As if the scenario needed
any other parallels with last week's vote in which Britain chose to leave the
European Union, England's coach, Roy Hodgson, announced his resignation after
the upset loss, similar to David Cameron announcing he would abandon the prime
minister's office. Football is the most
popular sport in Iceland, and viewing figures for the national team's EURO
matches have been phenomenal. While around 9.3 million British viewers tuned in
for England's game against Wales – some 14% or so of the population of Great
Britain – over half of all Icelanders are estimated to have watched Iceland v
Austria, representing 99.8% of the nation's television audience.
Trailing to Wayne Rooney's
early penalty, Iceland tipped this round of 16 tie on its head with goals from
centre-back Ragnar Sigurdsson – only his second in 60 internationals – and
Kolbeinn Sigthórsson. The next chapter in the debutants' fairy-tale run is a
date with the hosts. Ragnar Sigurdsson said Iceland didn't feel under any
pressure against England in their 2-1 Euro 2016 round of 16 victory in Nice. The
spot kick, awarded for keeper Hannes Halldórsson's foul on the recalled Raheem
Sterling, was exactly the start Roy Hodgson's men craved. It was a
fourth-minute goal to coax Iceland out of their shell. What followed next,
though, was as remarkable as it was unexpected from Lars Lagerbäck and Heimir
Hallgrímsson's team. First, Aron Gunnarsson hurled the ball in, Kári Árnason
outjumped Rooney and the unmarked Ragnar Sigurdsson planted the ball past Joe
Hart. What must have been relief for Iceland soon turned to ecstasy.
Another day, another surprising
result for the English to digest: Iceland pulled off a historic upset in the
Euro 2016 tournament Monday, sending England home with a 2-1 shocker. Iceland
now becomes the smallest nation to reach the quarterfinals of the UEFA European
Championship; next, it will face the host France in Paris. As the clock expired
in regular time, Iceland's blue-clad players streaked across the turf to stand
before their ecstatic fans. The newspapers write about the elimination.. For the second time in a week, England suffer
an ignominious exit from Europe. They’ve been awful tonight and thoroughly
deserved to lose. They look dazed, embarrassed, ashamed, angry and full of
disbelief and self-loathing as they wander the field, not quite knowing what to
do or where to go. This is a total humiliation and their fans are letting them
know in no uncertain terms that they’re not best pleased with this result. Not
since a distant World Cup, 66 years ago, have England suffered a humiliation as
great as this. Beaten by Iceland – a nation with a population the size of
Leicester, playing in their first international tournament. For Hodgson, this
was the bitter end. His players were booed, individually and collectively, and
there was none of the residue of goodwill felt at the end of the 2014 World
Cup.
Still the
tournament goes on and this is how the quarter-finals will line up:Poland v
Portugal; Wales v Belgium; Germany v Italy; France v Iceland.
There have been around
10,000 Icelanders at each of the team's last two UEFA EURO 2016 games – not a
huge number but massive for a nation of just 330,000. Those 10,000 fans
represent around 3% of the population; if a similar proportion of the
population of round of 16 opponents England came to France, there would be 1.59
million people backing Roy Hodgson's side, who resigned immediately after the
loss !
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
28th June 2016.
@7.15 am – I could not watch the match, only got up to read about the match from various websites including UEFA official site.
