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Eriksen calls for the Danish FA to end stand-off with players

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Christian Eriksen has called for a truce in the extraordin­ary row that threatens to see Denmark field uncapped players from the lower divisions against Wales on Sunday.

Denmark’s preparatio­ns for their Uefa Nations League game openerat the Aarhus Stadium are in turmoil after an extraordin­ary row over the players’ commercial rights.

The Danish Football Associatio­n (DBU), fearing the prospect of a Uefa ban if they do not fulfil the fixture in Aarhus, have invited players from Superligae­n and the first and second divisions in domestic football to play in Denmark’s two games.

The Danes have a friendly in Slovakia today and it has been reported in Denmark that a 23-man squad was due to fly out to Bratislava yesterday.

But the Danish Player Associatio­n( Spill er for en in gen) have urged the DBU to reconsider and told the governing body that the national squad is willing to play the two games under the terms of their old agreement.

“We have to solve this conflict now, not just digging the ditches deeper,” Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Eriksen said in a statement published on the Spill er for en in gen website.

“So we’re happy to stretch our hand again, even though DBU put it away in the first try.

“Let’s renew the old deal by one month. Then we have organised relationsh­ips right now and we are prepared to play the internatio­nal matches this week.

“And then we have time after the two internatio­nal matches to negotiate the entire agreement in place. It does not make sense if DBU does not accept that offer.

“The agreement has been working for years and should only run one month longer.

“Sign up and we will sit on the plane immediatel­y. We are ready and we will play.”

Denmark, who reached the last 16 of the World Cup in Russia this summer and are ninth in the Fifa rankings, have been beset by internal problems over the past 12 months.

The national women’s team boycotted a World Cup qualifier against Sweden in October 2017 in a dispute over employment conditions.

Sweden were awarded a 3-0 win and Uefa fined the DBU £18,000 (Dh85,000).

The DBU was also warned that Denmark would be barred from Uefa tournament­s if it cancelled another match in the next four years.

So failing to play Wales would almost certainly see Denmark expelled from the 2020 European Championsh­ip.

DBU chief executive Claus Bretton-Meyer said on Monday that the Wales game would go ahead, but he branded the dispute “regrettabl­e” with the two parties holding 26 meetings on the issue in 2018.

Eriksen added: “We could all be home in our clubs who pay our wages – at home by our wives and children.

“There is only one reason why we are here – and it’s not money.

“We are here because we love to play for Denmark – and proud of the many millions we play for children and the breadth of Danish football, and the work we do for the whole of Danish football.

“For example, making up for DBUs events and for their sponsors, as we have always done.”

We have to solve this conflict now, not just digging the ditches deeper. We’re happy to stretch our hand again CHRISTIAN ERIKSEN

 ?? Reuters ?? Denmark midfielder Chistian Eriksen insists the players are ready to play ‘immediatel­y’ for their country
Reuters Denmark midfielder Chistian Eriksen insists the players are ready to play ‘immediatel­y’ for their country

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