ICELAND BECOME SMALLEST NATION EVER
TO QUALIFY FOR WORLD CUP FINALS
Heimir
Hallgrimsson’s team knew a win against Group I’s bottom side would
guarantee top spot and an automatic qualifying place, and Everton’s Gylfi
Sigurdsson settled their nerves with a superbly taken goal five minutes before
half-time.
Sigurdsson also set up the second
for Johann Berg Gudmundsson midway through the second half as Iceland completed the campaign by winning their final
three games, proving their run to the quarter-finals of Euro 2016 was no fluke.
An
emphatic 3-0 win in Turkey on Friday had sent Iceland top of the group before
the final match, but they struggled to impose themselves against the group’s
bottom side. Jon Bodvarsson’s far-post header was easily saved by Samir Ujkani,
before Milot Rashica gave Iceland a fright with a long-range shot which flew
past Hannes Halldorsson’s post.
With their
next attack, Iceland went ahead. Sigurdsson collected the ball on the edge of
the area, wriggled his way past Amir Rrahmani and fired beyond Ujkani for his
fourth goal of the qualifiers. The hosts were happy to sit back on their lead
until Sigurdsson again got past Rrahmani and crossed for Gudmundsson to make
sure of victory in the 68th minute.
Hallgrimsson, a part-time dentist
who became sole manager after Euro 2016, when Lars Lagerback left to take
the Norway manager’s job, was lost for words at the final whistle.
“This is
really odd, I don’t know what to say. I mean ... Pelé, Maradona, Aron Einar
Gunnarsson,” Hallgrimsson said, referencing the Cardiff midfielder at the heart
of his side.
Qualification
for their first World Cup is a remarkable achievement for Iceland, a country
with a population of approximately 335,000. The previous smallest country to
have reached the finals was Trinidad & Tobago in 2006 (1.3m people)
followed by Northern Ireland (1.85m), Slovenia (2.08m), Jamaica (2.89m) and
Wales (3.1m).
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