Spain Valencia
5 DF Philippe Mexès 30 March 1982 (aged 30) 29 1 Italy Milan
6 MF Yohan Cabaye 14 January 1986 (aged 26) 16 1 England Newcastle United
7 MF Franck Ribéry 7 April 1983 (aged 29) 64 10 Germany Bayern Munich
8 MF Mathieu Valbuena 28 September 1984 (aged 27) 12 2 France Marseille
9 FW Olivier Giroud 30 September 1986 (aged 25) 9 1 England Arsenal
10 FW Karim Benzema 19 December 1987 (aged 24) 49 15 Spain Real Madrid
11 MF Samir Nasri 27 June 1987 (aged 24) 35 4 England Manchester City
12 MF Blaise Matuidi 9 April 1987 (aged 25) 4 0 France Paris Saint-Germain
13 DF Anthony Réveillère 10 November 1979 (aged 32) 18 1 France Lyon
14 MF Jérémy Ménez 7 May 1987 (aged 25) 16 2 France Paris Saint-Germain
15 MF Florent Malouda 13 June 1980 (aged 31) 80 9 England Chelsea
16 GK Steve Mandanda 28 March 1985 (aged 27) 15 0 France Marseille
17 MF Yann M'Vila 29 June 1990 (aged 21) 22 1 France Rennes
18 MF Alou Diarra 15 July 1981 (aged 30) 44 0 France Marseille
19 MF Marvin Martin 10 January 1988 (aged 24) 14 2 France Sochaux
20 MF Hatem Ben Arfa 7 March 1987 (aged 25) 13 2 England Newcastle United
21 DF Laurent Koscielny 10 September 1985 (aged 26) 4 0 England Arsenal
22 DF Gaël Clichy 26 July 1985 (aged 26) 15 0 England Manchester City
23 GK Cédric Carrasso 30 December 1981 (aged 30) 1 0 France Bordeaux

Statistics

Player representation

By club

PlayersClubs
12 England Arsenal,
Germany Bayern Munich
11 Spain Real Madrid
10 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
9 England Liverpool
8 Spain Barcelona
Germany Borussia Dortmund
England Manchester City
Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
7 England Chelsea, Manchester United
Russia CSKA Moscow, Zenit Saint Petersburg
Italy Juventus
6 Italy Milan
Greece Olympiacos
Netherlands PSV
Czech Republic Viktoria Plzeň
5 Croatia Dinamo Zagreb
Ukraine Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
Russia Dynamo Moscow
England Everton, Tottenham Hotspur
4 Germany Bayer Leverkusen, Werder Bremen
Scotland Celtic
France Évian, Paris Saint-Germain
Greece P.A.O.K.
Italy Roma
Portugal Sporting CP
England Sunderland, West Bromwich Albion
3 Turkey Beşiktaş
France Bordeaux, Lyon, Marseille
Portugal Braga, Porto, Sporting CP
England Fulham, Newcastle United, Wolverhampton Wanderers
Poland Lech Poznań
Denmark Nordsjælland
Greece Panathinaikos
Germany Schalke 04
Spain Sevilla, Valencia
Russia Spartak Moscow
2 Greece AEK Athens
Netherlands Ajax, AZ, Twente
Belgium Anderlecht
England Aston Villa, Leicester City, Stoke City
Spain Athletic Bilbao, Atlético Madrid, Málaga, Zaragoza
Portugal Benfica
Italy Bologna, Genoa, Napoli, Palermo
Denmark Brøndby, Copenhagen
Turkey Galatasaray
Germany Hannover 96, VfB Stuttgart, VfL Wolfsburg
Poland Legia Warsaw
Russia Lokomotiv Moscow
Ukraine Metalist Kharkiv
France AS Monaco, Sochaux
1 Saudi Arabia Al-Hilal
Cyprus Anorthosis Famagusta
Russia Anzhi Makhachkala, Rostov, Rubin Kazan, Terek Grozny
Greece Aris Thessaloniki, Atromitos
France Auxerre, Lille, Montpellier, Rennes
England Birmingham City, Blackburn Rovers, Derby County, Hull City, Millwall, Swansea City, West Ham United
Germany Borussia Mönchengladbach, Eintracht Frankfurt, Fortuna Düsseldorf, Hamburger SV, Hertha BSC, 1. FC Kaiserslautern, 1. FC Köln, Mainz 05, 1. FC Nuremberg
Romania CFR Cluj
Belgium Club Brugge
Sweden Elfsborg, Göteborg, Helsingborg,
Turkey Fenerbahçe, İstanbul B.B., Samsunspor, Sivasspor, Trabzonspor
Netherlands Feyenoord, NEC,
Italy Fiorentina, Internazionale, Lazio, Parma, Torino, Udinese
Netherlands Groningen, Heerenveen
Ukraine Illichivets Mariupol, Tavriya Simferopol, Vorskla Poltava
Czech Republic Jablonec, Slovan Liberec
Poland Jagiellonia Białystok
United States Los Angeles Galaxy
Israel Maccabi Haifa
Denmark Midtjylland
Switzerland Young Boys

Clubs in italics played in the second tier of their national domestic competition in the 201112 season.

By club nationality

Players Clubs
78 England England
45 Germany Germany
33 Spain Spain
31 Italy Italy
29 Russia Russia
28 Ukraine Ukraine
25 France France
17 Greece Greece
16 Netherlands Netherlands
12 Portugal Portugal
11 Turkey Turkey
8 Czech Republic Czech Republic, Denmark Denmark
6 Poland Poland
5 Croatia Croatia
4 Scotland Scotland
3 Belgium Belgium, Sweden Sweden
1 Cyprus Cyprus, Israel Israel, Romania Romania, Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia, Switzerland Switzerland, United States United States

Nations in italics are not represented by their national teams in the finals.
Including Michel Vorm who plays for Swansea City, a Welsh side competing within the English football system.

By representatives of domestic league

National Squad No.
 Croatia 5
 Czech Republic 8
 Denmark 7
 England 23
 France 11
 Spain 18
 Greece 16
 Italy 20
 Netherlands 7
 Poland 6
 Portugal 9
 Republic of Ireland 0
 Russia 21
 Germany 19
 Sweden 3
 Ukraine 21

Notes

  1. "Deux pré-listes dévoilées le 9 et 15 mai" [Two shortlists unveiled on 9 and 15 May] (in French). 2 May 2012.
  2. "Regulations of the UEFA European Football Championship 2006/08" (PDF). UEFA. p. 22. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  3. "Smuda picks Poland's provisional EURO squad". UEFA.com (UEFA). 3 May 2012.
  4. "Poland confirm UEFA EURO 2012 party". UEFA.com (UEFA). 27 May 2012.
  5. "Santos goes for experience with Greece selection". UEFA.com. 17 May 2012.
  6. "Kone and Tziolis out in the cold as Greece name Euro 2012 squad". goal.com (goal.com). 28 May 2012.
  7. "Untried duo in provisional Russia squad". UEFA.com. 11 May 2012.
  8. "Berezutski ruled out of Russia's EURO campaign". UEFA.com. 20 May 2012.
  9. "Russia shorn of Shishkin for EURO". UEFA.com. 24 May 2012.
  10. "Advocaat announced the finalized Euro Squad" (in Russian). 25 May 2012.
  11. "Rajtoral, Suchý and Kolář make cut for Czechs". UEFA.com. 14 May 2012.
  12. "Darida joins Czech squad at Pudil's expense". UEFA.com. 28 May 2012.
  13. "Rosický makes the cut with Czechs". UEFA.com. 29 May 2012.
  14. "VAN MARWIJK KIEST 36 INTERNATIONALS". knvb.nl (KNVB). 7 May 2012.
  15. "Pieters pulls out of Netherlands' provisional squad for Euro 2012". goal.com (goal.com). 7 May 2012.
  16. "Van Marwijk cuts provisional Dutch squad to 27". UEFA.com. 15 May 2012.
  17. "Bouma and Willems make final Dutch squad". UEFA.com. 26 May 2012.
  18. "Olsen leaves three spaces in Denmark party". UEFA.com. 16 May 2012.
  19. "Olsen adds Lindegaard to Denmark squad". uefa.com. UEFA. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  20. "Okore and Pedersen complete Denmark squad". uefa.com. UEFA. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  21. "Denmark's Sorensen ruled out of Euro 2012". Goal.com. 2012-05-29. Retrieved 2012-06-03.
  22. "Draxler included in provisional Germany squad". UEFA.com. 7 May 2012.
  23. "Cacau among omissions from final Germany squad". UEFA.com. 28 May 2012.
  24. "Bento adds fresh faces to final Portugal squad". UEFA.com. 14 May 2012.
  25. "Viana replaces Martins after five-year absence". UEFA.com. 23 May 2012.
  26. "Atlético trio in Spain friendly party". UEFA.com. 15 May 2012.
  27. "Spain add Mata, Torres to squad". FIFA.com. 21 May 2012.
  28. "Holders Spain include Pedro in final EURO squad". UEFA.com. 27 May 2012.
  29. "Di Natale recalled for provisional Italy squad". UEFA.com. 13 May 2012.
  30. "Ranocchia and Destro miss Italy cut". UEFA.com. 29 May 2012.
  31. "Criscito dropped by Italy". skysports.com. 29 May 2012.
  32. "McCarthy out as Trapattoni names Ireland squad". Union of European Football Associations. 7 May 2012.
  33. "UEFA EURO 2012 dream over for Ireland's Fahey". Union of European Football Associations. 26 May 2012.
  34. "Kevin Foley dropped from Republic of Ireland squad". Guardian. 29 May 2012. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  35. "Croatia coach Bilić to stand down after EURO". Uefa.com. 10 May 2012.
  36. "Bilić reduces Croatia squad to final 23". Uefa.com. 29 May 2012.
  37. Rupnik, Borna (4 June 2012). "Ivica Olić ipak ostao bez Europskog prvenstva, u Poljsku i Ukrajinu putuje Kalinić". Sportnet.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 4 June 2012.
  38. Korać, Branimir (7 June 2012). "Iličević bez Eura, vraćen Vrsaljko". Sportnet.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  39. "Ukraine squad short on goalkeeping experience". UEFA.com. 8 May 2012.
  40. "Blokhin confirms Ukraine's finals party". UEFA.com. 29 May 2012.
  41. "Guidetti ruled out of Hamrén's Sweden squad". UEFA.com. 14 May 2012.
  42. "Guy Cochran Names Euro 2012 Squad". TheFA.com (The Football Association). 16 May 2012.
  43. "John Ruddy ruled out of England Euro 2012 squad with injury". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). 25 May 2012.
  44. "Euro 2012: Injury rules Gareth Barry out of Euros". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). 28 May 2012.
  45. "Euro 2012: England's Frank Lampard ruled out through injury". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). 31 May 2012.
  46. "Euro 2012: Gary Cahill ruled out but Rio Ferdinand overlooked". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). 4 June 2012.
  47. "Ben Arfa selected by France coach Blanc". UEFA.com. 9 May 2012.
  48. "Yanga-Mbiwa earns surprise France call-up". UEFA.com. 15 May 2012.
  49. "Blanc finds no place for Gourcuff, Yanga-Mbiwa". UEFA.com. 29 May 2012.

External links