Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Holland aim to heal 7-year itch Euro 2020: Group C talking points

Team has failed to qualify for any major tournament since finishing third in the 2014 FIFA World Cup

- Dhiman Sarkar dhiman@htlive.com

KOLKATA: Had the Euros happened on time, Ronald Koeman would have been their coach and Virgil van Dijk captain. When Holland go into the competitio­n, Frank de Boer will be in the dugout—because Barcelona made an offer Koeman couldn’t refuse—with Georginio Wijnaldum wearing the armband instead of the injured Van Dijk.

There is a certain amount of randomness in how summer tournament­s unfurl: North Korea in the 1966 World Cup, Senegal in the 2002 edition, Iceland in the 2016 Euros and a group of Danes coming off their holidays to conquer a continent in 1992. But typifying the unpredicta­ble nature of internatio­nal competitio­ns—where teams need to keep it together for seven games in a month—is Holland. They didn’t make the World Cup finals from 1938 to 1970 and then were runners-up twice. They couldn’t qualify for the next two World Cups and won the European championsh­ip in 1988; Marco van Basten’s audacious volley being the insurance goal in a 2-0 win against Russia in the final. Van Basten’s strike, along with the Paul Gascoigne lob against Scotland in 1996 and Antonin Panenka’s penalty in 1976, remains one of the defining goals of the competitio­n.

It also remains Holland’s only major trophy. In 2010, when De Boer was part of the coaching staff, Holland lost another World Cup final. The journey from almost sublime to the ridiculous took two years and Holland lost all group games in the 2012 Euros. But in 2014, Holland almost edged out

The unveiling of Ukraine’s shirt for this Euro has not gone down well with the Russians. The front of the yellow jersey shows a map of Ukraine in white that includes Russia-annexed Crimea, which officials in the Kremlin called a provocatio­n. It doesn’t stop there, for the kit is also emblazoned with two Ukrainian military slogans. The political controvers­y could get even more pronounced if they were to meet Russia in the tournament’s knock-out stage. And Ukraine’s greatest-ever footballer turned manager in Andriy Shevchenko will back his team to get there this time around, thanks to Manchester City’s Oleksandr Zinchenko at the back and West Ham’s Andriy Yarmolenko up front.

ANDRIY YARMOLENKO

Argentina in a World Cup semifinal before besting hosts Brazil 3-0 to finish third. True to form, Holland then failed to qualify for the 2016 Euros and the 2018 World Cup.

“It is unbelievab­le that we have not played at a World Cup or European Championsh­ip with the Netherland­s for seven years… Missing one tournament, that can happen. But two?” Wijnaldum has said. He

The three-decade-old republic, one of the successor nations of Yugoslavia, had never seen its national team make it to a major tournament before this. It was a tight 1-0 win in Tbilisi over Georgia last November that sealed the deal for North Macedonia. At their Euro debut, the odds will be stacked against the Goran Pandev-led side. But North Macedonia are a tough nut to crack, as underlined by the fact that they have lost just twice in 13 games in the past year. A stunning 2-1 win over Germany—in Germany—in the World Cup qualifiers in March show that they can also spring a surprise or two on their day.

DAVID ALABA

would be on vacation then but those vacations, Wijnaldum said, felt wrong.

Despite the late pullout of Donny van de Beek due to injury, Wijnaldum will be working this summer as part of a squad with an equal mix of youth and experience. Holland have seven players who are 23 or younger and that includes Matthijs de Ligt, assuming of course that his groin injury isn’t serious enough

GORAN PANDEV

Austria have never won a match at the Euros—not when they hosted the event in 2008 and not when they played in a relatively easy group in Euro 2016, alongside Hungary and debutants Iceland. Six games, no wins and just one goal in open play. To break their duck, David Alaba-led side has been blessed with an easy group again, with yet another Euro debutant team in North Macedonia, a blow-hot-blow-cold Holland and Ukraine. Can they turn around their fortunes? Austria’s form coming into the Euro should tell you just how unlikely that is, with two losses and a draw in their last three prep games.

for them to make another late replacemen­t after goalie Jasper Cillessen was omitted due to Covid-19. Nineteen-year-old midfielder Ryan Gravenberc­h has been called “the next Patrick Vieira” by De Boer. Gravenberc­h, who scored in Sunday’s 3-0 win against Georgia, comes off the famed youth system at Ajax; as does defender Jurriën Timber. Forward Donyell Malen is 22 and has been trained by Dennis

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Bergkamp at Ajax and Thierry Henry at Arsenal. Among those in the roster between 24-29, said to be a player’s peak years, is free-scoring striker Memphis Depay – he would have been out with injury if the edition was not delayed but has scored 20 goals in 37 games for Lyon last term – whose six goals and five assists were crucial to Holland qualifying. Depay has taken that form to recent friendlies, scoring against both Scotland and Georgia. Also in that list are midfield master Frenkie de Jong (who is coming off a good season at Barcelona), Manchester City’s Nathan Ake and the six-foot-six Wout Weghorst, who has had two seasons of over 20 goals for Wolfsburg in Germany and got a goal on Sunday against Georgia. De Ligt’s possible central defensive partner in Stefan de Vrij, who plays for Serie A winners Inter Milan, is 29.

On the list of experience­d players would be Wijnaldum, 30, who is among nine players who were part of the 2014 World Cup. Allowed freedom to go forward in the national team, the midfielder will be hoping a good tournament should help him switch from Liverpool to a club where he gets more game time.

The buzz is PSG will get him before Barcelona. With eight goals, Wijnaldum is also Holland’s top scorer in the qualifiers.

Also in the 26 are Daley Blind, who can provide cover in central defence and play in midfield, goalkeeper Maarten Stekelenbu­rg, an internatio­nal since 2004 and the first choice in the 2010 World Cup, and Sevilla striker Luuk de Jong.

A serial winner of the Dutch league as Ajax player and coach – he is also Holland’s thirdmost capped player – De Boer has also had blink-and-miss stints at Inter Milan and Crystal Palace. The one with USA’S Atlanta United lasted longer but yielded little. His teams are known to play pragmatic rather than pleasing football, but Van Basten has a different take. “When I see Frank de Boer, I see someone who has a natural understand­ing of being a trainer,” he said.

“I think we are somewhere in the top eight sides,” De Boer claimed. Placed in an easy group and playing group games at Amsterdam’s Johan Cruyff Arena, anything less than a quarter-final berth could seem like inadequate healing of a seven-year itch.

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