Euro 2024 qualifying:
England drawn with Italy; Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland discover groups
England have been
drawn in the same group as Italy - the team that beat them in the Euro 2020
final - in qualifying for Euro 2024 in Germany.
Ukraine, North Macedonia and Malta are the
other teams in Group C.
Scoutland will be in Group A along with
Spain, Norway, Georgia and Cyprus.
Wales will face Croatia, Armenia, Turkey and
Latvia in Group D, while Northern Ireland joined by Denmark, Finland,
Slovenia, Kazakhstan and San Marino in Group H.
The Republic of Ireland face a tough task as
they are in Group B alongside the Netherlands and France, plus Greece and
Gibraltar.
At the draw in Frankfurt, there were gasps
when England were pulled out to face Italy, with the Azzurri having beaten
Gareth Southgate's side on penalties at Wembley to win the Euro 2020 final.
Italy will also face North Macedonia, who beat
Roberto Mancini's side in their 2022 World Cup play-off in March.
"It's ironic when
you've had a fixture like we've had and then played them again already again so
recently that you seem to have these sort of things," said Southgate,
whose side lost to the National league in September.
"We seemed to be playing Croatia every five minutes not so
long ago and now its seems we have got that situation with Italy."
Mancini said: "I knew that we'd get either England or
France, but that's OK. It's a decent five-team group, no easy matches, all ones
we can have a go at."
England also played Ukraine at Euro 2020 when Southgate's side
earned a 4-0 a quarter-final win in Rome.
"We know the quality of a lot of [Ukraine's] players,"
added the England boss.
"We had a good result against them at Euro 2020 but the
scoreline did not reflect the quality of their team. They will be difficult
games."
Russia were not part of the draw after they were
banned from Euro 2024 qualification by Uefa following their invasion of
Ukraine.
"We don't know what that [games against Ukraine] will look
like politically and venue wise," added Southgate.
"All of us, of course, have got more that we are thinking
about when we talk about Ukraine than football, but the team themselves
football-wise are a very good side."
Scotland have qualified for three European Championships - in
1992 and 1996, and for Euro 2020, which was delayed by a year because of the
coronavirus pandemic.
They are guaranteed at least a play-off place after finishing
top of their Nations League group and earning promotion to the top tier of that
competition.
Scotland's game against Norway will see them face Manchester
City's in-form striker Erling Haaland.
Wales made their European Championship finals debut in 2016 when
they reached the semi-finals.
"We're pretty pleased with the group," boss Rob Page
said.
"We've avoided some teams like Belgium, who we've played
quite a bit in recent years.
"If you try to forecast what teams you'd prefer compared to
others we're not far from it. Overall, pretty pleased."
Northern Ireland were the only home nation not to qualify for
Euro 2020, with their only finals appearance having come in 2016.
How does it work?
There are seven groups with five countries - and three groups
with six teams in them. The four Nations League finalists - Croatia, the
Netherlands, Italy and Spain - have gone into the smaller groups.
The top two teams in each of the 10 groups qualify directly for
Euro 2024.
Germany automatically qualify as hosts, while the remaining
three teams will come via the Nations League play-offs.
The groups start on 23 March and end on 21 November 2023.
The groups in full
Group A: Spain, Scotland, Norway,
Georgia, Cyprus
Group B: Netherlands, France,
Republic of Ireland, Greece, Gibraltar
Group C: Italy, England, Ukraine,
North Macedonia, Malta
Group D: Croatia, Wales, Armenia, Turkey, Latvia
Group E: Poland, Czech Rep,
Albania, Faroe Islands, Moldova
Group F: Belgium, Austria,
Sweden, Azerbaijan, Estonia
Group G: Hungary, Serbia,
Montenegro, Bulgaria, Lithuania
Group H: Denmark, Finland,
Slovenia, Kazakhstan, Northern Ireland, San
Marino
Group I: Switzerland. Israel,
Romania, Kosovo, Belarus, Andorra
Group J: Portugal, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Iceland, Luxembourg, Slovakia, Liechtenstein

