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EURO 2012 CHAMPIONSHIPS

EURO 2012

Match preview: Sweden’s crucial England clash

Sweden face England on Friday night in their vital second Group D encounter in Kiev. The Local's Joe Lynskey looks at what Erik Hamrén's squad can expect from Roy Hodgson and his side.

Match preview: Sweden's crucial England clash

After a nightmare loss to Ukraine to kick-off their Euro 2012 tournament hopes, Sweden must dust themselves down to face England on Friday night in Kiev.

A resolute display in Donetsk earned them a 1-1 draw against France, now England will be looking to build on the disciplined and tactically aware foundations set out for them by new head coach Roy Hodgson.

Sweden will have to look to capitalize, however, on England’s current lack of firepower up front, with striker Wayne Rooney remaining suspended for this second group match.

Despite a 1-0 defeat against England at Wembley in November, Erik Hamrén’s men will go in to this crucial match with history on their side, having never lost to the 1966 World Cup winners in any competitive major tournament.

Regular opponents in summer tournaments during recent years, the sides drew 2-2 back in the group stages of the 2006 World Cup in Germany, and 1-1 four years earlier in Japan and South Korea.

Sweden will think back with fond memories at their 2-1 home win over England at Euro ’92, and will be looking to emulate such surprise success this time around.

“We are in a position where we can’t lose any more games and hopefully we can win both,” Sweden defender Jonas Olsson told AFP ahead of Friday’s match.

“We will focus on Friday first, try to get a good result there. It will be nicer to win both games and not be depending on other results.”

Today England are a side in transition, and with relatively low expectations for the tournament. New manager Roy Hodgson may feel he holds the key to unlocking Sweden’s strategy, however, what with his vast experience of management in Scandinavia.

With the tasks he has undertaken for clubs across much of Europe, Hodgson may be quietly confident that he can be the man to finally end England’s tag as perennial tournament mis-firers in Poland and Ukraine. His tactical stance thus far has been to make the Three Lions disciplined and hard to break down.

“The Swedes are difficult and I don’t think we’ve beaten them for a long time in a competitive game. We will respect them but, with all respect, it’s a game we should win,” was the bullish assessment of England captain Steven Gerrard.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic will certainly be in for a tricky night under the watchful eye of England’s back line. The Swedish captain outlined his determination to silence his many critics in the English media in his recent autobiography.

Friday night might well be his last chance to do so.

And after having to put up with the majestic runs of Andriy Shevchenko against Ukraine earlier this week, facing either Danny Welbeck or Andy Carroll will be a more welcoming prospect for Sweden’s defenders, who will nevertheless need to rectify their sloppy marking in Kiev.

They will also need to be more than wary of the threat posed by the quality of Ashley Young, Steven Gerrard and England’s joker in the pack, young winger Alex Oxlaide-Chamberlaine.

With such Premier League stars being familiar to Swedish fans and players alike, this is perhaps the fixture the country will be looking forward to with the most anticipation.

After Monday’s defensive mishaps, Hamrén is expected to move Adreas Granqvist to right-back, and bring in West Brom defender Jonas Olsson into central defence – a player who has faced several of the England stars in his time in the Premier League.

A win against this more coveted opposition would be the springboard back into group qualification contention that Sweden expect, but they will certainly have to improve on Monday’s lackluster display.

Joe Lynskey/AFP

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FOOTBALL

Euro 2020: UEFA cancels Rome quarter final tickets sold to UK-based England fans

European football's governing body UEFA has cancelled all tickets sold to UK-resident England fans for the Euro 2020 quarter-final against Ukraine in Rome this weekend, amid concern some may travel to Italy despite Covid-19 quarantine rules.

Euro 2020: UEFA cancels Rome quarter final tickets sold to UK-based England fans
Photo: Oli Scarff/AFP

Since June 18th, all arrivals from the UK have had to quarantine for five days and take two coronavirus tests under Italian health restrictions.

To stop people from attempting to make the trip regardless, “a specific ticketing policy has been put in place” for Saturday’s last eight tie, the Italian interior ministry said in a statement.

READ ALSO: ‘No exceptions’: Italy and UK warn England fans against travel to Rome for Euro quarter final

UEFA, at the behest of Italian authorities, blocked the sale and transfer of tickets from Thursday night, and also cancelled tickets sold to UK residents from midnight on Monday.

The number of blocked or cancelled tickets was not given.

 England’s governing Football Association (FA) was entitled to a ticket allocation of 2,560, equating to 16 percent of the permitted capacity of 16,000 at Rome’s Stadio Olimpico.

Andrea Costa, Italian undersecretary of state for health, repeated on Thursday that any person arriving from Britain would face five days of quarantine.

“That will not allow fans who have left over the last couple of days to come and see the match,” he told Radio Capital.

“We’ll be vigilant on this quarantine, we’re not talking about a big number so the checks will not be difficult.”

The English FA has said it was working with UEFA and the British embassy in Rome to “facilitate” ticket sales to England fans resident in Italy.

But the British Embassy in Rome confirmed to The Local that it “is not selling or distributing tickets for the match on Saturday in Rome”.

The confusion on Wednesday left Italy-based England fans scrambling to find out where they could buy tickets.

READ ALSO: Covid cases on the rise in Europe once again as WHO warns of Euro 2020 risk

British government advice is fans should not travel to Italy, an “amber list” country requiring 10 days of self-isolation upon return.

The UK is experiencing a surge in new coronavirus cases, blamed on the Delta variant that was first detected in India.

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