Euro 2020

England wary of Ukraine as surging Denmark face Czechs

The Euro quarter-final match Ukraine v England on 3 July
AFP

England will be on their guard against surprise Euro 2020 quarter-finalists Ukraine in Rome on Saturday, while an increasingly confident Denmark hope to keep their inspiring run going against the Czech Republic.

After beating old rivals Germany in a knockout match for the first time since the 1966 World Cup final, England coach Gareth Southgate said that win will count for little if they lose to Ukraine.

The draw has opened up nicely for England, who will be favoured to beat a side coached by former Ballon d’Or winner Andriy Shevchenko, and Southgate urged his team to seize their chance.

“Right from the final whistle the other day, the players were already talking about the next game and preparing for it,” said Southgate, with England set to play their first match of the competition away from Wembley.

We will play with the heart of Christian Eriksen. He is the heart of the team still and with that heart and without fear, we will try
Kasper Hjulmand, Denmark coach

“They recognised that although they loved the experience of the last game, you move on quickly in tournaments and we have not got to the point we want to be at yet.

“It’s not been too difficult to refocus people. The opportunity is there, the confidence is there. They are looking forward to the challenge.”

A more subdued atmosphere awaits at the Stadio Olimpico, where the number of England fans among the permitted capacity of 16,000 is expected to be limited.

England supporters have been warned not to travel to the Italian capital for the game as Covid-19 restrictions mean even those with tickets cannot use them.

That’s an immense power. The Danes don’t have superstars, but they form a great team together and their style is similar to ours
Jaroslav Silhavy, Czech coach

Italian health regulations require fans travelling from Britain to observe five days of quarantine and therefore they would miss the match.

Ukraine are attempting to make the last four of a major tournament for the first time since the break-up of the Soviet Union, having matched their run to the quarter-finals of the 2006 World Cup.

“We will do our best, try to surprise them. But we know that to get past them we will have to play the best game of our lives,” said Ukraine midfielder Oleksandr Zinchenko, who will come up against several of his Manchester City team-mates.

Denmark doing it for Eriksen

The winners go on to a Wembley semi-final against Denmark or the Czech Republic, who meet in Baku exactly three weeks on from Christian Eriksen’s cardiac arrest in the Danes’ first match at the finals.

The Euro 2020 quarter-final match Czech Republic - Denmark on 3 July

Eriksen was discharged from hospital less than a week after his collapse after having a defibrillator implanted to regulate his heart rate, and without him Kasper Hjulmand’s team have rallied to reach the last eight.

“We will play with the heart of Christian Eriksen. He is the heart of the team still and with that heart and without fear, we will try,” said Hjulmand.

Denmark have scored four goals in successive matches against Russia and Wales, and will be dreaming of following in the footsteps of the side who claimed a shock European title in 1992.

Czech coach Jaroslav Silhavy pointed to Denmark’s team spirit as the main weapon to fear.

“That’s an immense power. The Danes don’t have superstars, but they form a great team together and their style is similar to ours,” said Silhavy.

Czech captain Vladimir Darida is set to return from injury after he missed the 2-0 win over the Netherlands in the last 16.

Italy and Spain will face off in Tuesday’s first semi-final at Wembley.

Lorenzo Insigne’s brilliant curling strike secured a 2-1 win over Belgium in Munich as Italy extended their national record unbeaten run to 32 matches.

Nicolo Barella gave Italy the lead before Insigne doubled it, and the Azzurri held on despite a penalty from Romelu Lukaku just before half-time.

“We deserved to win. The players were extraordinary,” Italy coach Roberto Mancini told Rai.

Spain goalkeeper Unai Simon saved two spot-kicks in a 3-1 penalty shootout win over 10-man Switzerland following a 1-1 draw in Saint Petersburg.

Denis Zakaria’s own goal put Spain ahead early on but Xherdan Shaqiri equalised for Switzerland on 68 minutes, before Remo Freuler was sent off.

Spain goalkeeper Unai Simon saved from Fabian Schaer and Manuel Akanji in the shootout before Mikel Oyarzabal converted the winning kick after Ruben Vargas blazed over.