The UK and Ireland hosting EURO 2028 can bring major benefits to all five nations
Spirit of 2012
London 2012 legacy charity, founded by the National Lottery Community Fund in 2013 with a £47m endowment.
The successful five nation bid to host Euro 2028 is a another opportunity to show the impact of major events, says our chair Ruth Hollis.
Today (Tuesday 10 October), it was confirmed that the 2028 Men’s European Championships will be hosted in the UK and Ireland. It is fantastic that our ambitious five-nation bid has been successful and as such, we will host what is quite possibly the highest profile international event since the London 2012 Games. However, while we can draw some comparisons with the scale and popularity of the London 2012 Games, the Euros 2028 will be a single sport, multi-location spectacle, and we won’t see women or disabled people on the field of play, and their approach to securing long term impact – which should be the ultimate prize for any event organiser - needs to reflect this.
The UK is seen as a world leader when it comes to hosting events and we only needs to look at the huge variety of success of events in the 11 years since London 2012 as testament to that. From the Cricket and Rugby World Cups, Diamond League Athletics, the Coronation, anniversaries and Cities of Culture to Glasgow and Birmingham hosting the Commonwealth Games, Eurovision and the Women’s Euros. We have put on events with variety and spectacle which the public will never forget whether they were lucky enough to get tickets or watched at home or with their communities. We hope that EURO 2028 will continue that proud tradition.
With the spotlight falling on the cost of events, naturally questions will be asked by some commentators about our priorities and whether the benefits of hosting the Euros will be worth the cost. We know from our evidence that all sporting events have the potential to leave a lasting social as well as economic impact. The reach of men’s football remains unparalleled and for EURO 2028, with its multi-location reach across five nations, the potential for a lasting legacy which makes a difference in those communities is astounding – arguably a bigger impact than one focused on a single place.
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However, even with our track record of spectacular events, we are still missing opportunities to really maximise their power for people and places. To ensure that this does not happen again with these Euros, the plan for long term impact needs to be backed into the plans from the starters whistle. Our Power of Events Inquiry, launched in January 2023, set out a set of recommendations that can help the hosts and host cities plan for legacy. We recommend that:
We want to see the Euros 2028 leave a blueprint for how single sport, multi-location events can leave a lasting impact for fans, players and crucially the people in the communities that host them this fantastic spectacle.