Italy and Spain to meet in Euro 2024 group stage as England land kind draw
2nd December 2023
France and Netherlands will also be in the same pool.
Italy, who beat England on penalties at Wembley in the final of the last European Championship in 2021, and Spain will also face Croatia and Albania in Group B.
England side will meet Slovenia, Denmark and Serbia
The top two teams in each group will qualify for the last 16, along with the four best third-placed sides.
Reigning champions Italy were placed in the same group as Spain in Saturday's draw for the Euro 2024, while France will come up against the Netherlands as England avoided any of the toughest opponents.
Italy, who beat England on penalties at Wembley in the final of the last European Championship in 2021, and Spain will also face Croatia and Albania in Group B.
Gareth Southgate's much-fancied England side will meet Slovenia, Denmark and Serbia, with hosts Germany taking on Scotland in the tournament's opening game on June 14 in Munich.
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Spain, victors over Italy in the final of Euro 2012, will
take on 2018 World Cup runners-up Croatia in their opening match in Berlin on
June 15.
Italy were always likely to face a difficult draw after
being placed in the bottom pot based on their results in qualifying, when they
scraped through with a 0-0 stalemate against Ukraine in their final match.
"When you're in the fourth pot you know that you have a lot of teams ahead of you, but you can't forget that you represent Italy and you have to play every match with pride," coach Luciano Spalletti told broadcaster RAI.
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The meeting of France, the 2022 World Cup runners-up, and
the Netherlands will be the other heavyweight tie of the opening phase.
They were in the same section in qualifying, with France winning both encounters. The two nations are in Group D along with Austria and a play-off winner, which will be one of Poland, Wales, Finland or Estonia.
England, in contrast, will have few complaints about their
opponents in Group C, although a Denmark side ranked 19th in the world were
arguably the team to avoid from the second pot of seeds.
Southgate's team, considered the favourites along with France for the tournament, will take on Serbia in their opening game in Gelsenkirchen on June 16.
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"I've stood here after quite a few draws and you always
feel the same way, you can look at it on paper but the games aren't played on
paper," Southgate told the BBC.
"One or two teams that you are obviously glad to avoid,
especially in pot three, pot four, but all the teams we play are more than
capable."
He added: "We've developed a lot as a team over the
past few years, we're used to these big games, we're ready for the expectation
and we hope we can give our supporters some more brilliant nights as I think we
have in the last few tournaments."
If England top their group, and France also finish first in their section, the two sides would find themselves on the same side of the draw in the knockout phase and would be on course to meet in the semi-finals.
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Scotland, who famously lost to Brazil in the opening match
of the 1998 World Cup, will again have the honour of featuring in the
tournament's curtain-raiser when they meet Germany to start in Group A.
Hungary and Switzerland complete that section, which could
be one of the most evenly-matched.
"It'll be nice to open the tournament, be involved in that first game, and hopefully we can set the tournament off with a good match," Scotland manager Steve Clarke told the BBC.
Germany have been European champions three times, a record shared with Spain, but there are big doubts about their form heading into the tournament.
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"It will be a very nice start against Scotland in
Munich. The other games will also be exciting duels. It's not a group of death,
but a very good one," said Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann.
Euro 2016 winners Portugal were drawn in Group F with
Turkey, the Czech Republic and a play-off winner from either Greece, Georgia,
Luxembourg or Kazakhstan.
Belgium are in Group E alongside Slovakia, Romania and the
winner of the other play-off path, which will be Israel, Iceland, Bosnia and
Herzegovina or Ukraine.
The month-long Euro, played in 10 cities across Germany, will conclude with the final in Berlin on July 14.
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The top two teams in each group will qualify for the last
16, along with the four best third-placed sides.
Earlier on Saturday, European football's governing body UEFA
announced that the total prize pot for competing nations will be 331 million
euros ($360m).
Each team gets 9.25 million euros as a starting amount and will earn up to a maximum of 28.25 million euros for the winner, if they win all their group games.