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On 15 December 2015, UEFA named eighteen referees for Euro 2016. [48] The full referee teams were announced on 1 March 2016. [49] [50] England was the only country to have two referees in the tournament. Hungarian referee Viktor Kassai was chosen to officiate the opener between France and Romania. [51]
As with every tournament since UEFA Euro 1984, there was no third place play-off. UEFA set out the following schedule for the round of 16: [3] Match 1: Runners-up Group A vs Runners-up Group C; Match 2: Winners Group D vs 3rd Place Group B/E/F; Match 3: Winners Group B vs 3rd Place Group A/C/D; Match 4: Winners Group F vs Runners-up Group E
As of 2024, Hungary have appeared in five UEFA European Championships. At the 1964 European Nations' Cup, they finished third after winning their play-off against Denmark, and at Euro 1972 they placed fourth. In the 2016 edition, Hungary finished in the round of 16, after winning the group. This was their best result in nearly four decades.
Template: UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying group tables. 6 languages. ... Qualify for final tournament: 2 F Hungary: 8 4 3 1 8 5 +3 15 Advance to play-offs: 3 C
Group F of UEFA Euro 2016 contained the eventual champions Portugal, Iceland, Austria, and Hungary. It was Iceland's first appearance at the finals. It was Iceland's first appearance at the finals. Matches were played from 14 to 22 June 2016.
The play-offs of the UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying tournament decided the final four teams which qualified for the UEFA Euro 2016 final tournament. Eight teams, each of which finished third in their qualifying group were paired and contested in four ties, with the winner of each pair qualifying for the final tournament.
Template:Hungary squad UEFA Euro 2016; U. UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying play-offs This page was last edited on 3 July 2018, at 17:13 (UTC). Text is ...
The UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying Group F was one of the nine groups to decide which teams would qualify for the UEFA Euro 2016 finals tournament. [1] Group F consisted of six teams: Greece, Hungary, Romania, Finland, Northern Ireland, and Faroe Islands, [2] where they played against each other home-and-away in a round-robin format.