The
qualifying draw for the 2016 European Championships took place at the weekend
in the south of France and for our European representative, San Marino, it
produced the only outcome it could possibly have done, namely a tough draw.
Drawn into
Group E, San Marino are paired with England as the seeded nation, the third
time this has happened to the Sammarinese, though the previous two were in
World Cup qualifying. The other teams in
the group are Switzerland, Slovenia, Estonia and Lithuania who will provide San
Marino’s first opponents in September this year.
For the
first time the fixture list was set in advance by UEFA rather than letting the
respective FAs hash it out themselves and this has resulted in a more balanced
set of fixtures, removing the possibility of the bigger teams setting things
according to their own agendas. This
seems much fairer all round.
Additionally,
the matches will be played over six consecutive nights during the international
windows in the cringingly named “Week of Football” concept, and Euro 2016 hosts
France have a fixed set of friendlies against the teams in the five team Group
I. There was no possibility of San
Marino, or any of the other real minnows, ending up with friendlies against
France though as they were all destined for six-team groups.
San Marino’s
Euro 2016 fixtures are as follows:
8th
September 2014 San Marino v.
Lithuania
9th
October 2014 England v. San
Marino
14th
October 2014 San Marino v.
Switzerland
15th
November 2014 San Marino v. Estonia
27th
March 2015 Slovenia v. San
Marino
14th
June 2015 Estonia v.
San Marino
5th
September 2015 San Marino v.
England
8th
September 2015 Lithuania v. San
Marino
9th
October 2015 Switzerland v.
San Marino
12th
October 2015 San Marino v.
Slovenia
San Marino
are of course yet to register a single point in European Championships
qualifying, having lost all 56 matches so far, scoring just 6 goals while
conceding a whopping 253. Prospects of
that changing in this campaign is very unlikely. The closest they came was a Euro 2008
qualifier at home to Ireland when it took a 94th minute Stephen
Ireland strike to snatch a 2-1 win for some very relieved Irishmen.
San Marino’s
record against each of their group opponents is of course hopeless:
v. England Played 4 Lost 4 Goals
1-26
v.
Switzerland Played 2 Lost 2 Goals 0-11
v. Slovenia Played 2 Lost 2 Goals
0-8
v. Estonia Played 1 Lost 1 Goals
0-1
v. Lithuania Played 2 Lost 2 Goals
0-5
Two of those
opponents have only scraped past San Marino 1-0 in matches in Serravalle. Lithuania did so in World Cup 2006
qualification, while Estonia won by the same narrow score in a 2002 friendly.
Currently
San Marino have no friendlies arranged ahead of this qualifying group which
starts in September, so should that remain the same they will of course remain
a Worst in the World up until that point.
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