UEFA Euro 2020 Group E

Group E of UEFA Euro 2020 took place from 14 to 23 June 2021 in Saint Petersburg's Krestovsky Stadium and Seville's La Cartuja.

[1] The group contained host nation Spain, Sweden, Poland and Slovakia.

The matches were originally scheduled to be played at Bilbao's San Mamés and Dublin's Aviva Stadium.

However, due to a lack of guarantees regarding spectators caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, UEFA announced on 23 April 2021 that the matches scheduled in Bilbao were moved to Seville, and the group stage matches scheduled in Dublin were reallocated to Saint Petersburg.

In the round of 16,[3] Man of the Match: Milan Škriniar (Slovakia)[6] Assistant referees:[5] Radu Ghinguleac (Romania) Sebastian Gheorghe (Romania) Fourth official: István Kovács (Romania) Reserve assistant referee: Vasile Marinescu (Romania) Video assistant referee: Marco Di Bello (Italy) Assistant video assistant referees: Jérôme Brisard (France) Filippo Meli (Italy) Massimiliano Irrati (Italy) Man of the Match: Victor Lindelöf (Sweden)[6] Assistant referees:[8] Tomaž Klančnik (Slovenia) Andraž Kovačič (Slovenia) Fourth official: Davide Massa (Italy) Reserve assistant referee: Stefano Alassio (Italy) Video assistant referee: Bastian Dankert (Germany) Assistant video assistant referees: Chris Kavanagh (England) Lee Betts (England) Kevin Blom (Netherlands) Man of the Match: Alexander Isak (Sweden)[6] Assistant referees:[10] Jan Seidel (Germany) Rafael Foltyn (Germany) Fourth official: Georgi Kabakov (Bulgaria) Reserve assistant referee: Martin Margaritov (Bulgaria) Video assistant referee: Marco Fritz (Germany) Assistant video assistant referees: Christian Dingert (Germany) Lee Betts (England) Stuart Attwell (England) Man of the Match: Jordi Alba (Spain)[6] Assistant referees:[12] Alessandro Giallatini (Italy) Fabiano Preti (Italy) Fourth official: Stéphanie Frappart (France) Reserve assistant referee: Mikaël Berchebru (France) Video assistant referee: Massimiliano Irrati (Italy) Assistant video assistant referees: Marco Di Bello (Italy) Filippo Meli (Italy) Paolo Valeri (Italy) Man of the Match: Sergio Busquets (Spain)[6] Assistant referees:[14] Sander van Roekel (Netherlands) Erwin Zeinstra (Netherlands) Fourth official: Stéphanie Frappart (France) Reserve assistant referee: Mikaël Berchebru (France) Video assistant referee: Pol van Boekel (Netherlands) Assistant video assistant referees: Kevin Blom (Netherlands) Christian Gittelmann (Germany) Bastian Dankert (Germany) Man of the Match: Emil Forsberg (Sweden)[6] Assistant referees:[16] Stuart Burt (England) Simon Bennett (England) Fourth official: Anthony Taylor (England) Reserve assistant referee: Gary Beswick (England) Video assistant referee: Chris Kavanagh (England) Assistant video assistant referees: Christian Dingert (Germany) Lee Betts (England) Stuart Attwell (England) Fair play points were to be used as a tiebreaker if the head-to-head and overall records of teams were tied (and if a penalty shoot-out was not applicable as a tiebreaker).