A defeat against the impressive Italians, but Wales head to Amsterdam and the knock out stages

With a defensive holding operation which I suppose you might expect from a side which, three goals in Belgium excepted, has a superb goals against record in competitive games in recent seasons, Wales qualified for the round of sixteen in the 2021 Euros, thereby making it an impressive three qualifications from the group stages in the three major competitions they’ve played in..

Although beaten 1-0 by Italy in Rome this evening, Wales made it through to the knock out stages as of right because of a superior goal difference over Switzerland who could not bring about the five goal swing needed to take them into second place, despite a 3-1 win over the very disappointing Turks.

I’d by pretty confident if I were Swiss mind because four points with a goal difference of minus one will surely be enough for them to clinch one of the four best third place finishes for them, but they’re going to have to go through a few days of nervous waiting before getting confirmation of this – Wales, on the other hand, know that they will be playing their next game in Amsterdam next Saturday evening..

As to who we’ll be playing, it’ll be the runners up in group B, but, as that could still be any of the four teams involved, it’s all still something of a mystery until tonight when the final round of fixtures in that group are played.

Although, our recent defeat against them doesn’t mean that we need to stop calling ourselves Belgium’s bogey side, we should be grateful that it is very unlikely to be them that we face. A draw in their final game against Finland would guarantee them first place, as, indeed, would a one goal defeat, with things only getting complicated if any defeat is by two or more goals.

Although the Finns have shown themselves to be defensively well organised and their victory over Denmark, albeit a traumatised Denmark, shows they’re capable of pulling off an upset, the likelihood is that Finland will end up with three points hoping that any defeat by the Belgians will be narrow enough to give them the chance of still finishing as runners up.

For that to happen, a Denmark side with no points from their two games so far would have to beat Russia knowing that a single goal win may not be enough to get them second spot, while the Russians could well end up rueing their 3-0 defeat against the Belgians when it comes to a second placed finish,with the probability being that they will have to avoid defeat to stand a chance of qualifying automatically or even as a best placed third.

If I had to predict, I’d say we will end up facing the team that are currently bottom of the group, Denmark. With Christian Eriksen discharged from hospital after a successful operation to fit him with a defibrillator, I’m sure the mood in the Danish camp is a better one and, having watched their unlucky 2-1 defeat against Belgium in midweek where they looked what they are, a top ten side in the world rankings, the Danes are the team I fear most out of our three likely opponents – I’d very pleasantly surprised if were able to beat them.

As for Finland and Russia, I’d say we would be looking at a very tight game where we might just be considered slight favourites. After all, we beat Finland twice in Nations League qualification, while I wouldn’t mind betting that there are some in the Russian side that still wake up in a cold sweat brought on by nightmares about what Messrs Ramsey, Bale and Taylor did to them in 2016! Being a bit more serious, I’ve not been too impressed with what I’ve seen of Russia in the competition so far, while Finland have something of an Iceland 2016 look to them which would make them doughty, if somewhat limited, opposition.

Coming back to what we do know, by finishing second in what I would rate as a tougher group than the one we won in 2016 (Russia were, arguably, better than Turkey this time around, while I’d argue Italy and Switzerland were better than England and Slovakia), Wales have defied their seeding, their odds and the large majority of pundits who had them down to finish last.

While we may not be in Croatia territory with their record of second and third placed finishes at World Cups and Iceland’s achievement of reaching the Quarter Finals in 2016 was remarkable considering their population of not much over six hundred thousand, Wales have done enough in the last five years to be up there challenging for a top six place in any country with a small population punching above their weight league table – no matter what happens from here, I believe our Euro campaign of 2021 now has to follow 1958 and 2016 as being deemed a success.

As for today, it could be said that the two manager/coaches went with different approaches when it came to team selection. While Roberto Mancini, with his team’s qualification secured, made eight changes, Robert Page limited himself to three as he left the three members of his squad facing a suspension if they picked up another booking (Keiffer Moore, Chris Mepham and Ben Davies) on the bench and brought in Neco Williams, Chris Gunter and Ethan Ampadu which meant that we reverted to the 3-4-3/5-3-2-1 seen in the last of the warm up games against Albania.

That day, we were non existent as an attacking force until we brought on Moore at half time and changed our formation – we had next to nothing to offer up front today as well, but this time we had an excuse in that we were playing a very good team.

After Italy had beaten Switzerland by a 3-0 score line that did not flatter them in the slightest, I saw a pundits’ discussion on ITV involving Gary Neville, Patrick Vierra and Roy Keane in which Italy were almost completely written off as possible winners of the tournament on the grounds that they had not played anyone good yet. Because I genuinely believe that the people who have played the game for a living have a better knowledge of it than those of us who are just spectators, I thought “fair enough” when I heard that verdict while thinking to myself that Italy were definitely the most impressive side I’ve seen so far.

Time will tell whether those three, who hold two hundred and sixty nine more international caps than I do, were right and I was wrong, but today Italy proved that, with something like a second string team out, they still are a very impressive outfit.

There was still the same intense high pressing game that had made life so difficult for Switzerland and Turkey and it is to Wales’ credit that they did not go the same way by suffering a three goal defeat or worse – especially when you consider that we had to play the last thirty five minutes with ten men following Ampsdu’s red card.

The Chelsea player was dismissed for a foul on Federico Bernardeschi where his foot was slightly off the floor when he made contact with the Italian’s shin. It was, we were told, a definite red card under the current interpretation of the law, but all that means to me is that the current interpretation is wrong.

 If you include our last Under 21 fixture, Wales have now had three players sent off in their last six games – there was Williams’ pathetic red card for handball against France and, although I’ve not seen Sion Spence’s sending off against Moldova, the fact he got a second yellow card, for a perceived dive, which was shown to him as he was being carried off on a stretcher rather tells a story!

It’s not the laws that are wrong, it’s the modern day interpretation being put on them that’s the problem – none of the three players would have seen red in more sensible times.

I won’t go into any great detail on the game. Suffice it to say that Italy’s 23-3 win in the goal attempts category accurately captures how the match went.

The winning goal was overdue by the time it arrived in the thirty sixth minute, but Wales will be angry and concerned that both of the goals they’ve conceded in the competition up to now have come from dead ball situations – this one was from a free kick by the very impressive Marco Verratti touched in by Matteo Pessina as he gained a vital yard on Joe Morrell.

Hardly surprisingly, Morrell’s limitations against opponents this good were exposed at times, but what do you expect from someone who spent most of last season on the Luton Town substitutes bench? Similarly, Charlton’s Gunter struggled occasionally, while the contributions of Joe Allen, Ampadu and Danny Ward, with his kicking anyway, told a story about how their league seasons had gone.

I’ve heard it said a few times that Italy are strongest in midfield at the moment, whereas, great servant though Allen has been and continues to be, this is the area where we are weakest. Little wonder then that I watched the game thinking that Wales’ world might collapse at any moment, but they were able to get a save (Ward was very good in that department again), a block or a challenge in that would prevent a goal – although we rode our luck on occasions, no one could deny our resilience and spirit.

Indeed, there were decent opportunities to end Italy’s ten game run without conceding a goal – Gunter probably came as close to scoring his first international goal as he’s ever done when he nodded Dan James’ corner on to the roof of the net and in the second half Ramsey got free in the inside right channel but was unconvincing, albeit from a narrow angle, as he seemed unsure what to do next. The worst miss was Bale’s though – he was completely unmarked as Joe Rodon’s header from a free kick dropped to him on his left foot about ten yards out, but his volley flew well over the bar, it was the sort of chance I’d expect him to score from about eight times out of ten.

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Intelligent and brave Wales repeat 2016 heroics as last sixteen beckons.

My knowledge of the Welsh language is sketchy at best. I can count up to five, ask do you like coffee and I know what pel droid is, but it’s a bit of a struggle after that. Actually, there is something else I can add to that extensive list – at about five to seven tonight, I found Dafydd Iwan’s Yma O Hyd on my favourite Spotify playlist and put it on full blast because you can send us 3,000 miles away to bloody Azerbaijan to play while England and Scotland don’t have to cross water to fulfil their fixtures and you can send us to Rome to play the best team I’ve seen in the tournament so far, but Wales are still here (that’s what Yma O Hyd is about) and they’re going to be in the last sixteen of the Euros to continue their brilliant record in major tournaments when they  are able to qualify for them!

I’m counting chickens a bit there, but, following the magnificent 2-0 beating of a Turkish team picked by many to go an awful long way in this tournament in front of 34,000 supporters of the Turks and a four hundred person red wall that, unlike Labour’s, stood solid and unyielding against the odds, only a freakish combination of results will deny us one of the four best third place finishers in the six groups now.

All of that presupposes that we’ll lose to Italy in Rome on Sunday of course – we probably will, but when the force is with Welsh teams in European Championship finals, strange and magical things can happen!

This wasn’t the Wales that stumbled to a point against Switzerland on Saturday or the one that edged through a nervy confrontation with Northern Ireland in Paris in 2016, it was the one that blew away the Russians and outfought and out footballed tournament favourites Belgium in that unforgettable Quarter Final five years ago.

Actually, there was another comparison with that night in Lille which was, arguably, the best in Welsh football history because, although the match was not played in Belgium, it may as well have been as it was only ten miles or so from the border with that country. While Wales were not as close geographically to Turkey tonight, this, like Belgium, was an away game for us as we were up against the undoubted local favourites because of the historical, language, military and trading ties between Azerbaijan and Turkey.

I had a moan about the format of this tournament on Saturday, so I won’t say too much here on that subject now except that Switzerland and Wales have been dealt a very rough hand compared to the other two teams in their group with Italy having three home matches and, effectively, Turkey having two. So, us and the Swiss have to play two away matches with the third one played in sweltering conditions on neutral territory in front of a small crowd.

Still, when you get nights like tonight, the against the odds aspect of the whole thing only makes it all the sweeter.

I like to think the post game reaction pieces I do on here can be thoughtful and analytical at their best, but forget that this time – this is just going to be pure emotion tonight!

When I learned that Robert Page had picked an unchanged side for the game, I joined in with the general criticism of that decision and said that nearly all of the team would have to up their game by something like fifty per cent to get the win we needed – we got that and more.

So, I think I owe Robert Page an apology for thinking he’d got it wrong by giving Saturday’s much criticised midfield two another chance – Joe Allen was very close to being the player he was in 2016, while Joe Morrell’s contribution was best summed up by the two headed clearances within a minute he made from Turkish headers from corners that were possibly on their way into the net (just about the only criticism I could offer of tonight’s display was that the weakness when defending some corners we saw against Switzerland was continued).

I would not have had Morrell in the starting line up tonight, but here he was the calming presence that he has been in most of the matches he has played for Wales before Saturday. Similarly, I would have left out Chris Mepham, but he was very good – especially for someone who in the last few months has been finding football more of a struggle than it had been for most of his career.

In goal, Danny Ward didn’t have to perform the repeated heroics of Saturday, but he was there to superbly deny sub Demiral in the eighty seventh minute when a Turkish head again got the first touch on a corner (it was noticeable that the Turks almost entirely avoided aiming their corners into the near post territory guarded by Keiffer Moore). Connor Roberts stabbed in the game sealing second goal deep into added time and performed his defensive duties efficiently while getting forward more than he did against Switzerland and Joe Rodon relished the defending that was required as Turkey enjoyed long periods of possession and pressure in the second half.

However, apart from that Demiral header and a bad miss by captain Bural Yilmaz when he fired well over from six yards out, Wales were generally unflappable and in control at the back with Ben Davies looking close to his best after the injury which caused him to miss the end of the season.

Ethan Ampadu was composed and controlled as a replacement for Allen in the final twenty minutes and, while there was no goal this time for Keiffer Moore, he played a full part in the game as he again stayed on for the duration and in what was a vibrant attacking performance by the team, he shed blood again for his country (this time from his nose), while the Turks were terrified of Dan James’ pace as he again put in a strong claim to be judged as Wales’ man of the match.

However, it was the two veterans, Bale and Ramsey that provided the class tonight. If I could only pick two words to describe how Wales played they would be intelligent and brave and these two (it only seems to be five minutes ago that they were making their introductions to Wales fans as precocious sixteen year olds!) epitomised those qualities.

I can remember Ramsey absolutely running the show at Hampden Park on a snowy night about ten years ago in a game in which he got sent off in late on – we were so much on top that night that, even when Scotland took the lead, it seemed to me that it was inevitable that we were going to win (we did by 2-1). For about half an hour tonight, it felt like that game with Scotland and the Bale/Ramsey axis was at the heart of our dominance.

Although I thought Ramsey did well defensively against the Swiss, neither man was at their best, but here, unusually, it was Bale being the provider and Ramsey the target of his captain’s passes – Harry Kane has, rightly, been praised for his role as a provider this season, but his 20/21 teammate Bale bettered him tonight.

Three times Bale found Ramsey with brilliant passes that left the Juventus player in on goal following superb runs which took him clear of a statuesque looking defence. On the first occasion, Ramsey left Leicester’s Caglar Soyuncu on his backside before trying to beat goalkeeper Cakir on his near post only for the shot be saved.

Bale then clipped a delicious low ball for Ramsey in glorious isolation who never looked to have it fully under control and fired hurriedly over the top (replays of the incident tended to indicate that VAR would have ruled any goal out for offside though).

These two misses came when Wales were on top and there was a Moore header over from a James cross and a fine block by Soyuncu as Moore looked to pounce after Bale and James had won far post headers. The Leicester man also foiled Bale in a three on two Wales break. After that though, the Turks had got themselves back into things with some midfield control ensuring they had a ten minute spell where they dominated possession..

So, there was a feeling that Wales, and Ramsey in particular, could be made to rue their misses, but showing that intelligence I mentioned earlier, Bale hit his best pass yet on forty three minutes and Ramsey, one of the bravest footballers around, did not let his previous misses stop him from making another fine run – this time the instant control and calm finish left Cakir helpless.

Although the second half was always going to be more of a holding operation, there were still plenty of chances for the Welsh. Cakir blocked a Ramsey shot from a Roberts cross, then Bale was fouled by right back Zeki Celik, an offence which referee Artur Diaz deemed, correctly in my opinion, to be just inside the area. Bale took the kick himself and missed the first penalty in normal time in the Euros for twenty one years apparently as he shot wildly over the bar with watching City fans muttering “why didn’t they give it to Keiffer?”.

Within a minute Bale closed down Cakir so well that his block of the attempted clearance flew no more than a yard away from the goal, but the captain had the last laugh by running along the bye line after receiving a corner in added time that was surely meant to be kept close to the flag and working his way into a shooting position. Bale’s long wait for an international goal continued as his shot was blocked and Moore’s follow up effort turned away, but Wales would surely have been happy enough to have gained another corner to eat up some more valuable seconds.

Incredibly, Bale showed that bravery I mentioned as he tried exactly the same thing again from the other side of the pitch. The Turkish defence was clearly at fault for allowing a repeat of what had happened a few seconds earlier, but they must have known it was not going to be their night by then and this time, rather than shooting, Bale chose to feed Roberts who rolled the ball in from six yards to seal a famous victory that reduced some of the watching red wall to tears.

As I’ve been writing this, Italy have been beating Switzerland 3-0, I make it therefore that only a combination of a defeat in Rome and a big win for the Swiss over Turkey can stop us finishing in the top two with the automatic qualification that would follow.

Finally, I know I’m biased, but Wales lived up to a reputation they gained in 2016 as one of the tournament’s more entertaining sides tonight – we may not be able to match the heroics of five years ago, but, with tonight’s brilliant win, the class of 2021 have left supporters with another unforgettable occasion to savour in years to come – my thanks to all involved tonight.

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