World Soccer

POLAND, UKRAINE AND GEORGIA COMPLETE EURO 2024 LINE-UP

- Nick Bidwell

PATH A

Not since1973 have Wales managed to beat Poland on the internatio­nal stage – a sorry run of ten matches – and true to that half-century trend, Rob Page’s plucky side just came up short in the Path A final in Cardiff, losing 5-4 on penalties to Robert Lewandowsk­i and co. In an encounter which produced zero goals, it was wholly ironic that both teams had their shooting boots on for the tiebreaker exercise, with the Poles netting all five of their efforts and Wales converting their first four kicks.

Something had to give and sadly for the Dragons, substitute Daniel James was the one to err, left dazed and bemused after Poland keeper Wojciech Szczesny dived to his right to parry.

Wales, who crushed Finland 4-1 in the semis, can consider themselves more than a little unfortunat­e not to be part of the Germany 2024 gala. They arguably were brighter and sharper than the Poles and looked to have the trump card in bustling centre-forward Kieffer Moore, who posed no end of aerial problems for the visitors.

Poland were not able to muster a single shot on target in120 minutes, though they certainly did up the tempo in the second half and came within a whisker of breaking the deadlock on 100 minutes, when midfielder Jakub Piotrowski thumped a curling longrange shot inches past the post.

All credit to Poland head coach Michal Probierz. Only in the post since September, he has instilled a mental toughness in the group. In the past, they would have folded in Cardiff.

PATH B

Through to their fourth consecutiv­e Euros, Ukraine had to do it the hard way in Path B, tapping into the patriotic resilience which the entire country has pumping through its veins in these times of Russian hostilitie­s. Away to Bosnia & Herzegovin­a in the semis, the Ukrainians were a goal down with the clock ticking, only to spectacula­rly turn the game on its head in a whirlwind three-minute spell thanks to goals from the Spanish-based frontline pairing of Roman Yaremchuk (Valencia) and Artem Dovbyk (Girona).

In the final, held in the Polish city of Wroclaw, Ukraine again had to come from behind against a surprising­ly enterprisi­ng Iceland, who took the lead on the halfhour mark with a quite brilliant effort from Genoa frontman Albert Gudmundsso­n. The scorer of a hat-trick in the 4-1 semifinal win over Israel, the 26-year-old is some talent, and showed quick, dancing feet to work space for a superb longrange finish to stun the Ukrainians.

In the second half, Iceland, intelligen­tly set up by coach Age Hareide, continued to defend with heart and soul, as well as posing a threat on the counter. But ultimately they could not resist the never-saydie spirit and relentless energy of their opponents, for whom Shakhtar Donetsk creative midfielder Heorhiy Sudakov was particular­ly impressive. The latter played an instrument­al part in both Ukrainian goals in the second half: winger Victor Tsyhankov cutting in from the right to lash home into the bottom corner, and Chelsea’s Mykhailo Mudryk firing in the winner six minutes from time.

PATH C

On a night of raw emotions and history-in-the-making in the Path C final in Tbilisi, Georgia booked their first-ever ticket for a major internatio­nal tournament finals, defeating Greece 4-2 on penalties after two hours of goalless action.

Prior to the game, Greece boss Gus Poyet had stressed the need for his side to keep their emotions under control. But just when they needed strong nerves the most they succumbed to the pressure, with skipper Anastasios Bakasetas seeing his spot-kick saved by Georgian custodian Giorgi Mamardashv­ili and US-based former Celtic forward Giorgos Giakoumaki­s missing the target.

Cue scenes of utter jubilation in Tbilisi. Following1­4 unsuccessf­ul European Championsh­ip and World Cup qualifying campaigns, they have finally cracked the big time, soon to be part of the Euro 2024 festivitie­s and to bank a € 9.25 million appearance fee, the sort of money that will make a huge difference to their coffers.

Greece proved to be their own worst enemies. Despite having much more of the ball, they did little with it in an attacking sense and it says it all that it took them100 minutes to carve

Ukraine had to do it the hard way, tapping into their patriotic resilience

out their first real goalscorin­g chance, Bakasetas denied at the near-post by Mamardashv­ili.

Georgia, who beat Luxembourg 2-0 in the Path C semis – in a dramatic and chaotic game where VAR had brought back play for a foul and a red card after Luxembourg thought they’d equalised – spent most of the game on the back foot. But what a defensive shift they put in, their resolve embodied by centreback Guram Kashia. Expect Georgia coach Willy Sagnol, the former Bayern Munich and France right-back, to have several European clubs on his case.

 ?? ?? Heading to Germany… Poland captain Robert Lewandowsk­i leads his country’s celebratio­ns
Heading to Germany… Poland captain Robert Lewandowsk­i leads his country’s celebratio­ns
 ?? ?? Equaliser…Viktor Tsyhankov after scoring Ukraine’s first goal v Iceland
Equaliser…Viktor Tsyhankov after scoring Ukraine’s first goal v Iceland
 ?? ?? Agonising... Giakoumaki­s of Greece fails to score his penalty kick
Agonising... Giakoumaki­s of Greece fails to score his penalty kick

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