Europe XI

The Europe XI is an association football scratch team mainly consisting of players from the UEFA region but, on occasion, players hailing from other continents playing for European teams are invited to play. The European XI play one-off games against clubs, national teams, collectives of other confederations, or a World XI made up of players from all the other continents.[2] Because of this, no governing body in the sport officially recognises the team and each incarnation of the team is not seen as a continuation of any other.[3] The causes for these games are anniversaries, testimonials or for charity. Proceeds earned from the games are donated to good causes and the players, coaching staff, and stadium owners are not paid for the event. In recent years, these games have been broadcast live on television.[4][5]

Europe XI
First international
 England 3–0 Rest of Europe XI[lower-alpha 1]
London, England; 26 October 1938
Biggest win
 Yugoslavia 2–7 Europe XI
Belgrade, Yugoslavia; 23 September 1964
Biggest defeat
 Great Britain 6–1 Rest of Europe
Glasgow, Scotland; 10 May 1947

Notable coaches

Matches

Date Opponent Stadium Result Goals for Europe XI Reason
26 October 1938 EnglandArsenal Stadium, London0–375th anniversary of the FA[lower-alpha 1][6][7][8]
10 May 1947 Great BritainHampden Park, Glasgow1–6Gunnar NordahlHome Nations return to FIFA[6][9][8][10][11]
21 October 1953 EnglandWembley, London4–4Laszlo Kubala (2×), Giampiero Boniperti (2×)90th anniversary of the FA[12][13][8]
13 August 1955 Great BritainWindsor Park, Belfast4–1Jean Vincent, Bernard Vukas (3×)75th anniversary of the Irish Football Association[12][9][8]
20 May 1964ScandinaviaIdrætsparken, Copenhagen4–2Jimmy Greaves (2×), Denis Law, Eusébio75th anniversary of the DBU[14][9][8]
23 September 1964 YugoslaviaMarakana, Belgrade7–2Uwe Seeler (2×), Eusébio (4×), Jose AugustoSkopje earthquake appeal fund[14][8]
28 April 1965 Great BritainVictoria Ground, Stoke6–4Godfried Vandeboer, Ferenc Puskás (2×), Josef Masopust, Laszlo Kubala, Jackie HendersonStanley Matthews testimonial[15][9][8]
8 December 1970 BenficaEstádio da Luz, Lisbon2–3Uwe Seeler, José Eulogio GárateMário Coluna testimonial[16][9][8]
23 November 1971 West Ham UnitedUpton Park, London4–4Frank McDougall, Rodney Marsh (2×), Jimmy GreavesGeoff Hurst testimonial[16]
1 May 1972 Hamburger SVVolksparkstadion, Hamburg7–3Geoff Hurst, Ferenc Bene, Franz Beckenbauer, Gerd Müller, Kálmán Mészöly, George Best, EusébioUwe Seeler testimonial[17][9]
23 November 1972 South AmericaSt. Jakob-Park, Basel0–2Pestalozzi charity match[18]
31 October 1973 South AmericaCamp Nou, Barcelona4–4Eusébio, Salif Keïta, Juan Manuel Asensi, Kurt JaraFIFA charity match[19]
28 December 1979 Borussia DortmundWestfalenstadion, Dortmund2–3Safet Sušić, Vladimir PetrovićMatch for UNICEF[20]
25 February 1981 ItalyStadio Olimpico, Rome3–0Allan Simonsen, Vahid Halilhodžić, Tony WoodcockFlood disaster appeal[21]
2 June 1981 FenerbahçeŞükrü Saracoğlu, Istanbul0–375th anniversary of Fenerbahçe[21]
12 August 1981 CzechoslovakiaLetná-Stadion, Prague0–480th anniversary of the Czechoslovak Football Association[21]
7 August 1982World XIGiants Stadium, New York City3–2Kevin Keegan, Bruno Pezzey, Giancarlo AntognoniFIFA charity match for UNICEF[22]
4 December 1997World XIStade Vélodrome, Marseille2–5Marius Lacatus, Zinedine Zidane[23]
18 August 1998 Manchester UnitedOld Trafford, Manchester4–8Jean-Pierre Papin, Laurent Blanc, Martin Dahlin, Mark Wilson40th anniversary of the Munich air disaster and Eric Cantona testimonial[24]
16 February 2005World XI
(Ronaldinho XI)
Camp Nou, Barcelona3–6Alessandro Del Piero, Gianfranco ZolaFootball for Hope (Indian Ocean Tsunami funds)[3][25][26][9]
14 March 2007 Manchester UnitedOld Trafford, Manchester3–4Florent Malouda, El Hadji Diouf (2×)UEFA Celebration Match[27][28][29][30]

Notes

  1. Rest of Europe is sometimes recorded as FIFA[1]

References

  1. Rollin, Jack (2015). Soccer in the 1930s: Simple or Sublime?. p. 215. ISBN 978-1-905891-92-4.
  2. World XI
  3. Mittendrin statt nur dabei
  4. Stars descend on Manchester
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2009-03-31.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. WXI History: 1930-1940
  7. Wednesday, 26 October 1938: England 3 Rest of Europe 0, England Football Online
  8. Matches of Supranational Representative Teams 1937-1970, RSSSF
  9. England Player Honours - International Representative Teams, England Football Online
  10. "The four British associations return to FIFA after the Second World War: 25th FIFA Congress in Luxembourg in 1946". FIFA. Archived from the original on 14 June 2010. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
  11. Great Britain's Easy Win Over The Rest Of Europe, video footage from official Pathé News archive
  12. WXI History: 1950-1955
  13. Wednesday, 21 October 1953: England 4 Rest of the World 4, England Football Online
  14. WXI History: 1960-1964
  15. WXI History: 1965-1967
  16. WXI History: 1970-1971
  17. WXI History: 1972
  18. WXI History: 1972
  19. WXI History: 1973
  20. WXI History: 1975-1979
  21. WXI History: 1980-1981
  22. WXI History: 1982-1985
  23. WXI History: 1997
  24. "OT100 #68: Munich tribute". Archived from the original on 27 January 2017. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
  25. WXI History 2005
  26. Zahlreiche Tore und hohe Einnahmen für den Tsunami-Fonds
  27. www.fifa.com Europäische Nacht im „Theatre of Dreams“
  28. Offizielle Vorstellung der Mannschaft „Europe XI“
  29. EU und UEFA: Fußballfest zu Ehren Europas
  30. Manchester United 4-3 Europe XI: Ronaldo class
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