Thursday, June 12, 2008

Euro 2008 standings

Group A

TeamsPld+/-Pts
PortugalPortugal 246
Czech RepublicCzech Republic 2-13
TurkeyTurkey 2-13
SwitzerlandSwitzerland 2-20

Group B

TeamsPld+/-Pts
GermanyGermany 123
CroatiaCroatia 113
AustriaAustria 1-10
PolandPoland 1-20

Group C

TeamsPld+/-Pts
NetherlandsNetherlands 133
FranceFrance 101
RomaniaRomania 101
ItalyItaly 1-30

Group D

TeamsPld+/-Pts
SpainSpain 133
SwedenSweden 123
GreeceGreece 1-20
RussiaRussia 1-30

Kuhn: The party will go on



Switzerland coach Köbi Kuhn has vowed "the party will go on" despite the co-hosts' early exit from UEFA EURO 2008™.

Early exit
An injury-time goal in Basel last night gave Turkey a 2-1 win against Switzerland that means Kuhn's side will definitely finish bottom of Group A regardless of Sunday's result against Portugal at St. Jakob-Park. But the coach, who will step down to be replaced by Ottmar Hitzfeld after the tournament, has said the different nationalities represented in Switzerland will ensure that the atmosphere will not deflate and the home fans will overcome their disappointment.

'Life goes on'
"The party will go on, no doubt about it," Kuhn said. "Switzerland is a multicultural country, there are enough Germans, Portuguese, French, Italians living here. It will remain a wonderful party and I'm sure the Swiss will not hold back and celebrate as best they can. And they deserve to celebrate. I am very disappointed but life goes on."

Group A decider could go to penalties



If Turkey and the Czech Republic draw their final Group A match in Geneva on Sunday, second place and a quarter-final berth will be decided on penalties.

Shoot-out chance
The Czech Republic lost 3-1 to Portugal on Wednesday evening and then Turkey beat Switzerland 2-1 – both after added-time goals. That leaves the Czech Republic and Turkey level on points, goal difference and goals scored, and according to Article 7.08 in the official 2008 UEFA European Championship regulations, in that instance, if the two equal teams are playing in the last game, their match is decided by spot-kicks after 90 minutes should it finish level.

Regulations
Article 7.08 reads: "If two teams which have the same number of points, the same number of goals scored and conceded play their last group match against each other and are still equal at the end of that match, the ranking of the two teams in question will be determined by kicks from the penalty mark, provided no other teams within the group have the same number of points on completion of all group matches." The full regulations can be read by clicking here. Whoever finishes second in Group A will play the winners of Group B in Vienna on 20 June. Portugal, as Group A winners, face the Group B runners-up in Basel the night before.

Precedent
The situation has arisen before in a UEFA final tournament. In the 2002/03 UEFA European Women's Under-19 Championship in Germany, Italy and Sweden went into their last group game exactly level. A last-gasp Italy goal made the score 3-3, and Sweden won the shoot-out 4-1, though they were to lose to Norway on penalties in the semi-finals. Meanwhile, while Turkey have never been in a major penalty shoot-out, the Czech Republic beat France 6-5 to reach the 1996 UEFA European Championship semi-finals and Czechoslovakia defeated West Germany 5-3 in the 1976 final and France 9-8 in the 1980 third-place match, giving the nation a major tourmament record of three wins out of three with all 20 attempts converted.

Experience
Meanwhile, both likely goalkeepers on Sunday have recent experience of major penalty shoot-outs. Turkey's Volkan Demirel saved three spot-kicks as Fenerbahçe SK defeated Sevilla FC 3-2 on penalties in the UEFA Champions League first knockout round in February. Fenerbahçe then lost to Chelsea FC, who reached the final only to be beaten 6-5 in a penalty competition by Manchester United FC in Moscow, Petr Čech saving from Cristiano Ronaldo.