UEFA EURO 2024 winning match ball to be auctioned for the UEFA Foundation for Children

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UEFA EURO 2024 winning match ball to be auctioned for the UEFA Foundation for Children

Berlin, JUL 24: Mikel Oyarzabal’s 86th minute winner clinched a record fourth UEFA EURO title for Spain following a pulsating final against England in Berlin on 14 July – and you can own a unique part of football history by bidding on the very ball with which the winning goal was scored, signed by the matchwinner himself.

adidas’s Connected Ball Technology, which made its UEFA EURO debut this summer, enabled European football’s governing body to track each of the 60 ‘FUSSBALLLIEBE FINALE’ balls during the UEFA EURO 2024 final, and for the first time in a UEFA EURO final the exact ball with which the winning goal was scored was identified.

Mikel Oyarzabal celebrates his winning goal in the UEFA EURO 2024 final
Mikel Oyarzabal celebrates his winning goal in the UEFA EURO 2024 final
UEFA via Getty Images
UEFA are therefore able to offer fans and collectors the chance to get their hands on ball number 17/60, signed by Oyarzabal, as part of an auction where all proceeds will go to the UEFA Foundation for Children.

The auction, launched at midday CET on 24 July, will continue until 20:00 CET on 4 August.

In addition, the unique memento also comes with adidas’ new match ball plinth made of anodised aluminium in the shape of a triangular prism containing 54 triangles that represent each national association that took part in the 2024 edition of the UEFA European Championship (qualifying included).

You can bid for the signed winning match ball, as well as other unique UEFA competition items to raise funds for the UEFA Foundation for Children exclusively on Catawiki, an online marketplace for special objects that fulfil people’s passions, via this link.

The UEFA Foundation for Children aims to help children and defend their rights, for example through sport and football. It provides support in the areas of health, education, access to sport, personal development, integration of minorities and employability.

The Foundation, a public utility body under Swiss law, was created and started its activities on April 24, 2015. Since then, the foundation has invested €51 million in 500 projects in 135 countries worldwide. More than 2.6 million children have benefited from the foundation’s work since its creation.