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Euro 2008 Wrap Up and The Bobs.
Jun 30, 2008 | 9:07AM | report this
Best goal
Russia’s second goal against Sweden scored by Arshavin created by Zhirkov.


Best free kick goal (possibly the only free kick goal)
Michael Ballack’s rocket against Austria.


Players of the Tournament
 1. Xavi Hernandez, 2. Marcos Senna, 3. David Silva, (All Spain).


Euro 2008 - the Best of (4-1-4-1)
Buffon (Italy); Anyukov (Russia), Puyol (Spain), Chiellini (Italy), Zhirkov (Russia); Senna (Spain); Xavi (Spain), Ballack (Germany), van der Vaart  (Netherlands), Silva (Spain); Villa (Spain).


Second Team (4-1-3-2)
Casillas (Spain); Corluka (Croatia), Tamos (Romania), Simunic (Croatia), Rat (Romania); Aurelio (Turkey); Sneijder (Netherlands), Deco (Portugal), Poldolski (Germany); Arshavin (Russia), Torres (Spain).


Officiating
Group stages – fair to good.
Knock out rounds – very good to excellent.


Comments of the Day
“For whatever reason, Spain excels at producing pint-sized pass-happy pixies: Xavi, David Silva and Andres Iniesta are all in the same mould, creative little fellas who can pass the ball to death. The problem is, you can only fit so many of them in your team.” – Gabriele Marcotti writing back on the eve of the European Championship.


“But the limiting of his participation has not prevented the Arsenal man (Cesc Fabregas) from confirming that he is not simply the most creative architect of penetration available to his country but conceivably the ultimate practitioner of the art in all of football today. And he is as brave as he is talented, constantly displaying not just the physical version of courage but that rarer form so often lauded by Sir Alex Ferguson, the kind that makes a player eager to embrace responsibility, to think always not of what will make him look good but what will benefit the team. As it happens, Fabregas’s innate style almost invariably causes him to look good whatever he does.” – Hugh McIlvanney.



Predictions

Geniusatwork takes the prediction league with 44 points out of a possible 64 points - congratulations.

Top 20
1.    Geniusatwork                          44
2.    Liverpoolfc73                           43
3.    sheehyCFC                              42
       Alwaysinthekop                       42
5.    RVN17 9                                   41
       Natty Red                                  41
       Sounderfan                              41
8.    Redfan4ever                            40
       Ernesto M                                 40
       stoehrst                                    40
       Anti-Madridista                        40
12.  LosAngelesChelseaFan      39
13.  Gallipan                                   38
        BostonGunner                        38
        sMuAnNuUy                            38
        sleeksokerpunk                     38
17.  Mz barca fan                            37
        Spainrules                              37
19.  Cpinkhouse                            35
        Marek6404                              35

Average was 27 points which was 42% of the possible points. The lowest points total achieved was 12.

Points range
0-9           0
10-14      4
15-19    13
20-24    33
25-29    22
30-34    13
35-39    10
40-44    11

Thank you to all that participated and the cast of thousands identified by daFootbllas who were apparently responsible for tabulating the results for me.


Blog wisdom and mirror time
Pride of place goes to the following posters for their insight and willingness to critique others choices without posting their own predictions.

OCbabelovesepl – “whoever seriously picked SPAIN to win, is retarded. Spain never pulls through, with or without Fernando Torres. That’s the way it is.”

Bman87 – “How funny, in your predictions Germany always beats the Czechs (by the way Czechs beat Germans twice in last three games) or Portugal and Spain are beating everyone else. Unfortunately these two losers will choke again. The final will be Holand (sic) – Czechs, Any m@ron understand that these two teams are playing the most entertaining football.”

No doubt we can look forward to more insight from these two clowns in four years time.


Next up
Draws for the first two qualifying rounds of the 2008/09 UEFA Champions League will be held tomorrow, July 1.

131 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Russia, Arshavin, Yuri Zhirkov, Michael Ballack, Xavi Hernandez, Marcos Senna, David Silva, Cesc Fabregas, Spain, Czech Republic, Fernando Torres, Germany, Portugal, UEFA Champions League
 
Euro 2008 - Day 23 Germany vs. Spain
Jun 29, 2008 | 8:07AM | report this
Match Report
Spain 1-0 Germany

It is very rare for a country to make it through a complete tournament final (6 games in the European championships or 7 at the World Cup) playing almost flawless and entertaining football and in the end still lift the trophy.  This Spain has done just that and there can be little doubt that they were the best team at Euro 2008.

Spain may have sputtered sporadically in some of the six games but at no time did the overall quality of their play slip below the opposition’s for 90 minutes or anything close to it.

Germany settled into the final match more quickly and for the first 10 minutes looked to be the most dangerous side. An early slip from Ramos allowed Klose half a chance but his control let him down.

Germany targeted the right side of the Spanish defense trying to split right back Ramos and center back Puyol with passes played into the space between them. A similar tactic would eventually bear fruit although it would be Spain that would prosper rather than Germany.

After some early nerves Spain settled in to their familiar pattern of short quick passes and constant movement in midfield. Halfway through the first 45 minutes a Fabregas to Ramos move finished with Fernando Torres leaping high above the German defense only to see his downward header rebound off the base of the post. With no one to take advantage of the rebound the danger was cleared.

As the first half progressed it became obvious that Germany was carrying a number of players who were just not up to the occasion and could not match Spain’s play. Just after the half hour mark Spain scored what would ultimately be the only goal of the game.

A Xavi Hernandez pass split Metzelder and Lahm. Lahm was guilty of worrying too much about Fernando Torres and not making a great enough effort to get to the ball first. Torres brushed the full back aside and clipped the ball over an advancing Jens Lehmann.

The half time introduction of Marcell Jansen after half time was the catalyst for Germany’s best spell of the game. Even then there was little threat that Iker Casillas would be beaten. 

The introduction of Alonso for Fabregas swung any territorial advantage back Spain’s way and although Germany threw more players forward Spain was the team most likely to score.

With expectations raised for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa it will be very interesting to see how Spain reacts.


Ratings

Spain
Casillas 7
– Lifting the trophy caused him more problems than the German attack.

Ramos 7 – Improved as the game progressed but mental errors are never far away.

Puyol 8 – Strong in the air and along with Marchena (8) presented a formidable barrier.

Capdevilla 7 – Had little to do but what he did do was accomplished with great effectiveness and efficiency.

Senna 9 – Another outstanding display of defensive midfield play but also exhibited great mobility and could have even scored in the last few minutes as he appeared in Germany’s six yard box.

Iniesta 9 – Enjoyed his best performance of the competition. If he put a foot wrong then I missed it. He was at the centre of most of Spain’s moves constantly prompting, passing and supporting.

Xavi Hernandez 8 - Just a smidgen off a 9. Played the through ball that Torres latched onto and scored from.

Cesc Fabregas 7 - Struggled to stamp any authority on the match.

Silva 7 – One of his quietest games of the tournament and was not as influential as we’ve come to expect.

Torres 8 – His pace and power a constant threat to the German defense.  But even scoring the winning goal wasn’t enough to stop Aragones from substituting him.

Substitutes
Alonso 7 – Helped Spain through the vital last half an hour.

Cazorla 7 – Brought on to replace Silva after he went head-to-head with Podolski. Did what he was supposed without being flashy.

Guiza 7 – With 12 minutes to go he had little time to establish himself but still delivered 100% effort in that time.


Germany

Lehmann 8 – Some may criticize him for the goal that was conceded but I wouldn’t. He never looked comfortable but he still pulled off three very good saves.

Friedrich 7 – Spain rarely attacked down Germany’s right and and for large spells of the game he was hardly noticeable.

Mertesacker 8 – Battled bravely and without him the the destination of the trophy would have been decided long before 90 minutes was up.

Metzelder 5 – The doubts about Metzelder’s readiness for this tournament were widely discussed in the lead up. Any problems he had in the previous games had not proven costly. It was not the case tonight. Nervous, indecisive and off the pace of the game.

Lahm 5 – At fault for the goal he only lasted 45 minutes.

Frings 7 – He fought the good fight and perhaps if he had better support in midfield the outcome might have been different.

Hitzlsperger 5 – Out of his depth. Lucky to last as long as he did.

Schweinsteiger 6 – A big disappointment. His set pieces were very poor and his hesitation to deliver early passes when the opportunity arose stifled a number of promising opportunities.

Ballack 7 – He was too occupied trying to contain the Spanish midfield and had little time to get forward and to support Klose.

Podolski 6 - Accomplished little and was never a threat.

Klose 6 – He never look comfortable, his touch was off and he strayed into off-site positions too often and too easily.

Substitutes
Jansen 7
– He showed some of the form that was on display in the first game against Poland. A willingness to get stuck in and win some tackles provided a platform for some early German attacks in the second half.

Kuranyi 5 - He was given over 30 minutes to make an impact and he didn’t.

Gomez 5 – He spent as much time on the field has Guiza and delivered about 80% less.

93 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Germany, Spain, Sergio Ramos, Carles Puyol, Xavi Hernandez, Fernando Torres, Philipp Lahm, Marcell Jansen, Michael Ballack, Jens Lehmann, Marcos Senna, David Silva, Iniesta, Daniel Guiza, Christphe Metzelder, Xabi Alonso, Iker Casillas
 
Euro 2008 - Day 21
Jun 27, 2008 | 7:52AM | report this
I try to answer as many questions as possible but I know that I have missed a number over the last few days. As much as I would like to sit and blog most of the day, time is a problem and I am afraid that it is just not possible to answer every query that is posted.


UEFA World Cup Qualifying
Another off day at the European Championships and an opportunity to look ahead at World Cup qualifying in Europe that will get underway in less than eight weeks when Kazakhstan plays Andorra. The bulk of the game day one fixtures go on September 6.

There are eight groups of six countries and one of five. The group winners will qualify for the finals. The eight best runners-up will be qualify for a play-off round in which there will be four two-leg ties and the winners will qualify to play in South Africa in 2010.

In deciding the best runners up spots the eight groups of six will not have the results against the countries finishing bottom counted.

Group 1 Portugal, Sweden, Denmark, Hungary, Albania and Malta

Group 2 Switzerland, Greece, Israel, Moldova, Latvia and Luxembourg

Group 3 Czech Republic, Poland, Northern Ireland, Slovakia, Slovenia and San Marino

Group 4 Germany, Liechtenstein, Azerbaijan, Wales, Finland and Russia

Group 5 Turkey, Spain, Belgium, Bosnia Herzegovina, Armenia and Estonia

Group 6 Croatia, England, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Andorra

Group 7 France, Romania, Serbia, Austria, Lithuania and Faroe Islands

Group 8 Italy, Bulgaria, Republic of Ireland, Cyprus, Georgia and Montenegro

Group 9 Netherlands, Scotland, Norway, Macedonia FYR, and Iceland

Based on what you have seen over the last three weeks has your views changed on who might qualify from Europe?



Prediction Update
We are down to only two possible winners. LHJS currently has 36 points and Geniusatwork has 34 points. With ten points available to the tournament winner it comes down to Germany (LHJS) or Spain (Geniusatwork).

Whoever gets it wrong will drop down the standings as there are a significant number of people sitting with figures in the low 30s and with either Spain or Germany to win.

The unofficial prediction rabbit Carlos has fallen to the folly of allowing his heart to rule is head. He picked Portugal to beat Spain in the final and so he has stalled out at 42 points.


Comment of the Day
“WSC statisticians are also compiling a report on behalf of a secretive but influential global organisation that we are not at liberty to name. Findings include: Simone Perotta's birth in Ashton-under-Lyne has been mentioned a total of 15 times by the two TV channels and national radio; the local TV directors have missed live action while running a slow motion replay 23 times; the BBC panel have offered truisms disguised as analysis on 65 occasions; Alan Shearer has appended “for me” to his half-time comments on 19 occasions, conclusively establishing that the views expressed are his alone rather than those of the entire BBC production team in Vienna, or Geordies everywhere.” – When Saturday Comes on television coverage in the UK.


Stat Fact
The highest scoring European Championship final was in 1976 when Czechoslovakia and West Germany drew 2-2. In the penalty shoot-out Uli Hoeness’ spot kick cleared the crossbar with room to spare and then Antonin Panenka chipped the winner down the middle as Sepp Maier anticipated a shot to the corner.


True or False
Uli Hoeness was the last German player to miss a penalty in a shoot-out at a major international championship?

52 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Germany, Spain, Portugal, Uli Hoeness, Antonin Panenka, Sepp Maier, Alan Shearer, Simone Perotta, Netherlands, Scotland, Italy, France, Romania, Austria, Russia, Turkey
 
Euro 2008 - Day 3
Jun 09, 2008 | 5:00AM | report this

France 0-0 Romania

It was an ultra-cagey first half with neither team willing to commit players forward in numbers during open play. Free kicks and corners offered up the best opportunities but even then the keepers were rarely tested.

You got the feeling that if France was willing to up the pace and go after Romania that they would be rewarded. Tamas and Goian looked very comfortable when balls were played high into the Romanian area but there was a sense that the ball played quickly along the ground might have provided them with a far greater challenge.

What's more Romania's goalkeeper Bogdan Lobont seemed at times to be intent on writing his own special chapter focusing on passbacks in the David James and Fabian Barthez best seller "Adventures in Goalkeeping."

The second half pretty much replicated the opening forty-five minutes. France held an edge but Romania defended with composure and opted to play the ball through the midfield once the French had surrendered possession.

The French midfield cried out for a player to quicken the tempo of the game but Makelele’s forte is to slow the pace down not to speed it up and France rapidly ran out of attacking ideas. The French attack was not helped by a thoroughly badly balanced pairing of Nicolas Anelka and Karim Benzema.

The second half in particular was close to a mirror image of the Scotland game in Paris last fall. A well organized and motivated team comfortably holding off a French side that enjoyed a significant edge in possession but was unable to change the flow of the game as their attacking options weathered and died.

A draw means that no matter the outcome of the second round of games both countries will enter the final round with a chance of progressing.

Man-of-the-match

My pick would be left back Razvan Rat. Tidy in possession and quick in the tackle Rat not only kept Franck Ribery quiet but he also found time to move forward to support the Romanian attack.



Italy 0-3 Netherlands

Italy is well known for starting tournaments slowly but rarely has it cost them as dearly. This time it has and even though the opening goal was undoubtedly offside the Italians were badly outplayed by a Dutch side was quicker in thought and in execution.

The second Dutch goal was as beautiful as the first one was offside. The classic counter attack came after van Bronckhorst had cleared what could have been own goal of the Dutch line and fed the ball up the left touchline. A glorious 40 yard cross field pass was headed down by Dirk Kuyt and Sneijder showed great composure and skill to hook the ball passed Buffon.

A third could have come before half time as van der Vaart played the pass of the tournament to date. He slipped awonderfully weighted pass behind Materazzi who looked like he was running in sand to van Nistelrooy. This time Buffon deflected the shot over.

Italy looked to be poorly equipped to come back from a two goal deficit. A five minute spell from the 70th minute, when first Toni and then Grosso got behind the Dutch defence and then Pirlo was denied off of a free kick by van der Sar, was the best Italy could offer.

Ironically the best Italian spell of play ended with another Dutch counter attack and another key contribution from Giovanni van Bronckhorst. Gio was smart enough to know that Kuyt would not score one-on-one with Buffon and craftily positioned himself for the cross that came after Buffon’s save. When Kuyt sent in the cross van Bronckhorst had a free jump and the goal bound header was helped across the line by Zambrotta.

A nightmare for Italy; a dream for the Dutch. But remember……it is only the start.

 
Stat check – Italy’s worst defeat at major finals since losing 4-1 to Brazil in 1970?

Comment of the Day

This was a description of Croatia midfielder Luka Modric by Peter Mallett in Saturday’s Globe & Mail.


“Traditionally known for tireless running, precision through balls and brute physical strength this 22-year-old midfielder personifies all that makes the red, white and blue checkered shirts of Croatia revered.”

Hmmm - Brute strength? At a little over 5 foot 9 inches and 143 pounds soaking wet Modric might be considered a brute by an under-13 girl’s team but that is about it.

Prediction Pool

Here is a breakdown of the winners as predicted on the blog by Friday’s posters.

Germany 25.9%

Spain 19.5%

Italy 13.9%

France 13.0%

Portugal 12.0%

Netherlands 9.2%

Romania 2.8%

Russia 1.9%

Croatia 0.9%

Sweden 0.9%

Thanks to everyone who took the contribute their predictions and I will post the interim leaders at the completion of the group stage.

93 Comments | Add a comment   categories: France, Romania, Italy, Netherlands, Luka Modric, Peter Mallett, Germany, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Russsia, Croatia, Sweden, Dorain Goian, Tamas, Bogdan Lobont, Claude Makelele, Razvan Rat, Franck Ribery, Nicolas Anelka
 
Euro 2008 Day 2
Jun 08, 2008 | 8:14AM | report this
Austria 0-1 Croatia

Conventional wisdom would have had an early goal for Croatia offering up the platform for a resounding win. Conversely the Austrians would have been expected to fold given the form guide going into the tournament. As it was the early penalty kick turned into a curse for Croatia and a blessing for Austria.

The early goal (a dead-cert penalty decision) seemed to dull Croatia’s appetite for the game as they failed to string passes together in any meaningful way. Without Ivica Olic the Croatian attack would have been completely anemic with Petric utterly anonymous.

With Croatia showing little ambition to increase their early lead the Austrian’s slowly settled into the game, grew in confidence and from the 30th minute onwards they dominated large chunks of the match.

Croatia allowed Austria far too much space in midfield as time and time again the co-hosts were allowed time to look up and to pick out their targets. Modric and Srna were particularly culpable as Austria regularly found Martin Harnik on the right side with raking crossfield passes.

Substitutions by Croatia’s manager Slaven Bilic failed to turn the ever increasing tide of Austrian attacks while each change rung by opposite number Josef Hickersberger upped the pressure on the Croatian defence.

In the end Croatia played poorly but still took three points; for Austria a glorious loss.

Three games gone and no surprises - so far.


Germany 2-0 Poland

After an early goal in the first game of the day, we could have had two in the first five minutes of this one. The first chance fell to Poland after Lehmann chose to try and gather a cross under pressure rather than punching clear. The fumble dropped awkwardly to Jacek Krzynówek who shot over from just outside of the box.

Only a couple of minutes later Klose caught the Polish back four flat-footed and square and was left with a clear run on goal. Rather than shooting Klose opted to pass to Gomez who in arriving late had to stretch to make contact.  It made for a weak connection  and the ball rolled agonizingly past the post.

Both incidents were to be harbingers as the first half progressed. Krzynówek was the central focus of most of the Polish attacks, while Klose again beat a stagnant Polish defensive line to find himself one-on-one with Boruc.

Once more Klose opted to pass but this time it was Lukas Podolski who was in support and he potted the chance. By half time it could well have been 3-1 as Germans continued to press with purposeful play and although Poland continued to look shaky under pressure they still carved out a great chance for Zurawski.

Half time substitute Roger Guerreiro helped Poland to their best period of pressure in the first twenty minutes of the second half but after Podolski scored with twenty minutes left a German win was never in doubt.

Podolski produced the best individual performance of the tournament so far and it was not just down to his two goals. Starting on the left side of midfield Podolski worked hard getting up and down the park and was a constant irritant to Poland.

Germany will be happy with the result and satisfied with the performance. Poland can take something away from this game as well. The defence and midfield settled down after a wobbly start but they look to have same problem as a number of other countries at his tournament – no one to finish at the business end.




Comment of the Day

In my Spain preview I included this comment - "Spain’s soft spot might be in midfield and that in turn may put the centre of defence under stress and strain. In midfield tidy passing types pervade but they may turn out to be lightweight over potentially three weeks of competition. Ball possession may not be a problem but moving the ball quickly to the strikers could be".


Writing in The Times Gabriele Marcotti provided his thoughts on the Spanish dilemma and in the process he included some memorable alliteration.

"Cesc Fabregas may be the best foreign midfielder not named Michael in the Premier League, but it holds little stock with Luis Aragones, the Spain manager. His place with Spain is in serious jeopardy which, frankly, seems extraordinary until you look at the midfielders at Aragones' disposal. For whatever reason, Spain excels at producing pint-sized pass-happy pixies: Xavi, David Silva and Andres Iniesta are all in the same mould, creative little fellas who can pass the ball to death. The problem is, you can only fit so many of them in your team.

Already Aragones is having to deploy Iniesta and Silva wide, despite the fact that both are probably more suited to a central role. And while deploying Xavi and Cesc together in the middle is a sexy idea, Spain need at least one holding midfielder, otherwise they'll be steamrollered. And that spot goes to Marcos Senna. Which means that Aragones has two options: he can either go with a 4-5-1 formation (but that would mean leaving out the in-form David Villa) or he can make a difficult choice between Xavi and Cesc. And, in that case, Xavi would be favored by a mile. It's debatable that he's a better player, less debatable is that he's more experienced and plays his football in Spain which means that, if things go horribly wrong, Xavi's exclusion is likely to haunt Aragones for far longer."


52 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Austria, Poland, Croatia, Spain, Germany, Gabriele Marcotti, Cesc Fabregas, Luis Aragones, Xavi, David Silva, Andres Iniesta, David Villa, Marcos Senna, Ivica Olic, Mladen Petric, Luka Modric, Darijo Srna, Martin Harnik, Slaven Bilic, Josef Hickersberger
 
Euro 2008 - Part 10 of 10.
Jun 06, 2008 | 9:17AM | report this
Before we gaze into the crystal ball here are some statistics collected from UEFA.com and other sources on the players, countries and club affiliations at Euro 2008.


Players
Oldest – Ivica Vastica a midfielder for Austria will be 39 in September which makes him six weeks older than Germany’s goalkeeper Jens Lehmann.


Youngest – Swiss forward Eren Derdiyok will no longer be a teenager when he turns 20 in six days time.


Tallest – Czech Republic forward Jan Koller stands at 202 cms. which is little over 6 foot 8 inches. But beware Koller and other tall players have been known to grow during major tournaments. Commentators take it upon themselves to add half an inch here and there and so if the Czechs reach the final game don’t be surprised if Koller is over seven foot by June 29th.


Shortest – The player jumping up and down in the tall grass will be Romanian midfielder Florentin Petre who is nearly 5 foot and six and a half inches although he claims that the wall chart in kitchen shows six and five eighth inches.


Countries (average)
Oldest
Sweden 29.14

Italy 29.10

Greece 29.05


Youngest
Russia 26.13

Switzerland 26.38

Spain 26.40


Countries with players 21 or under at the start of the the tournament - 21
Switzerland, Portugal, Austria and Turkey 3 each

Croatia, France and Poland 2 each

Romania, Czech Republic and Spain 1 each


Countries with outfield players 34 or over at the start of the the tournament - 16
Austria, Sweden, France, Croatia, Italy and Czech Republic 2 each

Poland, Italy, Germany and Turkey 1 each


Countries with the fewest domestic based players in their squad
Croatia 2

Czech Republic 3


Countries with the most domestic based players in their squad
Russia 22

Germany and Italy 19


Tallest (average)
Croatia 184.91 (a smidgen under 6 foot 2 inches)

Germany 184.87

Switzerland 184.61


Shortest (average)
Spain 179.61 (180 is 6 foot)

Turkey 180.35

Portugal 180.57


Players contributed by clubs
Panathinaikos (Greece) and Lyon (France) 10 each

Galatasaray (Turkey) and Bayern Munich 9 each


Premiership clubs represented – 17 of 20.

Arsenal and Chelsea 7

Liverpool 5

Manchester United 4


Highest representation of players by league
Germany 56

England 43

Spain 41

Italy 36

Russia 30



For those making predictions don’t be to despondent should your “dead-cert can’t lose winner” get off to a slow start. There is ample evidence to show that countries can recover from a set-back or two at the group stage and still go on to the final or even win the Championship.


1980Belgium won only once in the group stage but went on to finish as runners-up to Germany.

1984Spain recorded just one win in three group games but qualified for the knock out stage all the same and finished as runners-up to France.


1988The Netherlands lost their opening game of the tournament to the Soviet Union but gained revenge when the counties met again in the final when the Dutch won 2-0.


1992 – Danish players were recalled from the beaches and golf courses of Europe to take the place of Yugoslavia. Denmark had a draw and a loss in their first two group games before beating France and moving into the last eight. From there the Netherlands were beaten in a penalty kick shoot-out and the Danes took the title beating Germany 2-0 in the final.


1996 – The Czech Republic lost their opening group game 2-0 to Germany but rebounded to make the final against the same opponent. However, Germany doubled the Czechs with a golden goal from Oliver Bierhoff.


2004 – Few would have predicted that the two countries that opened the tournament would also make it all the way to the final match. But that was exactly what happened. Greece beat Portugal 2-1 in the opener and then again 1-0 in the final.

However, few seem to remember that the opening game win was Greece’s only victory in group play. The second match was a 1-1 draw with Spain and Russia then beat the eventual winners 2-1. Portugal actually won group A while Greece only moved on based on scoring more goals than Spain having finished tied on both points and goal differential.


Predictions
Before anyone jumps all over anyone's predictions there is one rule. No criticism allowed unless you also post your own predictions under the comments section. A scoring system can be found at the end of my predictions.


Group A
1. Portugal
2. Czech Republic
3. Switzerland
4. Turkey


Group B
1. Germany
2. Croatia
3. Poland
4. Austria


Group C
1. France
2. Romania
3. Italy
4. Netherlands

There has to be at least one surprise and for me this is it. I flipped between France and Italy not to qualify and the decision eventually swung on Cannavaro’s injury and the potential France have available from the bench. We will see.


Group D
1. Spain
2. Greece
3. Sweden
4. Russia


Quarter Finals
Portugal to beat Croatia

Germany to beat Czech Republic

France to beat Greece

Spain to beat Romania


Semi Finals
Germany to beat Portugal

France to beat Spain


Final
Germany to beat France


Prediction scoring system
1 point for every group position picked correctly.

2 bonus points for getting 1st or 2nd position in the group correct

3 points for correctly predicting the winners of each of the quarter final matches

5 points for correctly predicting the winners of the semi finals

10 points for correctly predicting the winners of the competition.

By my calculation sixty-four points (64) constitutes the maximum score.

Good luck.


Part One - History and Background


Part Two – Portugal and the Czech Republic.


Part Three - Switzerland and Turkey.


Part Four - Austria and Croatia.


Part Five - Germany and Poland.


Part Six - France and Italy


Part Seven - Netherlands and Romania.


Part 8 - Greece and Russia



Part 9 - Spain and Sweden.




168 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Ivica Vastica, Jens Lehmann, Eren Derdiyok, Jan Koller, Florentin Petre, Czech Republic, Portugal, Switzerland, Turkey, Germany, Croatia, Poland, Austria, France, Romania, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Greece, Russia
 
European Championships 2008 Draw
Dec 02, 2007 | 10:36AM | report this

Another Sunday, another draw. This time it is for the European Championship Finals. Here are some initial thoughts on the draw and what might be in store.

 

Group A
Switzerland, Turkey, Portugal, Czech Republic


June 7 – Switzerland vs. Czech Republic, Portugal vs. Turkey
June 11 – Switzerland vs. Turkey, Czech Republic vs. Portugal
June 15 – Switzerland vs. Portugal, Turkey vs. Czech Republic

 

Summary
The Czech Republic and Portugal will start as the favourites to move on but as one of the co-hosts Switzerland should not be easily discounted. The Czechs have a fine history in this tournament and made it to the final game in 1996, the semi finals in 2004 and were unlucky to be drawn together in a group with co-hosts the Netherlands and eventual winners France in 2000. However, the Czechs would have preferred not to have drawn the co-hosts in the opening game of the tournament.

 

Portugal is another country that has performed well at the last few European Championships. After going unbeaten at the group stage in 96 the Portuguese went out to the Czechs in the last eight when Karel Poborsky scored the only goal of the game. In 2000 they took winners France to extra time and it needed a golden goal from a Zidane penalty to decide the game. As hosts in 2004 their tournament got off to a poor start when they lost to Greece. Although they bounced back and made it to the final they again faced Greece and lost once more.

 

Turkey missed out on the 2004 finals although they qualified in 1996 and 2000. There appearance in 1996 was a first at the European Finals and they went winless in three games. Lessons were learned and four years later they made it to the quarter finals where they lost 2-0 to Portugal. Qualification for 2008 consisted of a series of highs and lows. A great start was highlighted by a 4-1 away win against European champions Greece. A series of poor performances and dropped points meant hopes of qualification were rapidly receding before two wins (including a come-from-behind win away against Norway) saved the day.

 

As co-hosts Switzerland will enter the tournament without the advantage of any competitive matches since the 2006 World Cup. However, Coach Kubi Kuhn will be hoping that his young side can build on a solid performance in Germany last summer. Switzerland made it to last summer’s World Cup after beating Turkey is an ill-tempered play-off game and memories of this are unlikely to have receded by next summer.

 

Keys
Under manager Karel Bruckner the Czechs are the consummate team. Any side that knocks off the Czechs can look forward to going deep into the tournament. 


Portugal will be difficult to break down but their progress might be largely dictated by whether or not they can find a reliable international goal scorer.


Which Turkish side will turn up at the tournament?


Switzerland went to the last sixteen in Germany last summer and was knocked-out without conceding a goal. Another strong defence showing – although in 2006 goalkeeper Pascal Zuberbueler seemed to more lucky than good! – and some opportunism in front of goal might generate the kind of momentum that leads to a shock or two.

 

Group B
Austria, Poland, Germany, Croatia


June 8 – Austria vs. Croatia, Germany vs. Poland
June 12 – Austria vs. Poland, Croatia vs. Germany
June 16 – Austria vs. Germany, Poland vs. Croatia.

 

Summary
Based on performances Germany will not be particularly concerned with their draw. However, with two traditional rivals in Austria and Poland this group will have a derby game flavour and that should be a cause for concern.  A re-emerging Croatia side will also be looking to repeat their countries famous win over Germany at the 1998 World Cup in the knock-out stages.

 

Poland bounced back from a poor start in qualification to move on with room to spare. Surprisingly this will be Poland’s first appearance at the Euro Finals and they will be looking to make it to through the group stage of a major tournament for the first time since 1986. Poland pushed Germany all the way last summer before losing to a late goal. However, it was a poor display and a first game loss to Ecuador that was critical. A win over Austria is mandatory if they are to have a realistic chance to progress.

 

By knocking out England in group qualifying Croatia lost any chance of sneaking under the radar. Slaven Bilic has created a confident and competent side that should make it to at least the last eight.

 

Austria have already been labeled as the worst country (performance-wise that is) ever to host a major tournament. They are so bad that a group of Austrian fans started a petition that asked the team to withdraw in order to save face.

 

Keys
Germany has a huge target on their backs and needs to meet their historical rivals Austria and Poland head-on. A slow start might be costly.


Poor starts have cost Poland dearly at the last two World Cups and they can ill-afford a repeat.


Expectations are so low that even one win in the group stage might be considered a success for Austria.


The schedule has been kind to Croatia with an over-matched Austria first. Next up is Germany before what might be a decider against Poland in the last group game. 


Group C
Netherlands, France, Romania, Italy


June 9 – Romania vs. France, Netherlands vs. Italy.
June 13 – Italy vs. Romania, Netherlands vs. France
June 17 – France vs. Italy, Netherlands vs. Romania.

 

Summary
As soon as this draw was made the Group of D***h label was applied. No team can be overlooked here.


Romania only lost one game in qualifying and that was once they had guaranteed their spot in the finals. Along the way they beat Netherlands for the first time ever and now look to be fulfilling their potential of a few years ago.

 

France , insults, Italy, Materazzi, video replay, Zidane, revenge, head-butt, World Cup Final, sisters, Domenech saying something stupid – that is what we have to look forward to for the next six months. At least it won’t be go to penalty kicks – unless they hook up again in the semi final game!

 

The draw was not kind to the Dutch and then the schedule really put the boot in. Italy followed by France is not what the Dutch would have wanted. The 1988 European Championship remains the only major trophy won by the Netherlands. After this tournament it is unlikely that this will have changed.


Keys
As the best-known Romanian players Adrian Mutu and Christian Chivu are going to garner most of the headlines but this squad has a lot more depth than just these two. In any other group Romania would have an excellent chance to move-on but ….

 

France made it the World Cup Final last summer with one of the oldest squads ever seen at the Finals. It is almost inconceivable that they can repeat while looking to the same core of veterans …or is it?


Italy won the World Cup with a squad of players that were almost all in the prime years of their footballing lives. Donadoni needs to squeeze out another round of great performances before moving on. If he can, then a World and European double is not out of the question.

 

Goal scoring was a problem during group qualifying and in a number of games the Dutch were only a goal way from embarrassment. Chances have to be converted on a more regular basis or the Dutch may be out of contention before game three.

 

Group D
Greece, Russia, Spain, Sweden


June 10 – Greece vs. Sweden, Spain vs. Russia
June 14 – Greece vs. Russia, Sweden vs. Spain
June 18 – Greece vs. Spain, Russia vs. Sweden.

 

Summary
This is probably the most open group and a lot of attention will be paid to the amount of grey hair in charge pulling the coaching strings. 

 

The reigning European Champions Greece has bounced back after failing to make the 2006 World Cup Finals. A humiliating home loss to Turkey (4-1) was the only bump on the 2008 road which was then negotiated without too much difficulty.

 

Spain has now made it to the last fifteen of sixteen major finals and has generated a lot of momentum since starting poorly in group qualifying for 2008. But as we all know Spain’s problems normally start when they reach the finals of a major tournament. The squad is more than solid containing a number of players that could find a place in any team in the world. However, until they win a major final (1964 is so long ago and pretty much discounted) the doubts will remain.

 

There were a few hiccups along the way for Russia but major tournaments and Guus Hiddink seem to mix very well. Like Spain, Russia has (the Soviet Union did win the first European championship in 1960) rarely delivered on the world stage and one of Hiddink’s challenges is to instill a sense of believe in a squad that has considerable talent.

 

Sweden has a great record of qualification for major tournaments and is always a difficult opponent.

 

Keys
There will be no element of surprise for Greece this time. The other fifteen countries will be well prepared should Otto Rehhagel opt for a repeat performance of stifling defence and opportunism in front of goal. What can the coach come up with this time?


Hiddink’s ability to chop and change on the fly as needs arise is almost without parallel.
Spain needs to finally win a must win game. If they can do that then maybe years of disappointment will melt away.


If Sweden is to drive deep into the tournament then it is probably going to be on the back of Zlatan Ibrahimovic. The talent has never been in doubt and from his early season performances for Inter he seems to have now achieved a level of consistency that has previously been missing.

 

Quarter Finals
June 19 – Winner Group A vs. Runner Up Group B, (Game 25)
June 20 – Winner Group B vs. Runner Up Group A, (Game 26)
June 21 – Winner Group C vs. Runner Up Group D, (Game 27)
June 22 – Winner Group D vs. Runner Up Group C, (Game 28)

 

Semi Finals
June 25 – Winner Game 25 vs. Winner Game 26, (Game 29)
June 26 – Winner Game 27 vs. Winner Game 28, (Game 30)

 

Final
June 29 - Winner Game 29 vs. Winner Group 30.

 

39 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Switzerland, European Championships 2008, Czech Republic, Portugal, Turkey, Austria, Croatia, Germany, Poland, Netherlands, France, Italy, Romania, Greece, Sweden, Spain, Russia, Otto Rehhagel, Guus Hiddink, Karl Bruckner
 
Weekend preview
Mar 22, 2007 | 7:53PM | report this

Euro 2008 qualifying is centre stage this weekend. The biggest game would appear to be in Prague with Germany - top of group D on goal difference - facing the Czech Republic. Slovakia, Cyprus, the Republic of Ireland and Wales will all be hoping to make up ground but I see this group as a two-horse race.

Greece and Turkey go head-to-head in another titanic Mediterranean struggle. Both countries have 100% records after three games and neither have conceded a goal so far. They also faced each other in 2006 World Cup qualifying and both games finished scoreless. Norway and Bosnia-Herzegovina sit third and fourth (Norway are three points behind the leaders and two ahead of Bosnia-Herzegovina and the Bosnians have played a game more) and play each other in Oslo. Norway then plays Turkey in Istanbul on Wednesday so this group could be turned on its head by this time next week.

Group A may turn out to be the most competitive of the seven groups. Two of the 2006 World Cup finalists currently sit third and fourth – Poland and Portugal – behind group leaders Finland and second place Serbia. Portugal versus Belgium (5th place) looks to be a vital one for both sides. A win for the Portuguese would make sure that they remain in a strong position while a loss for Belgium would mean that they would have already dropped 11 points and that would leave them in an impossible position.

Italy has to wait until Wednesday when Scotland will travel to Bari. Group B leaders Scotland – how strange does that sound ? – will have new manager Alex McLeish in charge for the first time against Georgia. Although the game against Italy is the glamour tie, a win over Georgia at Hampden Park is much more important. France currently trail Scotland on goal difference and have to play away to Lithuania – a tricky task I would suggest.

In Group E all eyes are on Israel against England. Much as been made of the fact that Israel have lost only one of their last 14 competitive fixtures while also drawing with the likes of France, Switzerland, Russia, and the Republic of Ireland. The never-say-die spirit of the Israeli squad has seen them fight back a number of times over the last two seasons to #### draws as the seconds tick down. A draw may again be the outcome. The Israeli loss came at home in November when group leaders Croatia beat them 4-3 in Tel Aviv. Croatia are at home to Macedonia on Saturday.

Spain are currently sitting in fifth place in Group F and they have no margin for error when they face Denmark. The Danes are four points ahead of Spain and have yet to concede a goal in their first three games. The good news is that the Spanish have an outstanding record against the Danes.  Since 1985, Spain have beaten Denmark five times, drawn once and lost only once. Sweden leads the group with a 100% record after four games and have a rest day this weekend. On Wednesday Sweden faces third Northern Ireland in Belfast. Norhern Ireland plays group whipping-boys Liechtenstein on Saturday.

In Group G the Netherlands and Romania is a battle of first versus third with both countries unbeaten. Second place Bulgaria are also unbeaten but don’t play until Wednesday when Albania are the opposition.

Romania have yet to win in eight friendly and competitive games against Holland, drawing two and losing six, while scoring just only once.

Any thjoughts and/or predictions?
 

 

23 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Germany, Czech Republic, Greece, Turkey, Portugal, Belgium, Scotland, Georgia, Israel, England, Croatia, Macedonia, Spain, Denmark, Netherlands, Romania
 
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ABOUT ME


BobbyMcMahon
I am the soccer analyst for the Fox Soccer Report and appear twice a week - every Monday and Friday at 10:00 EST. I have also been a regular contributor to the Fox Soccer Channel website since the summer of 2004. Over the last twenty years I have contributed to various radio and television programs throughout North America as well writing about the game for newspapers, magazines and websites. Thank you to all who take time to visit this blog and especially to those of you who post your comments and thoughts. PS - If you have questions please post them on the regular Monday blog. I am unable to answer e mails posted to the inbox on this site. And one more thing. If you have questions or complaints or compliments about programming please contact Fox Soccer Channel or Fox Sports World Canada directly. I have no control over what the stations televise.
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