The Zimbabwe Independent

Ukraine qualify for Euro 2024

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UKRAINE came from behind to beat Iceland in a play-off to qualify for Euro 2024 on Tuesday night, while Poland secured their place at the finals with a penalty shoot-out victory over Wales and Georgia qualified for a first ever major tournament.

The Ukrainians were aiming to qualify for a first tournament since the Russian invasion of the country two years ago, and they did so by coming from behind to defeat Iceland 2-1 in a game played in the Polish city of Wroclaw.

Albert Gudmundsso­n silenced the crowd in a city with a large Ukrainian refugee population as he fired Iceland into the lead on the half-hour mark.

Iceland, with a population under 400 000, were hoping to return to the finals of a competitio­n in which they reached the quarterfin­als in 2016.

However, Euro 2020 quarter-finalists Ukraine equalised nine minutes after halftime thanks to a superbly taken goal by Viktor Tsygankov of Spanish side Girona.

Extra time was looming when Ukraine grabbed the winner with six

minutes left as Chelsea's Mykhailo Mudryk swept home a first-time shot from the edge of the area.

"Thank you, guys! Thank you, team! For significan­t emotions for the entire country. For the important victory and making it to Euro. For proving once again: whenever Ukrainians face difficulti­es but do not give up and continue to fight, Ukrainians certainly win," Ukraine's President, Volodymyr Zelensky, wrote on X.

Having narrowly missed out to Italy in their qualifying group and being forced into the play-offs, Ukraine can now look forward to the European Championsh­ip which begins in Germany on June 14.

They will go into Group E alongside Belgium, Slovakia and Romania and will have ambitions of progressin­g to the last 16.

Poland go into a difficult Group D at the Euro along with France, the Netherland­s and Austria after getting the better of Wales in a tense shoot-out at the end of their playoff final in Cardiff.

The match ended 0-0 after 90 minutes and there were no goals either in extra time, which ended with Wales having Chris Mepham sent off for a second booking.

A high-quality shoot-out, which began with Robert Lewandowsk­i converting Poland's first kick, saw nine successful penalties before Daniel James had his effort saved and Wales lost 5-4.

There will be no third consecutiv­e European Championsh­ip for the Welsh team, who were semi-finalists in 2016, but Poland will be present at a fifth continenta­l finals in a row.

"It is a cruel game, that is what I have said to the players, one kick away from qualifying. It hurts," Wales manager Rob Page told broadcaste­r S4C.

Earlier, Georgia made history by winning through to a major internatio­nal tournament for the first time since the country in the Caucasus of 3.7 million people gained independen­ce from the Soviet Union in 1991. They beat Greece 4-2 on penalties after a 0-0 draw at the end of extra time in Tbilisi, sparking a pitch invasion from delighted fans at the Boris Paichadze Stadium. — Supersport.

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