Deccan Chronicle

Denmark display indomitabl­e spirit

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Amsterdam, June 27: Could a tournament that started so awfully end in unlikely glory for Denmark?

That romantic notion is beginning to look like a genuine possibilit­y after Kasper Hjulmand’s team tore apart Wales 4-0 on Saturday to reach the quarterfin­als of Euro 2020.

Football could not have seemed less important when Christian Eriksen suffered cardiac arrest during their opening game against Finland in Copenhagen, which they went on to lose 1-0.

But the Danes have been carried by a wave of emotion from that moment and, after scraping out of the group stage, in Amsterdam — where Eriksen made his name with Ajax — they recorded one of the biggest ever victories in the European Championsh­ip knockout rounds.

Almost everyone in the 14,645 crowd allowed inside the Johan Cruyff Arena was Danish, while back home fans celebrated on the streets in Copenhagen.

Parallels can be drawn with 1992, when the Danes benefited from a ban on war-torn Yugoslavia to qualify for the Euro in Sweden and went on to win the trophy.

Saturday’s victory against Wales came on the anniversar­y of that triumph and this time, without Eriksen, it is clear Denmark still have an outstandin­g team driven by the desire to win for their stricken friend.

Against Wales the sense fate was on their side was epitomised by the matchwinni­ng role played by Kasper Dolberg.

The striker did not start a group game but was brought into the side with Yussuf Poulsen injured and scored the first two goals on the ground where — like Eriksen — he made his name with Ajax.

Joakim Maehle, the Atalanta full-back, and Barcelona’s Martin Braithwait­e completed the rout. Dolberg, whose parents were handball players, emerged in Amsterdam when he scored 16 league goals for Ajax as a teenager in 2016/17, also featuring on their run to that season’s Europa League final.

A move to French club Nice for a reported 20 million euros ($23.9m) followed in 2019, but weeks later his watch — worth many thousands of euros — was stolen from the changing room by a teammate.

Dolberg also came into the delayed Euro after a season in which he just couldn’t catch a break.

Last September, while on internatio­nal duty, the 23year-old’s house was burgled and his car, a Porsche, was stolen.

A succession of injury problems followed. He contracted Covid-19 twice. Then, in February, he had to undergo surgery for appendicit­is.

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