EURO 2020: UEFA hoping UK will allow overseas fans for semifinals, final

Under current regulations in England, fans travelling from countries on the government's 'amber list' must quarantine for 10 days on arrival in the country, making it difficult for them to fly in for games.

Published : Jun 17, 2021 20:12 IST

A woman wearing a protective mask walks past the logo of UEFA Euro 2020.
A woman wearing a protective mask walks past the logo of UEFA Euro 2020.
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A woman wearing a protective mask walks past the logo of UEFA Euro 2020.

UEFA hopes negotiations with the UK government on lifting quarantine restrictions for overseas fans will result in a change that allows them to attend the semifinals and final of the Euro 2020 tournament at Wembley Stadium.

Under current regulations in England, fans travelling from countries on the government's 'amber list' must quarantine for 10 days on arrival in the country, making it difficult for them to fly in for games.

Outside of the three British teams - England, Scotland and Wales - all other competing countries are on the amber list except for Turkey which is on the stricter red list.

"We are in discussions for the knockout rounds, especially for the semifinal and final, the obvious question is also to have overseas spectators," UEFA tournament organiser Martin Kallen said on Thursday.

"Every day we are in discussions with local authorities but we hope to come to a good conclusion together with the English government.

"At the moment it is too early to say it but we have seen some signs that there could be a possibility. But it is too early to give a clear answer, we have also still some time," he told reporters.

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The UK government has agreed to increase the capacity at Wembley to 50% for the knockout stage, meaning crowds of 40,000 rather than the group stage limit of 22,500.

Wembley is scheduled to host two last-16 matches.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has delayed plans to lift COVID-19 restrictions, which means the goal of a full house for the final is now unlikely to be met.

"It was once in the plan, on the roadmap of the UK. At the moment with the Delta variant, they have agreed on 50% and I am not sure it will go higher than 50%," said Kallen.

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