European Championship Qualifiers October
Euro 2008 qualifiers: Gloom for Scotland and England
Romania, Greece and Czechia through; disasters for England, Scotland
and Turkey
Ozren Podnar reports
Moscow game puts England in jeopardy
A blind referee, Gerrard's glaring miss, Hiddink's magic, Terry's
injury: so many adverse factors conspired to push England to the
brink of elimination in Moscow.
How terrible: Rooney, who had finally recaptured his scoring touch,
tugged at Zhiryanov's shirt just in front of England's penalty area,
but the ref, strolling at a significant distance from the action,
thought the foul was inside the area.
Now England do not depend on themselves: they depend on Israel
holding Russia or Macedonia beating Croatia on November 17th. One
of the two results must go England's way for the final game against
Croatia at Wembley to count for anything.
Option no. 1: Russia fail to win in Israel
Are there any real chances of that happening? Well, yes, but they
are slight. Israel's coach Dror Kashtan has just extended his contract
until 2010 thanks to what the Israelis see as a good showing of
the national team. Kashtan has already started to rejuvenate his
squad and a team with six debutants did quite well losing 1-0 in
Zagreb.
Croatia only created two more chances which proves Israel still
have their own pride to defend. A draw with Russia in Tel Aviv is
not impossible. After all, Israel did not even lose in Moscow in
their first encounter 14 months ago.
Option no. 2: Croatia lose in Macedonia
And Macedonia could pull it off against Croatia because we are
talking about Balkans rivalry. The Macedonians have largely underperformed
in the current qualifiers, but they have played best against the
best: they drew 0-0 away to England and lost in Zagreb 2-1 with
a late goal from Eduardo
da Silva. It is true that Croatia have not lost a qualifying
game in the past 50 months, never a single match against another
team from the former Yugoslavia and not one game since Slaven Bilic
took over. But, a defeat will come sooner or later.
Should Russia fail to win in Tel Aviv, England would have to beat
Croatia by any margin, which would be made easier since the Croats
would already have qualified at Russian expense. In the latter case,
that is if Russia win and Croatia lose in Macedonia, England would
have to win their last game by 2-0 or by three goals because they
had lost in Zagreb by 0-2. The away goals would count just as they
do in the UEFA's club competitions so a 3-1 win would not see Steve
McClaren's squad through; 2-0 would suffice, though, because England
would have a superior overall goals difference.
Group A
Portugal looking good
Portugal look good in Group A since six points from the two remaining
home games would see them through, while Poland have a tougher task
when their entertain Belgium and travel to Belgrade to meet Serbia,
also with an outside chance of making it to the final stage.
Group B
Scotland Need To Beat World Champions
Scotland's case is certainly more galling than England's. McClaren's
side at least lost to a known soccer power coached by a superior
coach. McLeish's boys were capable of beating France twice, but
they got beaten fair and square by an unimpressive Georgia; still,
Scotland at least depend on themselves, the only British side to
have that privilege. A win over Italy in Glasgow would guarantee
a place over the Azzurri in the final standings. A draw could only
be enough should France fail to win in Ukraine, which would also
fall within the footballing logic.
Group C
Turkey or Norway
Of the big teams, Turkey have commited a double-suicide by drawing
away to Moldova and losing at home to Greece. Now the Greeks will
be in Austria and Switzerland to defend their crown, but Turkey
will have to beat Norway away; a mere glance at the form of both
teams suggests that the Scandinavians are huge favourites to qualify.
Group D
Germany and Czechia qualify
Czechia have also made sure of their place in the final stage,
perhaps even the top spot, as they thrashed Germany by 3-0 creating
a better head-to-head record with respect to their hosts who have,
incidentally, also qualified thanks to a draw in Dublin.
Group F
Northern Ireland Long Shot
Ironically, even Northern Ireland still have a chance of qualifying.
For that they must defeat Denmark at home and Spain away, but at
least one other score would have to be favourable to them. Either
Spain would have to lose to Sweden at home (and Sweden are not certain
yet!), or the Swedes would have to lose both their remaining games.
A very long shot, longer even than Nayim's against David Seaman
in 1995's Cup Winners' Cup finals.
Group G
Netherlands or Bulgaria
Finally, Romania have also qualified by beating Holland and Luxembourg
in the space of four days, while Bulgaria have virtually bid goodbye
after being incapable of overcoming Albania in Tirana.
The top two in each of the seven groups will automatically qualify
for the finals. There are no play-offs.
Austria and Switzerland automatically qualify as hosts.
Euro 2008 kick offs on June 7, 2008 at St
Jakob Park Stadium in Basle,
Switzerland.
The final of Euro 2008 will be held at the Ernst
Happel Stadion in Vienna,
Austria on June 29.
| EURO2008
DRAW |
| Group
A |
Group
B |
Group
C |
Group
D |
| Portugal |
France |
Greece |
Czechia |
| Poland |
Italy |
Turkey |
Germany |
| Serbia |
Ukraine |
Norway |
Slovakia |
| Belgium |
Scotland |
Bosnia |
Republic of Ireland |
| Finland |
Lithuania |
Hungary |
Wales |
| Armenia |
Georgia |
Moldova |
Cyprus |
| Azerbaijan |
Faroe Islands |
Malta |
San Marino |
| Kazakhstan |
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| Group
E |
Group
F |
Group
G |
|
| England |
Sweden |
The Netherlands |
|
| Croatia |
Spain |
Romania |
|
| Russia |
Denmark |
Bulgaria |
|
| Israel |
Latvia |
Slovenia |
|
| Estonia |
Iceland |
Albania |
|
| Macedonia |
Northern Ireland |
Belarus |
|
| Andorra |
Liechtenstein |
Luxembourg |
|
|
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