by Silver Fox » 16 Nov 2023 11:14
by LUX » 16 Nov 2023 21:54
by Clyde1998 » 16 Nov 2023 22:52
LUX Luxembourg just beat Bosnia 4-1, pretty happy and impressed.with that. I did not go, too much rain
OTOH the qualification dream is over, Slovakia also won and that’s it
by LUX » 19 Nov 2023 22:07
by Stranded » 20 Nov 2023 16:38
by WestYorksRoyal » 20 Nov 2023 21:45
by Hendo » 21 Nov 2023 08:58
by Sanguine » 21 Nov 2023 11:15
Hendo Yeah, that was an absolute shocker.
by Sanguine » 21 Nov 2023 11:33
by Stranded » 21 Nov 2023 22:17
by Sutekh » 22 Nov 2023 07:53
Sanguine Scenes in San Marino last night. Having scored their first goal in two years against Denmark last month, they also got one in Kazakhstan on Saturday night. That was the first time they had scored in consecutive games for 18 years.
Pandemonium last night after the hosts converted a 97th minute penalty against Finland to score for a third consecutive game for the first time in their history.
by RG30 » 22 Nov 2023 08:04
Stranded Wales will play one of Finland, Ukraine or Iceland in the play off semi. Winner will likely face Poland unless Estonia pull off a mighty shock.
by Stranded » 22 Nov 2023 08:11
by Stranded » 22 Nov 2023 08:15
RG30Stranded Wales will play one of Finland, Ukraine or Iceland in the play off semi. Winner will likely face Poland unless Estonia pull off a mighty shock.
Poland have been truly awful this qualifying campaign and are very fortunate they still have a chance to qualify. Sousa was a disaster and Michał Probierz hasn't fared much better, although granted it is still very early days.
by Sutekh » 22 Nov 2023 08:28
Stranded Naturally opens up the pre-qualifying argument again.
Was reading an article earlier this week, I think on The Athletic, about countries in Asia who are already out of the World Cup after 2 games due to a pre-qualifying round. It was interesting* to read. Essentially, for countries like Sri Lanka where football isn't #1, they look forward to these games as they are often the only competitive games they get to play, even friendlies are hard to come by.
As a result, they struggle to build an infrastructure around the game to help it grow. A couple of the interviewees were asked if they would benefit from playing in a group stage straight off but the answer was no, the costs would be too high due to the travel even if it was just a pre-quali group - for example, if 5 groups of 4 happened - Sri Lanka could be drawn against Maldives, Timor Leste & Mongolia.
So yes in Europe it may seem lopsided if the most certain teams can hope for is just a goal but the fact San Marino have now scored in 3 games in a row, equalising against Denmark, shows improvement that playing these games bring. The Faroe Islands now regularly win games, Luxembourg could make the Euros still, going back further, the likes of Turkey would often get stuffed.
It goes the other way too, 30 years ago Bulgaria made the WC semis, in this set of Euro qualifiers, they only managed 4 points.
So as costs/travel is not prohibitive and these games do help the smaller nations to develop (and also financially) then the format should continue, after all it is only 2 games for the bigger nations and, if they choose, a great opportunity to try out fringe players in a competitive setting.
by Silver Fox » 22 Nov 2023 08:44
Stranded the likes of Turkey would often get stuffed.
by Clyde1998 » 22 Nov 2023 08:59
That's where the Nations League comes in for these nations. If you look at San Marino's results against the traditional smaller nations they're not too bad. San Marino have not lost nine matches; four are since the Nations League came into existence and were regularly playing weaker nations.Sutekh Can't help but feel there's something wrong with qualifying if the most some "countries" can hope for is scoring a goal.
As I understand it, the reason UEFA doesn't have pre-qualifying is due to the financial benefit the smaller countries get from the broadcasting deal. Having pre-qualifying would mean countries like San Marino wouldn't get any meaningful broadcasting revenue and would be even weaker as a result; they wouldn't be able to fund leagues, youth coaching, etc. to the same level.Stranded Naturally opens up the pre-qualifying argument again.
Was reading an article earlier this week, I think on The Athletic, about countries in Asia who are already out of the World Cup after 2 games due to a pre-qualifying round. It was interesting* to read. Essentially, for countries like Sri Lanka where football isn't #1, they look forward to these games as they are often the only competitive games they get to play, even friendlies are hard to come by.
As a result, they struggle to build an infrastructure around the game to help it grow. A couple of the interviewees were asked if they would benefit from playing in a group stage straight off but the answer was no, the costs would be too high due to the travel even if it was just a pre-quali group - for example, if 5 groups of 4 happened - Sri Lanka could be drawn against Maldives, Timor Leste & Mongolia.
So yes in Europe it may seem lopsided if the most certain teams can hope for is just a goal but the fact San Marino have now scored in 3 games in a row, equalising against Denmark, shows improvement that playing these games bring. The Faroe Islands now regularly win games, Luxembourg could make the Euros still, going back further, the likes of Turkey would often get stuffed.
It goes the other way too, 30 years ago Bulgaria made the WC semis, in this set of Euro qualifiers, they only managed 4 points.
So as costs/travel is not prohibitive and these games do help the smaller nations to develop (and also financially) then the format should continue, after all it is only 2 games for the bigger nations and, if they choose, a great opportunity to try out fringe players in a competitive setting.
by Clyde1998 » 22 Nov 2023 09:08
by Hendo » 22 Nov 2023 09:12
Stranded Wales will play one of Finland, Ukraine or Iceland in the play off semi. Winner will likely face Poland unless Estonia pull off a mighty shock.
by WestYorksRoyal » 22 Nov 2023 09:34
Clyde1998 In other news, the seeding for the Euro 2024 finals have been confirmed:
Pot 1: Germany; Portugal; France; Spain; Belgium; England
Pot 2: Hungary; Turkey; Romania; Denmark; Albania; Austria
Pot 3: Netherlands; Scotland; Croatia; Slovenia; Slovakia; Czech Republic
Pot 4: Italy; Serbia; Switzerland; Play-Off Winner A (Poland; Wales; Estonia; TBD); Play-Off Winner B (Israel; Bosnia; TBD; TBD); Play-Off Winner C (Georgia; Greece; Kazakhstan; Luxembourg)
The teams to be allocated to a play-off path are Finland, Ukraine and Iceland.
Some pretty brutal groups could be formed: any Pot 1 side; Austria/Hungary/Denmark; Netherlands/Croatia; Italy would be insane.
On the flip side: any Pot 1 side; Romania/Albania; Slovenia/Slovakia; Play-Off Winner A/C would be almost as straight forward as you could get in the group stage.
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