2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (UEFA)

The European Zone of qualification for the 2010 FIFA World Cup saw 53 teams competing for 13 places at the finals. The qualification process started on 20 August 2008, after UEFA Euro 2008, and ended on 18 November 2009. The qualification process saw the first competitive matches of Montenegro.

Contents

Format

Teams were drawn into eight groups of six teams and one group of five teams. The nine group-winners qualified directly, while the eight best second-placed teams contested home and away play-off matches for the remaining four places. In determining the best eight second-placed teams, the results against teams finishing last in the six-team groups were not counted for consistency between the five- and six-team groups.[1]

First round

Seeding

After initially proposing to use a similar system to recent World Cup and European Championship qualification (based on results across the previous two European qualification cycles), the UEFA Executive Committee decided on 27 September 2007 at its meeting in Istanbul that seeding for the qualifiers would be based on FIFA World Rankings, in accordance with the FIFA World Cup regulations (which note that where teams are ranked on "performance" criteria, the FIFA World Rankings must be used).[2]

The FIFA World Ranking used for seeding was the most recent at the time of the preliminary draw, namely the November 2007 edition. Initially scheduled for 21 November, the release date of the ranking was moved to 23 November to include the final match days of Euro 2008 qualification.[3]

The countries which eventually qualified for the final tournament are emboldened in the table below.

Pot A Pot B Pot C Pot D Pot E Pot F

 Italy
 Spain
 Germany
 Czech Republic
 France
 Portugal
 Netherlands
 Croatia
 Greece

 England
 Romania
 Scotland
 Turkey
 Bulgaria
 Russia
 Poland
 Sweden
 Israel

 Norway
 Ukraine
 Serbia
 Denmark
 Northern Ireland
 Republic of Ireland
 Finland
 Switzerland
 Belgium

 Slovakia
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Hungary
 Moldova
 Wales
 Macedonia
 Belarus
 Lithuania
 Cyprus

 Georgia
 Albania
 Slovenia
 Latvia
 Iceland
 Armenia
 Austria
 Kazakhstan
 Azerbaijan

 Liechtenstein
 Estonia
 Malta
 Luxembourg
 Montenegro
 Andorra
 Faroe Islands
 San Marino

Draw

The draw for the group stage took place in Durban, South Africa on 25 November 2007.[4] During the draw, teams were drawn from the 6 pots A-F (see above) into the nine groups below, starting with pot F, which filled position 6 in the groups, then continued with pot E filling position 5, pot D in position 4 and so on.[5]

Legend
Countries that directly qualified for the 2010 World Cup
Countries that advanced to the play-offs

Group 1

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Denmark 10 6 3 1 16 5 +11 21
 Portugal 10 5 4 1 17 5 +12 19
 Sweden 10 5 3 2 13 5 +8 18
 Hungary 10 5 1 4 10 8 +2 16
 Albania 10 1 4 5 6 13 −7 7
 Malta 10 0 1 9 0 26 −26 1
  Albania Denmark Hungary Malta Portugal Sweden
Albania  1 – 1 0 – 1 3 – 0 1 – 2 0 – 0
Denmark  3 – 0 0 – 1 3 – 0 1 – 1 1 – 0
Hungary  2 – 0 0 – 0 3 – 0 0 – 1 1 – 2
Malta  0 – 0 0 – 3 0 – 1 0 – 4 0 – 1
Portugal  0 – 0 2 – 3 3 – 0 4 – 0 0 – 0
Sweden  4 – 1 0 – 1 2 – 1 4 – 0 0 – 0

Group 2

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Switzerland 10 6 3 1 18 8 +10 21
 Greece 10 6 2 2 20 10 +10 20
 Latvia 10 5 2 3 18 15 +3 17
 Israel 10 4 4 2 20 10 +10 16
 Luxembourg 10 1 2 7 4 25 −21 5
 Moldova 10 0 3 7 6 18 −12 3
  Greece Israel Latvia Luxembourg Moldova Switzerland
Greece  2 – 1 5 – 2 2 – 1 3 – 0 1 – 2
Israel  1 – 1 0 – 1 7 – 0 3 – 1 2 – 2
Latvia  0 – 2 1 – 1 2 – 0 3 – 2 2 – 2
Luxembourg  0 – 3 1 – 3 0 – 4 0 – 0 0 – 3
Moldova  1 – 1 1 – 2 1 – 2 0 – 0 0 – 2
Switzerland  2 – 0 0 – 0 2 – 1 1 – 2 2 – 0

Group 3

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Slovakia 10 7 1 2 22 10 +12 22
 Slovenia 10 6 2 2 18 4 +14 20
 Czech Republic 10 4 4 2 17 6 +11 16
 Northern Ireland 10 4 3 3 13 9 +4 15
 Poland 10 3 2 5 19 14 +5 11
 San Marino 10 0 0 10 1 47 −46 0
  Czech Republic Northern Ireland Poland San Marino Slovakia Slovenia
Czech Republic  0 – 0 2 – 0 7 – 0 1 – 2 1 – 0
Northern Ireland  0 – 0 3 – 2 4 – 0 0 – 2 1 – 0
Poland  2 – 1 1 – 1 10 – 0 0 – 1 1 – 1
San Marino  0 – 3 0 – 3 0 – 2 1 – 3 0 – 3
Slovakia  2 – 2 2 – 1 2 – 1 7 – 0 0 – 2
Slovenia  0 – 0 2 – 0 3 – 0 5 – 0 2 – 1

Group 4

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Germany 10 8 2 0 26 5 +21 26
 Russia 10 7 1 2 19 6 +13 22
 Finland 10 5 3 2 14 14 0 18
 Wales 10 4 0 6 9 12 −3 12
 Azerbaijan 10 1 2 7 4 14 −10 5
 Liechtenstein 10 0 2 8 2 23 −21 2
  Azerbaijan Finland Germany Liechtenstein Russia Wales
Azerbaijan  1 – 2 0 – 2 0 – 0 1 – 1 0 – 1
Finland  1 – 0 3 – 3 2 – 1 0 – 3 2 – 1
Germany  4 – 0 1 – 1 4 – 0 2 – 1 1 – 0
Liechtenstein  0 – 2 1 – 1 0 – 6 0 – 1 0 – 2
Russia  2 – 0 3 – 0 0 – 1 3 – 0 2 – 1
Wales  1 – 0 0 – 2 0 – 2 2 – 0 1 – 3

Group 5

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Spain 10 10 0 0 28 5 +23 30
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 10 6 1 3 25 13 +12 19
 Turkey 10 4 3 3 13 10 +3 15
 Belgium 10 3 1 6 13 20 −7 10
 Estonia 10 2 2 6 9 24 −15 8
 Armenia 10 1 1 8 6 22 −16 4
  Armenia Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Estonia Spain Turkey
Armenia  2 – 1 0 – 2 2 – 2 1 – 2 0 – 2
Belgium  2 – 0 2 – 4 3 – 2 1 – 2 2 – 0
Bosnia and Herzegovina  4 – 1 2 – 1 7 – 0 2 – 5 1 – 1
Estonia  1 – 0 2 – 0 0 – 2 0 – 3 0 – 0
Spain  4 – 0 5 – 0 1 – 0 3 – 0 1 – 0
Turkey  2 – 0 1 – 1 2 – 1 4 – 2 1 – 2

Group 6

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 England 10 9 0 1 34 6 +28 27
 Ukraine 10 6 3 1 21 6 +15 21
 Croatia 10 6 2 2 19 13 +6 20
 Belarus 10 4 1 5 19 14 +5 13
 Kazakhstan 10 2 0 8 11 29 −18 6
 Andorra 10 0 0 10 3 39 −36 0
  Andorra Belarus Croatia England Kazakhstan Ukraine
Andorra  1 – 3 0 – 2 0 – 2 1 –3 0 – 6
Belarus  5 – 1 1 – 3 1 – 3 4 – 0 0 – 0
Croatia  4 – 0 1 – 0 1 – 4 3 – 0 2 – 2
England  6 – 0 3 – 0 5 – 1 5 – 1 2 – 1
Kazakhstan  3 – 0 1 – 5 1 – 2 0 – 4 1 – 3
Ukraine  5 – 0 1 – 0 0 – 0 1 – 0 2 – 1

Group 7

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Serbia 10 7 1 2 22 8 +14 22
 France 10 6 3 1 18 9 +9 21
 Austria 10 4 2 4 14 15 −1 14
 Lithuania 10 4 0 6 10 11 −1 12
 Romania 10 3 3 4 12 18 −6 12
 Faroe Islands 10 1 1 8 5 20 −15 4
  Austria Faroe Islands France Lithuania Romania Serbia
Austria  3 – 1 3 – 1 2 – 1 2 – 1 1 – 3
Faroe Islands  1 – 1 0 – 1 2 – 1 0 – 1 0 – 2
France  3 – 1 5 – 0 1 – 0 1 – 1 2 – 1
Lithuania  2 – 0 1 – 0 0 – 1 0 – 1 2 – 1
Romania  1 – 1 3 – 1 2 – 2 0 – 3 2 – 3
Serbia  1 – 0 2 – 0 1 – 1 3 – 0 5 – 0

Notes on the tie-breaking situation:

Group 8

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Italy 10 7 3 0 18 7 +11 24
 Republic of Ireland 10 4 6 0 12 8 +4 18
 Bulgaria 10 3 5 2 17 13 +4 14
 Cyprus 10 2 3 5 14 16 −2 9
 Montenegro 10 1 6 3 9 14 −5 9
 Georgia 10 0 3 7 7 19 −12 3
  Bulgaria Cyprus Georgia (country) Italy Montenegro Republic of Ireland
Bulgaria  2 – 0 6 – 2 0 – 0 4 – 1 1 – 1
Cyprus  4 – 1 2 – 1 1 – 2 2 – 2 1 – 2
Georgia  0 – 0 1 – 1 0 – 2 0 – 0 1 – 2
Italy  2 – 0 3 – 2 2 – 0 2 – 1 1 – 1
Montenegro  2 – 2 1 – 1 2 – 1 0 – 2 0 – 0
Republic of Ireland  1 – 1 1 – 0 2 – 1 2 – 2 0 – 0

Notes on the tie-breaking situation:

Group 9

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Netherlands 8 8 0 0 17 2 +15 24
 Norway 8 2 4 2 9 7 +2 10
 Scotland 8 3 1 4 6 11 −5 10
 Macedonia 8 2 1 5 5 11 −6 7
 Iceland 8 1 2 5 7 13 −6 5
  Iceland Republic of Macedonia Netherlands Norway Scotland
Iceland  1 – 0 1 – 2 1 – 1 1 – 2
Macedonia  2 – 0 1 – 2 0 – 0 1 – 0
Netherlands  2 – 0 4 – 0 2 – 0 3 – 0
Norway  2 – 2 2 – 1 0 – 1 4 – 0
Scotland  2 – 1 2 – 0 0 – 1 0 – 0

Notes on the tie-breaking situation:

Ranking of second-placed teams

Because one group has one team fewer than the others, matches against the sixth-placed team in each group are not included in this ranking. As a result, eight matches played by each team will count for the purposes of the second-placed table.

Legend
Countries that advanced to the play-offs
Grp Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
4  Russia 8 5 1 2 15 6 +9 16
2  Greece 8 5 1 2 16 9 +7 16
6  Ukraine 8 4 3 1 10 6 +4 15
7  France 8 4 3 1 12 9 +3 15
3  Slovenia 8 4 2 2 10 4 +6 14
5  Bosnia and Herzegovina 8 4 1 3 19 12 +7 13
1  Portugal 8 3 4 1 9 5 +4 13
8  Republic of Ireland 8 2 6 0 8 6 +2 12
9  Norway 8 2 4 2 9 7 +2 10

Ranking rules[6]

  1. Total points
  2. Goal difference
  3. Goals scored
  4. Goals scored away from home
  5. Disciplinary record (yellow card, -1 point; two yellow cards in the same match, -3 points; red card, -3 points; yellow card followed by a direct red card in the same match, -4 points)
  6. Drawing of lots

Second round

The UEFA second round (often referred to as the play-off stage) was contested by the best eight runners-up from the nine first round groups. The winners of each of four home and away ties joined the group winners in the World Cup finals in South Africa.

Seeding and draw

The eight teams were seeded according to the FIFA World Rankings released on 16 October (shown in parentheses in the table below). The draw for the ties was held in Zürich on 19 October, with the top four teams seeded into one pot and the bottom four teams seeded into a second. A separate draw decided the host of the first leg.[7]

Pot 1 Pot 2

 France (9)
 Portugal (10)
 Russia (12)
 Greece (16)

 Ukraine (22)
 Republic of Ireland (34)
 Bosnia and Herzegovina (42)
 Slovenia (49)

Matches

Team 1   Agg.   Team 2   1st leg     2nd leg  
Republic of Ireland  1–2  France 0–1 1–1 (a.e.t.)
Portugal  2–0  Bosnia and Herzegovina 1–0 1–0
Greece  1–0  Ukraine 0–0 1–0
Russia  2–2 (a)  Slovenia 2–1 0–1

Goalscorers

There were 725 goals scored over 268 games by 399 different players, for an average of 2.71 goals per game. England were the highest scorers in the European section with 34 goals. Malta did not score any goals, but did score two own goals. The top scorer was Theofanis Gekas of Greece, who scored 10 goals.

Note: Goals scored in the play-offs are included.

10 goals
9 goals
7 goals
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
  • Austria Erwin Hoffer
  • Azerbaijan Vagif Javadov
  • Azerbaijan Elvin Mammadov
  • Belarus Gennadi Bliznyuk
  • Belarus Sergei Kornilenko
  • Belarus Vitali Rodionov
  • Belarus Dmitry Verkhovtsov
  • Belgium Émile Mpenza
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Senijad Ibričić
  • Bulgaria Martin Petrov
  • Bulgaria Dimitar Telkiyski
  • Croatia Mladen Petrić
  • Cyprus Efstathios Aloneftis
  • Cyprus Constantinos Charalambidis
  • Cyprus Chrysis Michael
  • Czech Republic Václav Svěrkoš
  • Denmark Christian Poulsen
  • England Joe Cole
  • Estonia Sergei Zenjov
  • Finland Mikael Forssell
  • France Karim Benzema
  • France William Gallas
  • Georgia (country) Vladimir Dvalishvili
  • Greece Dimitris Salpigidis
  • Greece Georgios Samaras
  • Greece Vasilis Torosidis
  • Hungary Roland Juhász
  • Republic of Ireland Kevin Doyle
  • Republic of Ireland Richard Dunne
  • Republic of Ireland Glenn Whelan
  • Italy Alberto Aquilani
  • Italy Daniele De Rossi
  • Italy Antonio Di Natale
  • Italy Vincenzo Iaquinta
  • Latvia Vitālijs Astafjevs
  • Latvia Aleksandrs Cauņa
  • Latvia Ģirts Karlsons
  • Latvia Andrejs Rubins
  • Lithuania Mindaugas Kalonas
  • Montenegro Dejan Damjanović
  • Montenegro Stevan Jovetić
  • Netherlands Mark van Bommel
  • Netherlands Rafael van der Vaart
  • Northern Ireland Warren Feeney
  • Northern Ireland Kyle Lafferty
  • Northern Ireland Grant McCann
  • Norway Steffen Iversen
  • Norway Morten Gamst Pedersen
  • Poland Rafał Boguski
  • Poland Ireneusz Jeleń
  • Poland Mariusz Lewandowski
  • Poland Robert Lewandowski
  • Poland Marek Saganowski
  • Portugal Hugo Almeida
  • Portugal Bruno Alves
  • Portugal Liédson
  • Romania Gheorghe Bucur
  • Romania Ciprian Marica
  • Russia Diniyar Bilyaletdinov
  • Russia Aleksandr Kerzhakov
  • Scotland James McFadden
  • Serbia Miloš Krasić
  • Serbia Nenad Milijaš
  • Slovakia Marek Čech
  • Slovakia Marek Hamšík
  • Slovakia Martin Jakubko
  • Slovakia Ján Kozák
  • Slovenia Valter Birsa
  • Slovenia Robert Koren
  • Slovenia Zlatan Ljubijankič
  • Slovenia Nejc Pečnik
  • Spain Cesc Fàbregas
  • Spain Álvaro Negredo
  • Sweden Marcus Berg
  • Sweden Zlatan Ibrahimović
  • Sweden Kim Källström
  • Switzerland Philippe Senderos
  • Turkey Arda Turan
  • Turkey Emre Belözoğlu
  • Turkey Semih Şentürk
  • Ukraine Artem Milevskiy
  • Ukraine Yevhen Seleznyov
  • Ukraine Andriy Yarmolenko
  • Wales David Edwards
1 goal
  • Albania Armend Dallku
  • Albania Klodian Duro
  • Albania Hamdi Salihi
  • Andorra Ildefons Lima
  • Andorra Marc Pujol
  • Andorra Óscar Sonejee
  • Armenia Robert Arzumanyan
  • Armenia Gevorg Ghazaryan
  • Armenia Hovhannes Goharyan
  • Armenia Sargis Hovsepyan
  • Armenia Vahagn Minasyan
  • Armenia Henrik Mkhitaryan
  • Austria René Aufhauser
  • Austria Andreas Ivanschitz
  • Austria Stefan Maierhofer
  • Austria Franz Schiemer
  • Austria Martin Stranzl
  • Austria Roman Wallner
  • Belarus Maksim Bardachov
  • Belarus Aliaksandr Hleb
  • Belarus Vyacheslav Hleb
  • Belarus Leonid Kovel
  • Belarus Pavel Sitko
  • Belarus Ihar Stasevich
  • Belgium Steven Defour
  • Belgium Moussa Dembélé
  • Belgium Marouane Fellaini
  • Belgium Gill Swerts
  • Belgium Daniel Van Buyten
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Zlatan Bajramović
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Vedad Ibišević
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Sanel Jahić
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Sejad Salihović
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Emir Spahić
  • Bulgaria Stanislav Angelov
  • Bulgaria Valeri Domovchiyski
  • Bulgaria Blagoy Georgiev
  • Bulgaria Radostin Kishishev
  • Bulgaria Dimitar Makriev
  • Bulgaria Stiliyan Petrov
  • Bulgaria Ivelin Popov
  • Croatia Ivan Klasnić
  • Croatia Niko Kovač
  • Croatia Niko Kranjčar
  • Croatia Mario Mandžukić
  • Croatia Ognjen Vukojević
  • Cyprus Demetris Christofi
  • Cyprus Marios Elia
  • Cyprus Konstantinos Makrides
  • Cyprus Ioannis Okkas
  • Czech Republic Martin Fenin
  • Czech Republic Marek Jankulovski
  • Czech Republic Radoslav Kováč
  • Czech Republic Jaroslav Plašil
  • Czech Republic Zdeněk Pospěch
  • Czech Republic Daniel Pudil
  • Czech Republic Libor Sionko
  • Denmark Daniel Agger
  • Denmark Leon Andreasen
  • Denmark Daniel Jensen
  • Denmark Thomas Kahlenberg
  • Denmark Morten Nordstrand
  • Denmark Jakob Poulsen
  • England Gareth Barry
  • England Rio Ferdinand
  • England Emile Heskey
  • England John Terry
  • England Shaun Wright-Phillips
  • Estonia Andres Oper
  • Estonia Raio Piiroja
  • Estonia Sander Puri
  • Estonia Vladimir Voskoboinikov
  • Faroe Islands Egil á Bø
  • Faroe Islands Arnbjørn Hansen
  • Faroe Islands Bogi Løkin
  • Faroe Islands Andreas Lava Olsen
  • Faroe Islands Súni Olsen
  • Finland Shefki Kuqi
  • Finland Jari Litmanen
  • Finland Niklas Moisander
  • Finland Roni Porokara
  • Finland Daniel Sjölund
  • Finland Hannu Tihinen
  • Finland Mika Väyrynen
  • France Yoann Gourcuff
  • France Sidney Govou
  • Georgia (country) Alexander Iashvili
  • Georgia (country) Levan Kenia
  • Germany Thomas Hitzlsperger
  • Germany Marcell Jansen
  • Germany Simon Rolfes
  • Germany Piotr Trochowski
  • Germany Heiko Westermann
  • Greece Kostas Katsouranis
  • Hungary Ákos Buzsáky
  • Hungary Zoltán Gera
  • Hungary Tamás Hajnal
  • Hungary Szabolcs Huszti
  • Hungary Gergely Rudolf
  • Iceland Veigar Páll Gunnarsson
  • Iceland Heiðar Helguson
  • Iceland Indriði Sigurðsson
  • Iceland Kristján Örn Sigurðsson
  • Republic of Ireland Sean St Ledger
  • Israel Aviram Baruchyan
  • Israel David Ben Dayan
  • Israel Klemi Saban
  • Israel Salim Tuama
  • Italy Mauro Camoranesi
  • Italy Fabio Grosso
  • Italy Giampaolo Pazzini
  • Italy Andrea Pirlo
  • Kazakhstan Rinat Abdulin
  • Kazakhstan Ruslan Baltiev
  • Kazakhstan Zhambyl Kukeyev
  • Kazakhstan Tanat Nusserbayev
  • Kazakhstan Roman Uzdenov
  • Latvia Kaspars Gorkšs
  • Latvia Kristaps Grebis
  • Latvia Deniss Ivanovs
  • Latvia Vladimirs Koļesņičenko
  • Latvia Andrejs Perepļotkins
  • Latvia Aleksejs Višņakovs
  • Latvia Jurijs Žigajevs
  • Liechtenstein Mario Frick
  • Liechtenstein Michele Polverino
  • Lithuania Saulius Mikoliūnas
  • Luxembourg Alphonse Leweck
  • Luxembourg René Peters
  • Luxembourg Jeff Strasser
  • Republic of Macedonia Boban Grnčarov
  • Republic of Macedonia Filip Ivanovski
  • Republic of Macedonia Ilčo Naumoski
  • Republic of Macedonia Goran Pandev
  • Republic of Macedonia Aco Stojkov
  • Moldova Serghei Alexeev
  • Moldova Valeriu Andronic
  • Moldova Denis Calincov
  • Moldova Gheorghe Ovseannicov
  • Moldova Igor Picuşceac
  • Moldova Veaceslav Sofroni
  • Montenegro Radoslav Batak
  • Montenegro Andrija Delibašić
  • Netherlands Eljero Elia
  • Netherlands John Heitinga
  • Netherlands Nigel de Jong
  • Netherlands Joris Mathijsen
  • Netherlands André Ooijer
  • Netherlands Robin van Persie
  • Netherlands Arjen Robben
  • Northern Ireland Chris Brunt
  • Northern Ireland Steven Davis
  • Northern Ireland Jonny Evans
  • Northern Ireland David Healy
  • Northern Ireland Gareth McAuley
  • Norway Thorstein Helstad
  • Norway Erik Huseklepp
  • Poland Jakub Błaszczykowski
  • Poland Paweł Brożek
  • Poland Michał Żewłakow
  • Portugal Deco
  • Portugal Edinho
  • Portugal Raul Meireles
  • Portugal Pepe
  • Portugal Miguel Veloso
  • Romania Iulian Apostol
  • Romania Răzvan Cociş
  • Romania Dorin Goian
  • Romania Ionuţ Mazilu
  • Romania Florentin Petre
  • Romania Dorel Stoica
  • Romania Cristian Tănase
  • Russia Vasili Berezutski
  • Russia Sergei Ignashevich
  • Russia Pavel Pogrebnyak
  • Russia Igor Semshov
  • San Marino Andy Selva
  • Scotland Kirk Broadfoot
  • Scotland Scott Brown
  • Scotland Steven Fletcher
  • Scotland Ross McCormack
  • Serbia Zdravko Kuzmanović
  • Serbia Ivan Obradović
  • Serbia Marko Pantelić
  • Serbia Neven Subotić
  • Serbia Zoran Tošić
  • Slovakia Ľuboš Hanzel
  • Slovakia Filip Hološko
  • Slovakia Erik Jendrišek
  • Slovakia Miroslav Karhan
  • Slovakia Peter Pekarík
  • Slovakia Martin Škrtel
  • Slovakia Miroslav Stoch
  • Slovenia Andraž Kirm
  • Slovenia Aleksandar Radosavljević
  • Slovenia Dalibor Stevanovič
  • Slovenia Marko Šuler
  • Spain Xabi Alonso
  • Spain Joan Capdevila
  • Spain Santi Cazorla
  • Spain Andrés Iniesta
  • Spain Juanito
  • Spain Carles Puyol
  • Spain Albert Riera
  • Spain Marcos Senna
  • Sweden Samuel Holmén
  • Sweden Daniel Majstorović
  • Sweden Anders Svensson
  • Switzerland Eren Derdiyok
  • Switzerland Gelson Fernandes
  • Switzerland Stéphane Grichting
  • Switzerland Benjamin Huggel
  • Switzerland Marco Padalino
  • Switzerland Hakan Yakin
  • Turkey Halil Altıntop
  • Turkey Mevlüt Erdinç
  • Turkey Sercan Yıldırım
  • Turkey Servet Çetin
  • Ukraine Oleksiy Gai
  • Ukraine Oleh Husyev
  • Ukraine Yaroslav Rakytskiy
  • Wales Craig Bellamy
  • Wales James Collins
  • Wales Joe Ledley
  • Wales Aaron Ramsey
  • Wales David Vaughan
  • Wales Sam Vokes
2 own goals
1 own goal
  • Andorra Ildefons Lima (for Ukraine)
  • Faroe Islands Jón Rói Jacobsen (for Serbia)
  • Finland Veli Lampi (for Russia)
  • Finland Petri Pasanen (for Russia)
  • France Julien Escudé (for Romania)
  • Greece Avraam Papadopoulos (for Luxembourg)
  • Republic of Ireland Kevin Kilbane (for Bulgaria)
  • Kazakhstan Aleksandr Kuchma (for England)
  • Liechtenstein Mario Frick (for Wales)
  • Malta Ian Azzopardi (for Sweden)
  • Malta Brian Said (for Portugal)
  • Poland Seweryn Gancarczyk (for Slovakia)
  • Poland Michał Żewłakow (for Northern Ireland)
  • Romania Dorel Stoica (for Serbia)
  • Slovakia Ján Ďurica (for Northern Ireland)
  • Wales Ashley Williams (for Germany)

References

External links