Spain the standouts as Euro 2024 heads into knockout stage
27th June 2024
France meet Belgium in one of the Round of 16 standout ties.
- France and England were widely tipped as the leading contenders before the tournament, but both stumbled unconvincingly through the first round.
- They each scored only two goals in three matches despite boasting some of the best forwards in the world.
- There is now the prospect of England and Italy clashing again here in the quarter-finals, should both win their last-16 ties.
Euro 2024 in Germany moves on to the knockout phase this
weekend after a group stage that saw all of the continent's biggest names
advance to the last 16 even if some of the favourites have failed to convince.
France and England were widely tipped as the leading
contenders before the tournament, but both stumbled unconvincingly through the
first round, each scoring only two goals in three matches despite boasting some
of the best forwards in the world.
The most impressive team has been Spain, probably followed
by the hosts Germany, even if their group stage performance was not flawless in
similar fashion to a strong Portugal team.
Yet those three sides now all find themselves in the harder
half of the draw alongside Belgium and France, after the stuttering 2022 World
Cup runners-up proved incapable of winning their section.
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"We were in a very tough group. We beat Austria but
they finished top," pointed out France coach Didier Deschamps, whose side
were not helped by Kylian Mbappe breaking his nose and missing the goalless
draw with the Netherlands.
"We have achieved our first objective. A new
competition starts now."
A veteran of five previous major tournaments in 12 years as
France boss, he also pointed out that the impressions left in the group stage
"are not always the same later on".
Had France finished first, they would have been on a
collision course to play England in the semi-finals.
Instead, they meet Belgium in the last 16, with the winner
of that possibly facing Portugal in the quarter-finals. Spain and Germany,
meanwhile, are on course to meet in the last eight.
"It doesn't cost anything to dream, but we need to keep
our feet on the ground," was the reaction of Spain coach Luis de la Fuente
despite his team winning all three group games without conceding a goal.
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That matched the performance of Italy at the last Euros,
when they went on to win the trophy by beating England in the final.
There is now the prospect of England and Italy clashing
again here in the quarter-finals, should both win their last-16 ties.
England defeated Italy twice in qualifying but have
disappointed at the tournament despite winning their group. Gareth Southgate's
team were booed off after their 0-0 draw with Slovenia on Tuesday.
"I've not seen any other team qualify and receive a
similar reaction," pointed out Southgate, who is under pressure as star
men Jude Bellingham and Harry Kane struggle to shine.
Beyond the leading names, Austria and Georgia have made the
biggest impressions, but for different reasons.
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Austria have built on promising form under coach Ralf
Rangnick in recent months by running France close and beating Poland and the
Netherlands.
Rangnick called his team's achievement in winning their
group "incredible", and they suddenly seem serious candidates to make
the semi-finals.
Georgia's story is remarkable, that of a small country in
political turmoil appearing at their first major tournament and qualifying for
the knockout stages by beating Cristiano Ronaldo's Portugal.
They now face Spain, who beat them 7-1 and 3-1 during
qualifying.
Slovenia, a country of barely two million people, are also
into the knockout phase for the first time at a major tournament, despite
drawing all three group games.
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Croatia and Ukraine, meanwhile, are the biggest names to go
out, after almost two weeks of group-stage action which eliminated only eight
teams from the awkward 24-nation format.
The group stage was less prolific than at the last Euros,
with only 81 goals in the first round compared to 94 in 2021. Games became
progressively more cagey after a lively start to the competition.
Perhaps some misfiring stars will turn up when it really
matters, starting with Mbappe.
He got his first ever European Championship goal via a
penalty in France's 1-1 draw with Poland, but his Expected Goals (a
commonly-used metric to measure attacking performance) is, at 2.12, the highest
of any player in the competition. And he has only played two matches.
It is hard to pick a standout player from the group stage,
but Toni Kroos and Jamal Musiala have excelled for Germany, and winger Nico
Williams is just one player to star for Spain.
Pepe has been outstanding at the age of 41 for Portugal,
while Georgia could not have advanced without Georges Mikautadze, the
tournament's top scorer on three goals.
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Saturday, June 29 (All times in GMT)
In Berlin (1600)
Switzerland v Italy
In Dortmund (1900)
Germany v Denmark
Sunday, June 30
In Gelsenkirchen (1600)
England v Slovakia
In Cologne (1900)
Spain v Georgia
Monday, July 1
In Duesseldorf (1600)
France v Belgium
In Frankfurt (1900)
Portugal v Slovenia
Tuesday, July 2
In Munich (1600)
Romania v Netherlands
In Leipzig (1900)
Austria v Turkey
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