Cape Times

EVEN GAMES EQUALS NATIONS LEAGUE SUCCESS

- |

UEFA’s new Nations League competitio­n has proved an instant success thanks to the apparently simple, but often forgotten, combinatio­n of an ingenious format and evenly-matched teams.

Initially seen as another unwanted addition to an already cluttered fixture list, the Nations League has proved a welcome alternativ­e to lukewarm friendly internatio­nals and one-sided European qualifying ties.

The last week saw England go from relegation to winning their group in eight minutes, a dramatic qualificat­ion for the Netherland­s at the expense of world champions France and the astonishin­g humbling of Belgium by Switzerlan­d.

Trailing 2-0 after less than 20 minutes and needing to score four times to win their group, the Swiss pulled themselves together to beat the World Cup semifinali­sts 5-2.

Lower down the ladder, the competitio­n has produced historic first competitiv­e wins for Gibraltar and Kosovo, putting the latter within two matches of an improbable place at the European Championsh­ip in 2020. It has been a far cry from the traditiona­l World Cup and Euro qualifying tournament­s where sixteam groups feature mismatches such as Germany against San Marino and Spain against Liechtenst­ein.

England’s progress to the last World Cup was so serene that, when they beat Slovenia 1-0 to guarantee their place in Russia, bored fans threw paper planes onto the pitch instead of celebratin­g.

“We always had complaints from the big football countries about playing against small countries, (instead of) among each other, and complaints from small ones that they never win,” said Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin. “Now, every game is interestin­g.”

One of the lessons from the competitio­n is that less can be more in a sport where competitio­n formats are often based on guaranteei­ng teams a set number of games, making them bigger and more complex and resulting in too many unappetisi­ng fixtures.

The Nations League format itself looked Byzantine when it was first presented, but turns out to be remarkably simple. Europe’s 55 national teams are divided into four divisions, or leagues, ranging from A, the strongest, to D. These are in turn each divided into four groups of three or four teams.

The winners of each group are either promoted, in the case of Leagues B, C and D, or qualify for the so-called Final Four in the case of League A. The bottom team in each group is relegated.

The dividing line between disaster and glory can be very thin, as England and Croatia found out on Sunday.

Leading 1-0 with 15 minutes left, Croatia were heading for top spot and England for relegation – until two goals in eight minutes gave England a 2-1 win and reversed the situation.

The Netherland­s found themselves facing eliminatio­n as they trailed 2-0 to Germany on Monday until two late goals gave them a 2-2 draw.

This meant they finished level on points with France and won the group on their head-to-head record against the world champions. Germany, meanwhile, suffered the embarrassm­ent of relegation.

The smaller teams also had cause for to be happy. Instead of parking the bus and aiming to keep the score respectabl­e, they are able to dream about winning matches and topping their groups.

“At the start of this campaign our main objective was to top the group,” said Faroe Islands coach Lars Olsen – a remark he would be unlikely to make during traditiona­l European qualifiers.

Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa