Kuwait Times

Germany, Netherland­s to meet as England given clement draw

Euro 2020 qualifying: England drawn with Czech Republic

-

DUBLIN: The Netherland­s and Germany were grouped together in qualificat­ion for the 2020 European Championsh­ip at yesterday’s draw in Dublin, one of 12 host cities for the finals that will be staged across the continent for the first time.

Germany, the team everyone wanted to avoid after their poor showing in UEFA’s new Nations League competitio­n pushed them into the second pot of seeds, will also play Northern Ireland, Estonia and Belarus in Group C when the qualificat­ion competitio­n begins in March. The Dutch, European champions in 1988, failed to qualify for the last two major tournament­s but have been rejuvenate­d under new coach Ronald Koeman, beating Germany last month on their way to securing a spot in the final stages of the Nations League.

“I wasn’t happy because they are strong, they were the strongest team in the second pot, but Germany are also not happy with Holland, I think,” Koeman, the former Ajax and Everton manager, told reporters.

“I think the rest of the draw is acceptable but with the Germans, it will be a good fight. We know it will be tough to beat them. The developmen­t of the team is really positive and we look forward.”

Holders Portugal must face Ukraine and Serbia in a tricky five-team Group B which also includes Lithuania and Luxemburg while world champions France drew Iceland and Turkey in Group H.

Elsewhere three-times champions Spain were drawn in Group F with Sweden, Norway and Romania. England, one of the other in-form teams from the Nations League, face the Czech Republic and Bulgaria in Group A.

AVOID GERMANY

The top two teams from each group qualify automatica­lly. Unlike previous tournament­s, the playoffs to decide the four other spots will be contested between the most successful teams from the four divisions of the Nations League who have not already qualified.

“I would say it’s a group with three candidates for

middle of the pitch and feeding the ball to Pedro on the right side of the penalty box.

The winger stepped inside onto his left foot and fired the ball into the far corner. Pedro’s strike was Chelsea’s 1,000th Premier League goal-they are the third club to reach the landmark after Manchester United and Arsenal.

Chelsea dominated the remainder of the first half, with Sergio Rico saving smartly with his feet from Olivier Giroud shortly before half-time but they failed to convert their dominance into clear-cut chances.

Fulham started the match rooted to the foot of the table but lifted by last week’s victory in Ranieri’s first match as boss, which followed six straight Premier League defeats. Ranieri made two substituti­ons for the second half, bringing on Floyd Ayite and Aboubakar Kamara for Stefan Johansen and Ryan Sessegnon.

Fulham, playing with more urgency, twice went close to an equaliser through defender Calum Chambers. Chelsea goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabala­ga kept out Chambers’ header 10 minutes after the break before the loose ball was cleared off the line by Pedro.

Then midway through the second half Kepa palmed away a powerful shot from Chambers. Chelsea had a chance to seal all three points when Rico could only palm an Eden Hazard deflected shot into the path of substitute Alvaro Morata but he skewed the ball horribly. The Spanish forward was spared further embarrassm­ent when England internatio­nal Loftus-Cheek finished a lovely move by driving into the net from the right-hand side of the penalty area in the 82nd minute. — AFP two places, and Portugal are one of them,” said Portugal coach Fernando Santos. “We escaped playing Germany... or Germany escaped playing us. You could say the group is less difficult because Germany are not there but that would not be true. Ukraine and Serbia are difficult.”

Hoping to restore his team’s credibilit­y after they failed to qualify for the World Cup, Italy coach Roberto Mancini was also happy to avoid Germany after his side were drawn in Group J along with teams including Bosnia, Finland and Greece.

“A good draw, the aim was to avoid Germany,” he said. “We need to improve and get back to being among the top teams.” The new format offers a potential back door for any top side that struggles in qualifying, while also handing the leading minnows from the lowest Nations League division-Kosovo, Georgia, Belarus and Macedonia-a crack at the last qualificat­ion place. The finals will take place in 12 different cities stretching from Bilbao in Spain to Baku in Azerbaijan. For the first time in the competitio­n’s history, the tournament will be hosted by more than two countries to mark its 60th anniversar­y.

No team will qualify automatica­lly as hosts, although every host country that qualifies will be guaranteed two home games in the group phase. A maximum of two host teams were permitted to be grouped together in Sunday’s qualifying draw.

That meant that Ireland, to sighs of relief in the Dublin auditorium, had to be moved out of the Germany/Netherland­s group they were initially drawn in, dumping neighbouri­ng Northern Ireland in Group C with the former winners instead.

Yet new Ireland manager Mick McCarthy was not thanking the “person on the computer with a magic finger” for long when he realised his side would still face the relatively daunting task of getting past either Switzerlan­d or Denmark in Group D. “I don’t see why we should be thinking it’s a damn sight easier,” the returning Ireland manager said. — Reuters

Forgotten man Origi snatches dramatic derby win for Liverpool

LIVERPOOL: Forgotten man Divock Origi snatched a dramatic last-gasp 1-0 win for Liverpool over Merseyside rivals Everton in the Premier League at Anfield yesterday. Everton looked to have done enough to secure a point but a horrendous error from goalkeeper Jordan Pickford gifted the ball to Origi, who headed it home in the sixth minute of stoppage time.

Chasing a first win at Anfield since 1999, Everton created the better of the openings in the first half, but found Liverpool goalkeeper Allison in inspired form. Liverpool upped the tempo after the break and twice went close through Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane.

Origi, who came off the bench for his first league appearance of the season, saw an earlier close-range effort come out off the post, before he grabbed the headlines with the bizarre winner. The goal sparked wild celebratio­ns at Anfield with manager Juergen Klopp running on to the pitch. The win allowed second-placed Liverpool to close the gap on league leaders Manchester City to two points. — Reuters

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? DUBLIN: A picture shows the completed groups displayed on a screen during the UEFA Euro 2020 football competitio­n qualifying draw in Dublin yesterday. —AFP
DUBLIN: A picture shows the completed groups displayed on a screen during the UEFA Euro 2020 football competitio­n qualifying draw in Dublin yesterday. —AFP
 ??  ?? LIVERPOOL: Everton’s Senegalese midfielder Idrissa Gueye (L) vies with Liverpool’s Dutch midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum during the English Premier League football match between Liverpool and Everton at Anfield in Liverpool, north west England yesterday. — AFP
LIVERPOOL: Everton’s Senegalese midfielder Idrissa Gueye (L) vies with Liverpool’s Dutch midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum during the English Premier League football match between Liverpool and Everton at Anfield in Liverpool, north west England yesterday. — AFP
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait