Sunday, July 10, 2011

UEFA Euro 2004 disciplinary record

Sanctions against foul play at UEFA Euro 2004 are in the first instance the responsibility of the referee, but when he deems it necessary to give a caution, or dismiss a player, UEFA keeps a record and may enforce a suspension. Referee decisions are generally seen as final. However, UEFA's disciplanary committee may additionally penalise players for offences unpunished by the referee.

Red cards

A player receiving a red card is automatically suspended for the next match. A longer suspension is possible if the UEFA disciplinary committee judges the offence as warranting it. In keeping with the FIFA Disciplinary Code (FDC) and UEFA Disciplinary Regulations (UDR), UEFA does not allow for appeals of red cards except in the case of mistaken identity. The FDC further stipulates that if a player is sent off during his team's final Euro 2004 match, the suspension carries over to his team's next competitive international(s). For Euro 2004 these were the qualification matches for the 2006 FIFA World Cup.

Any player who was suspended due to a red card that was earned in Euro 2004 qualifying was required to serve the balance of any suspension unserved by the end of qualifying either in the Euro 2004 finals (for any player on a team that qualified, whether he had been selected to the final squad or not) or in World Cup qualifying (for players on teams that did not qualify).

Yellow cards

Any player receiving a single yellow card during two of the three group stage matches plus the quarter-final match is suspended for the next match. A single yellow card does not carry over to the semi-finals. This means that no player will be suspended for final unless he gets sent off in semi-final or he is serving a longer suspension for an earlier incident. Suspensions due to yellow cards will not carry over to the World Cup qualifiers. Yellow cards and any related suspensions earned in the Euro 2004 qualifiers are neither counted nor enforced in the final tournament.

In the event a player is sent off for two bookable offences, only the red card is counted for disciplinary purposes. However, in the event a player receives a direct red card after being booked in the same match, then both cards are counted. If the player was already facing a suspension for two tournament bookings when he was sent off, this would result in separate suspensions that would be served consecutively. The one match ban for the yellow cards would be served first unless the player's team is eliminated in the match in which he was sent off. If the player's team is eliminated in the match in which he was serving his ban for the yellow cards, then the ban for the sending off would be carried over to the World Cup qualifiers.

Additional punishment

For serious transgressions, a longer suspension may be handed down at the discretion of the UEFA disciplinary committee. The disciplinary committee is also charged with reviewing any incidents that were missed by the officials and can award administrative red cards and suspensions accordingly. However, just as appeals of red cards are not considered, the disciplinary committee is also not allowed to review transgressions that were already punished by the referee with something less than a red card. For example, if a player is booked but not sent off for a dangerous tackle, the disciplinary committee cannot subsequently deem the challenge to be violent conduct and then upgrade the card to a red. However, if the same player then spits at the opponent but is still not sent off, then the referee's report would be unlikely to mention this automatic red card offence. Video evidence of the spitting incident could then be independently reviewed.

Unlike the rules in many domestic competitions, there is no particular category of red card offence that automatically results in a multi-game suspension. In general however, extended bans are only assessed for red cards given for serious foul play, violent conduct, spitting or perhaps foul and abusive language. Also, unlike many sets of domestic rules second and subsequent red cards also do not automatically incur an extended ban, although a player's past disciplinary record (including prior competition) might be considered by the disciplinary committee when punishing him. As a rule, only automatic red card offenses are considered for longer bans. A player who gets sent off for picking up two yellow cards in the same match will not have his automatic one-match ban extended by UEFA on account of what he did to get the second booking, because the referee has deemed him as not to have committed an automatic red card offense.

If UEFA suspends a player after his team's elimination from the tournament, or for more games than the team ends up playing without him prior to the final or their elimination (whichever comes first), then the remaining suspension must be served during World Cup qualifying. For a particularly grave offence UEFA has the power to impose a lengthy ban against the offender.

By individual

Red cards

Five red cards were shown over the course of the tournament's 31 matches, an average of 0.161 red cards per match.

1 red card
  • Bulgaria Stiliyan Petrov
  • Netherlands John Heitinga
  • Russia Sergei Ovchinnikov
  • Russia Roman Sharonov
  • Switzerland Bernt Haas
  • Switzerland Jörg Stiel

Yellow cards

152 yellow cards were shown over the course of the tournament's 31 matches, an average of 4.90 yellow cards per match

3 yellow cards
  • Greece Giorgos Karagounis
  • Greece Giourkas Seitardis
  • Portugal Costinha
  • Russia Roman Sharonov
2 yellow cards
  • Bulgaria Rosen Kirilov
  • Bulgaria Martin Petrov
  • Bulgaria Stiliyan Petrov
  • Bulgaria Ilian Stoyanov
  • Czech Republic Tomáš Galásek
  • Greece Zisis Vryzas
  • Greece Theodoros Zagorakis
  • Italy Fabio Cannavaro
  • Italy Gennaro Gattuso
  • Netherlands John Heitinga
  • Portugal Ricardo Carvalho
  • Portugal Deco
  • Portugal Pauleta
  • Portugal Nuno Valente
  • Russia Dmitri Alenichev
  • Russia Vladislav Radimov
  • Russia Alexey Smertin
  • Spain Carlos Marchena
  • Sweden Erik Edman
  • Sweden Zlatan Ibrahimović
  • Sweden Tobias Linderoth
  • Switzerland Bernt Haas
  • Switzerland Benjamin Huggel
  • Switzerland Johann Vogel
1 yellow card
  • Bulgaria Valeri Bojinov
  • Bulgaria Marian Hristov
  • Bulgaria Vladimir Ivanov
  • Bulgaria Zoran Janković
  • Bulgaria Zdravko Lazarov
  • Bulgaria Ivaylo Petkov
  • Bulgaria Zlatomir Zagorčić
  • Croatia Nenad Bjelica
  • Croatia Robert Kovač
  • Croatia Jerko Leko
  • Croatia Ivica Mornar
  • Croatia Dado Pršo
  • Croatia Milan Rapaić
  • Croatia Đovani Roso
  • Croatia Dario Šimić
  • Croatia Darijo Srna
  • Croatia Igor Tudor
  • Croatia Boris Živković
1 yellow card (cont.)
  • Czech Republic Milan Baroš
  • Czech Republic Marek Jankulovski
  • Czech Republic Pavel Nedvěd
  • Czech Republic Vladimír Šmicer
  • Czech Republic Roman Týce
  • Czech Republic Tomáš Ujfaluši
  • Denmark Kasper Bøgelund
  • Denmark Thomas Gravesen
  • Denmark Thomas Helveg
  • Denmark Niclas Jensen
  • Denmark Christian Poulsen
  • Denmark Ebbe Sand
  • Denmark Jon Dahl Tomasson
  • England Steven Gerrard
  • England David James
  • England Frank Lampard
  • England Gary Neville
  • England Phil Neville
  • England Wayne Rooney
  • England Paul Scholes
  • France Olivier Dacourt
  • France Thierry Henry
  • France Robert Pirès
  • France Louis Saha
  • France Mikaël Silvestre
  • France Patrick Vieira
  • France Zinedine Zidane
  • Germany Michael Ballack
  • Germany Arne Friedrich
  • Germany Torsten Frings
  • Germany Dietmar Hamann
  • Germany Kevin Kurányi
  • Germany Philipp Lahm
  • Germany Jens Nowotny
  • Germany Christian Wörns
  • Greece Angelos Basinas
  • Greece Angelos Charisteas
  • Greece Traianos Dellas
  • Greece Takis Fyssas
  • Greece Stelios Giannakopoulos
  • Greece Kostas Katsouranis
  • Greece Dimitrios Papadopoulos
  • Italy Marco Materazzi
  • Italy Francesco Totti
  • Italy Gianluca Zambrotta
  • Latvia Vitālijs Astafjevs
  • Latvia Aleksandrs Isakovs
  • Latvia Valentīns Lobaņovs
  • Netherlands Frank de Boer
1 yellow card (cont.)

By referee

Referee Matches Red card.svg Red Yellow card.svg Yellow Red Cards
Sweden Anders Frisk 4 0 19
Russia Valentin Ivanov 3 1 15 1 second yellow
Slovakia Ľuboš Micheľ 3 0 15
France Gilles Veissière 3 0 14
Italy Pierluigi Collina 3 0 11
Portugal Lucílio Batista 2 2 18 2 second yellows
Spain Manuel Mejuto González 2 1 10 1 second yellow
Norway Terje Hauge 2 1 9 1 straight red
Switzerland Urs Meier 2 0 11
England Mike Riley 2 0 11
Germany Markus Merk 2 0 7
Denmark Kim Milton Nielsen 2 0 7

By team

Team Matches Red card.svg Red Yellow card.svg Yellow Red Cards Suspensions
Russia 3 2 13 S. Ovchinnikov vs Portugal R. Sharonov vs Portugal
S. Ovchinnikov vs Greece
A. Smertin vs Greece
V. Radimov vs Slovakia (WCQ)
D. Alenichev vs Slovakia (WCQ)
Switzerland 3 2 10 J. Vogel vs Croatia
B. Haas vs England
J. Vogel vs England
B. Haas vs France
B. Huggel vs Faroe Islands (WCQ)
Bulgaria 3 1 15 S. Petrov vs Denmark S. Petrov vs Italy
R. Kirilov vs Italy
I. Stoyanov vs Iceland (WCQ)
M. Petrov vs Iceland (WCQ)
Netherlands 5 1 12
J. Heitinga vs Latvia
Greece 6 0 17
G. Karagounis vs Russia
Z. Vryzas vs France
G. Seitardis vs Portugal (final)
Portugal 6 0 14
Pauleta vs England (quarter-final)
R. Carvalho vs Netherlands (semi-final)
Costinha vs Netherlands (semi-final)
Deco vs Netherlands (semi-final)
Nuno Valente vs Latvia (WCQ)
Croatia 3 0 10

Czech Republic 5 0 8
T. Galásek vs Netherlands
Germany 5 0 8

Sweden 4 0 8
T. Linderoth vs Denmark
E. Edman vs Netherlands (quarter-final)
Z. Ibrahimović vs Malta (WCQ)
Italy 3 0 8
F. Cannavaro vs Bulgaria
G. Gattuso vs Bulgaria
Denmark 4 0 7

England 4 0 7

France 4 0 7

Spain 3 0 6
C. Marchena vs Bosnia and Herzegovina (WCQ)
D. Albelda vs Bosnia and Herzegovina (WCQ)
Latvia 3 0 3

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