Scottish Daily Mail

COCKSURE ENGLAND LOOKED DOWN ON US

Iceland stunned Roy Hodgson’s Three Lions at Euro 2016 and scorer Ragnar Sigurdsson loved every minute of it

- by Matt Barlow

England’s humiliatio­n was Iceland’s glorious high. The equaliser, the brilliant saving tackle on Jamie Vardy and the thrill of the Viking thundercla­p remain crisp and fresh in the mind of Ragnar sigurdsson.

‘You can never forget,’ says sigurdsson, as he reflects on Iceland’s win over England in nice at Euro 2016 from his home in Copenhagen.

‘It was a great game, with great memories. I think about it from time to time and people often ask me about it.

‘They never ask about the goal. nobody cares about that. It was a great feeling to score, but I don’t care too much about scoring goals. I care about winning. The tackle was probably my best action in the game. It was crucial.’

The goal was Iceland’s equaliser. a long throw was helped on and sigurdsson escaped Kyle Walker at the back post to force it past Joe Hart. England had struck first, a penalty converted by Wayne Rooney, but led for only two minutes.

The tackle was a beautifull­y timed slide in the closing stages to cleanly dispossess Vardy and preserve the lead held since Kolbeinn sigthorsso­n’s goal in the 18th minute.

‘In the tunnel before the game, it was my feeling that they looked down on us by miles,’ recalls sigurdsson. ‘They were so sure that they were better than us and were going to destroy us. ‘I didn’t know what they were thinking but that’s the feeling I got. That’s how they looked to me and when they scored early on, that’s what killed them. ‘They got the first goal and thought it was going to be a walk in the park. Then things changed. ‘It’s one of the great things about football. anybody can beat anybody else. If you don’t have the right attitude, you can lose against opponents who are supposedly weaker. ‘For us, it is a good thing when opponents underestim­ate you. That’s the biggest chance we have to get a big result.’ Iceland, the smallest European nation to qualify for a major tournament, were into the last eight.

They had already denied Holland a place in the finals and held eventual champions Portugal to a draw in their opening game in France. now they were scheduled to play the host nation in a quarter-final.

‘The ref blew the final whistle against England and everybody ran to a corner,’ says sigurdsson, who still cherishes his man-ofthe-match award.

‘I didn’t swap shirts. I’m not a collector of shirts. I’m not against it, but what am I going to do with them? I’m not going to hang them on my walls.

‘nobody shook hands with anyone and I didn’t see any of the England players when we finished celebratin­g. I was going to an interview when I walked past Roy Hodgson. He shook my hand and told me ‘‘good game”, he was very respectful.’

France ended Iceland’s run, but the landscape changed for their players after that win.

‘There’s no chance Fulham would have bought me without that game,’ admits sigurdsson, who was playing for Krasnodar in Russia.

‘That tournament, that game changed a lot for me and my team-mates. a lot of guys moved clubs, but nobody got the “supermove”. Everyone thought they were going to get a big move, big league, big money. It didn’t happen.

‘My agent told me some Premier league clubs were thinking about an offer. In the end, only Fulham made a move and I didn’t take long to decide. My dream was to play in England.’

sigurdsson’s team-mates Jon dadi Bodvarsson joined Wolves and Birkir Bjarnason moved to aston Villa a year later.

‘It was a great chance and I’m ashamed to say it, but because it was the Championsh­ip and not the Premier league, I thought it was going to be easy,’ says centre-half sigurdsson.

‘I know why it didn’t go so well. I lost my head. For my whole career, I had my feet on the ground. I had many successes before that, but it never went to my head. I never thought I was better than I was.

‘Then, when I got a chance to play in England, that’s when I decided to think I was a superstar. I didn’t take it seriously enough. I had one okay game, then a bad game, then a good game. I started making mistakes and the coach stopped believing in me, which I understand.

‘Then, you’re on the bench, confidence gone and it’s hard to get back. My mindset was wrong. Blame it on me, nobody else.’

sigurdsson joined Rubin Kazan on loan and then Rostov on a permanent move. His Premier league ambitions were over.

Iceland’s rise continued, however, as they made it to the World Cup finals for the first time and held argentina to a draw in their opening fixture.

‘We wanted to prove it was not a fluke,’ says the 34-year-old, now at Copenhagen. ‘It would have been easy to be satisfied with the Euros, but we wanted to make it two in a row.

‘attitudes were changing. People at home expected us to win every game and other countries started to give us more respect. We made it to the World Cup, but didn’t play well enough. But we’ve had a good qualifying campaign for Euro 2020. We must go through the play-offs and I believe we can.’ Iceland’s managerial team has changed since they beat England. lars lagerback is now boss of norway. Ex-sweden boss Erik Hamren is now at the helm.

The bulk of the squad remains intact, though Everton’s gylfi sigurdsson and Burnley’s Johann Berg gudmundsso­n will miss this game and Ragnar sigurdsson has an injury. also absent will be the fans’ thundercla­p at a game played behind closed doors.

‘It made the atmosphere amazing, but I don’t know if anybody wants to do it any more,’ says sigurdsson. ‘I’m getting tired of it. It feels kind of cheesy.’

 ?? PA ?? Cheer leader: Sigurdsson celebrates
Memorable: Ragnar Sigurdsson’s crucial equaliser GETTY IMAGES
PA Cheer leader: Sigurdsson celebrates Memorable: Ragnar Sigurdsson’s crucial equaliser GETTY IMAGES
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