June
20, 1976, 50 years ago: The Final of the 1976 UEFA European Football
Championship is held at Red Star Stadium in Belgrade, Yugoslavia -- now the
Rajko Mitić Stadium in Belgrade, Serbia. This was the only time UEFA the
Union of European Football Associations, ever held a tournament, or the Final of a club tournament, in a Communist
country. (It has since held them in former Communist countries.)
England
did not qualify. Nor did France, nor Italy. Under the format then in place, only 4 teams did, including
Yugoslavia, who did so only because they were the hosts, although they usually
had a good team. In one Semifinal, Czechoslovakia beat the Netherlands, 3-1. In
the other, West Germany, who had won the last 2 major tournaments, the 1974
World Cup and Euro 72, beat Yugoslavia, 4-2. Both games went to extra time.
The
Final also went to extra time. Czechoslovakia led, 2-0 after just 25 minutes,
but West Germany came back, and the game ended, 2-2. So it went to penalty
kicks. Stereotypically, Germany usually win those. With the Czechs up, 4-3, Ivo
Viktor, goalkeeper for Dukla Prague was ready to try to stop Bayern Munich star
Uli Hoeneß, but he missed his shot completely, sending it over the
crossbar.
It
was now up to Antonín Panenka to face the
best goalie in the world at the time, Bayern's Josef "Sepp" Maier. Taking a
short and stuttering run-up, he gently struck the ball in an arcing parabola up
the middle, while Maier had already dived and was resting on his knees. The
Czechs had won, 5-3.
It
remains the only major tournament ever won by either a united Czechoslovakia,
or by the Czech Republic (a.k.a. Czechia) or Slovakia separately, although they reached the Final of the 1962 World Cup, and finished 3rd at Euro 1980.
Such a
penalty attempt has been known as a "Panenka" ever since, but a stuttering
run-up is almost a giveaway that this is what the player is going to do, and it
gets stopped more than most shots.
A midfielder, Antonín Panenka played for Bohemians Prague from 1967 to 1981, never winning a major trophy -- except Euro 76 for his country. He then went to Rapid Wien, and helped the Vienna club win the Austrian Bundesliga in 1982 and '83; and the Austrian Cup in 1983, '84 and '85. He continued to play professionally until 1993, at age 44. He later served as team president for Bohemians. As of June 20, 2026, he is still alive.

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