Britain, Ireland affirm stadiums in joint bid for Euro 2028

Britain, Ireland affirm stadiums in joint bid for Euro 2028

LONDON — Britain and Ireland confirmed the ten stadiums they’d use to stage the European Championship in 2028, however their joint bid submitted Wednesday excluded Manchester United’s Old Trafford and Liverpool’s Anfield.

The proposal by the soccer associations of England, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales included Wembley Stadium, Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and Cardiff’s Principality Stadium.

UEFA confirmed bid dossiers had additionally been submitted by the Turkish Football Federation to host both Euro 2028 or 2032 and the Italian Football Federation for 2032.

The UEFA Executive Committee will vote in October to resolve the hosts of each tournaments, the governing physique mentioned Wednesday.

Britain and Ireland mentioned their bid would “take the tournament to new heights” and was a “a world-class stadia concept tailor-made for Euro 2028.”

“High-capacity, world-famous football grounds and state-of-the-art new venues will provide the platform for the biggest and most commercially successful UEFA Euro ever – making us a low risk, high reward host,” it mentioned in a press release.

The different stadiums within the bid are Manchester City’s Etihad Stadium, Everton’s new waterfront stadium, Newcastle’s St James’ Park, Villa Park, Hampden Park in Glasgow, Aviva Stadium in Dublin and Casement Park in Belfast.

United mentioned in a press release over the weekend that in discussions with the FA “it became clear that we were unable to provide the necessary certainty around availability of Old Trafford due to potential redevelopment of the stadium.”

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