[1] The group contained hosts Germany, Scotland, Hungary and Switzerland.
In the round of 16,[2] Aged 36 years and 327 days, Germany's coach Julian Nagelsmann became the youngest to ever coach in the UEFA European Championship final tournament.
[3] Man of the Match: Jamal Musiala (Germany)[6] Assistant referees:[5] Nicolas Danos (France) Benjamin Pages (France) Fourth official: François Letexier (France) Reserve assistant referee: Cyril Mugnier (France) Video assistant referee: Jérôme Brisard (France) Assistant video assistant referees: Willy Delajod (France) Massimiliano Irrati (Italy) Dominik Szoboszlai became the youngest captain to appear at the UEFA European Championship final tournament, aged 23 years and 234 days.
[18] Man of the Match: Roland Sallai (Hungary)[6] Assistant referees:[20] Gabriel Chade (Argentina) Ezequiel Brailovsky (Argentina) Fourth official: Espen Eskås (Norway) Reserve assistant referee: Jan Erik Engan (Norway) Video assistant referee: Alejandro Hernández Hernández (Spain) Assistant video assistant referees: Juan Martínez Munuera (Spain) Tiago Martins (Portugal) Fair play points would have been used as a tiebreaker if the head-to-head and overall records of teams had been tied (and if a penalty shoot-out was not applicable as a tiebreaker).
These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received by players and team officials in all group matches as follows:[2] Only one of the above deductions was applied to a player or team official in a single match.