안전놀이터



Denmark Euro 92 Champions: Squad, How They Qualified and Shocked Europe To Win 

There have been 10 unique victors of the European Championship since its origin in 1960, and the roll of honor highlights natural heavyweights like Germany, Spain, France and Italy. 

Denmark are likewise there among the rundown of champions, however the Scandinavian nation isn't really what one should seriously think about a normal competitor on the world stage. 

The Danes have similar number of titles as Italy and Portugal, overseeing in 1992 to do what England and Belgium have not. 

Objective investigates that accomplishment, how they qualified, their crew and the groups they beat en route to triumph. 

How did Denmark meet all requirements for Euro 92? 

Denmark's capability for Euro 92 is the thing that makes the resulting win in the opposition such a quirk, since they didn't procure their place at the competition in the conventional way. 

They had completed second in their capability bunch behind Yugoslavia, in the wake of dominating six matches, drawing one and losing one. 

Yugoslavia were expected to contend at the last phase of the European Championship, yet the nation was suspended from cutthroat football by FIFA and UEFA following the episode of the Yugoslav Wars.  안전놀이터

Accordingly, Denmark, as the following best qualifier from the gathering, had their spot at the competition. 

"There are a ton of tales about us being on the sea shore," Peter Schmeichel revealed to Sky Sports, pondering the shock capability. "We were still match fit, yet totally turned off from football. We needed to recapture that craving to play and dominate football matches. We didn't have a lot of time, yet for those Euros it worked." 

Who was in the Denmark Euro 92 crew? No. Player Age Club 1 Peter Schmeichel 28 Manchester United 2 John Sivebaek 30 Monaco 3 Kent Nielsen 30 Aarhus 4 Lars Olsen (chief) 31 Trabzonspor 5 Henrik Andersen 27 Koln 6 Kim Christofte 31 Brondby 7 John Jensen 27 Brondby 8 Johnny Molby 23 Vejle 9 Flemming Povlsen 25 Borussia Dortmund 10 Lars Elstrup 29 Odense 11 Brian Laudrup 23 Bayern Munich 12 Torben Piechnik 29 B.1903 13 Henrik Larsen 26 Lyngby 14 Torben Frank 23 Lyngby 15 Bent Christensen Arensoe 25 Schalke 16 Mogens Krogh 28 Brondby 17 Claus Christiansen 24 Lyngby 18 Kim Vilfort 29 Brondby 19 Peter Nielsen 24 Lyngby 20 Morten Brun 26 Silkeborg 

Most of Denmark's Euro 92-winning crew was situated in Denmark at that point, with four players carrying out their specialty in Germany, one playing in England, one in France and one in Turkey. 

Peter Schmeichel was the star goalkeeper and playing for Manchester United, with Brian Laudrup, then, at that point with Bayern Munich, John Jensen and group commander Lars Olsen giving the outfield motivation. 

The crew had a normal time of 26.9, with 31-year-olds Olsen and Kim Christofte being the oldest. 

What was Denmark's course to the Euro 92 last? Pos Team Pld Pts 1 Sweden 3 5 2 Denmark 3 France 3 2 4 England 3 2 

Denmark were attracted Group 1 at the last phase of the Euro 92 competition alongside England, France and hosts Sweden. 

They drew 0-0 in their initial game against an England group that included stars like Gary Lineker, Paul Merson and David Platt. Their shots at advancing from the gathering took a blow when they lost 1-0 to rivals Sweden in Solna. 

Britain had drawn their subsequent gathering game against France and were very much positioned to progress with an ideal outcome against Sweden, if Denmark lost or drew against France. 

Be that as it may, Denmark pulled off a furious against France, winning 2-1, and England endured a 2-1 loss against Sweden, with Tomas Brolin breaking English hearts. 

Henrik Larsen and Lars Elstrup scored the vital objectives against Les Bleus and they qualified as Group 1 sprinters up for the semi-last against Group 2 victors the Netherlands, who were defending champs. 

Date Match result Denmark Goalscorers Jun 11, 1992 Denmark 0-0 England - Jun 14, 1992 Sweden 1-0 Denmark - Jun 17, 1992 France 1-2 Denmark Henrik Larsen, Lars Elstrup Jun 22, 1992 Netherlands 2-2 Denmark (4-5 on pens.) Henrik Larsen x2 

In spite of going into the game against the Dutch as overpowering longshots, Denmark started to lead the pack following five minutes with a Larsen header, yet the reigning champs reacted through Dennis Bergkamp. 

In any case, the Danes went on again not long before half-time, with Larsen scoring his third objective of the competition from the edge of the container. 

The Dutch seemed to take off of the opposition until Frank Rijkaard scored a rough objective in the 86th moment, compelling the game into additional time. 

No objectives were impending in the extra time, which means punishments were needed to choose which group would progress to the last. 

Schmeichel saved the second Dutch punishment, which was hit by Marco van Basten, and the Danes put forth no misstep in any of their attempts, with Kim Christofte beating Hans van Breukelen with the definitive spot-kick. 

Denmark won 5-4 on punishments to proceed with their excursion and progress to the Euro 92 last. 

Watch Netherlands versus Denmark Euro 92 semi-last features 

Who did Denmark beat in the Euro 92 last? Date Match result Denmark Goalscorers Jun 26, 1992 Denmark 2-0 Germany John Jensen, Kim Vilfort 

Denmark crushed Germany 2-0 in the Euro 92 last to win their first historically speaking European title. 

The Germans came into Euro 92 having effectively won the competition on two events and, with players like Jurgen Klinsmann, Stefan Effenberg and Matthias Sammer in their positions, were viewed as hefty top picks. 

Overseen by Berti Vogts (who might proceed to lead them to Euro 96 brilliance), Germany had drawn with CIS (Soviet Union) prior to beating Scotland, however they shut the gathering stage with a substantial loss to Netherlands. In any case, they booked their spot in the last with a hard-battled 3-2 success over Sweden. 

Regardless of the way that Germany were relied upon to win, Denmark didn't peruse the content and, maybe floated by their semi-last triumph, started to lead the pack on the eighteenth moment when John Jensen crushed a long-range shot past Bodo Illgner. 

Schmeichel was called right into it on various events, eminently denying an amazing Klinsmann header and dominating the competition in a one-on-one with Stefan Reuter. 

The endeavors of the Manchester United shotstopper to keep Germany under control were compensated when Kim Vilfort added a second for Denmark with a little more than 10 minutes to play, fixing triumph and shocking the landmass. 

A long time later, Schmeichel recommended that Denmark's impossible triumph at the competition originated from an ability to be self aware conviction that they could contend with the best parts on the planet. 

"That comes from, not disobedience, but rather not tolerating that we are a little country," the notorious goalkeeper told UEFA in 2015. "We [thought], 'we have the very same chance to proceed to better ourselves and be the best experts, and in the event that we get the right conditions we can proceed to do whatever work we need to do.' 

"So it's anything but an attitude, I think. I feel that, more than anything, was the reason we won the European Championship."