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.
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.
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
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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
Group 4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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
Group 6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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:
- Lithuania and Romania are ranked by their overall goal difference.
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 |
– |
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:
- Cyprus and Montenegro are ranked by their overall goal difference.
Group 9
Notes on the tie-breaking situation:
- Norway and Scotland are ranked by their overall goal difference.
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 |
Ranking rules[6]
- Total points
- Goal difference
- Goals scored
- Goals scored away from home
- 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)
- 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]
Matches
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
- Erwin Hoffer
- Vagif Javadov
- Elvin Mammadov
- Gennadi Bliznyuk
- Sergei Kornilenko
- Vitali Rodionov
- Dmitry Verkhovtsov
- Émile Mpenza
- Senijad Ibričić
- Martin Petrov
- Dimitar Telkiyski
- Mladen Petrić
- Efstathios Aloneftis
- Constantinos Charalambidis
- Chrysis Michael
- Václav Svěrkoš
- Christian Poulsen
- Joe Cole
- Sergei Zenjov
- Mikael Forssell
- Karim Benzema
- William Gallas
- Vladimir Dvalishvili
- Dimitris Salpigidis
- Georgios Samaras
- Vasilis Torosidis
- Roland Juhász
- Kevin Doyle
|
- Richard Dunne
- Glenn Whelan
- Alberto Aquilani
- Daniele De Rossi
- Antonio Di Natale
- Vincenzo Iaquinta
- Vitālijs Astafjevs
- Aleksandrs Cauņa
- Ģirts Karlsons
- Andrejs Rubins
- Mindaugas Kalonas
- Dejan Damjanović
- Stevan Jovetić
- Mark van Bommel
- Rafael van der Vaart
- Warren Feeney
- Kyle Lafferty
- Grant McCann
- Steffen Iversen
- Morten Gamst Pedersen
- Rafał Boguski
- Ireneusz Jeleń
- Mariusz Lewandowski
- Robert Lewandowski
- Marek Saganowski
- Hugo Almeida
- Bruno Alves
- Liédson
|
- Gheorghe Bucur
- Ciprian Marica
- Diniyar Bilyaletdinov
- Aleksandr Kerzhakov
- James McFadden
- Miloš Krasić
- Nenad Milijaš
- Marek Čech
- Marek Hamšík
- Martin Jakubko
- Ján Kozák
- Valter Birsa
- Robert Koren
- Zlatan Ljubijankič
- Nejc Pečnik
- Cesc Fàbregas
- Álvaro Negredo
- Marcus Berg
- Zlatan Ibrahimović
- Kim Källström
- Philippe Senderos
- Arda Turan
- Emre Belözoğlu
- Semih Şentürk
- Artem Milevskiy
- Yevhen Seleznyov
- Andriy Yarmolenko
- David Edwards
|
- 1 goal
- 2 own goals
- 1 own goal
- Ildefons Lima (for Ukraine)
- Jón Rói Jacobsen (for Serbia)
- Veli Lampi (for Russia)
- Petri Pasanen (for Russia)
- Julien Escudé (for Romania)
- Avraam Papadopoulos (for Luxembourg)
|
- Kevin Kilbane (for Bulgaria)
- Aleksandr Kuchma (for England)
- Mario Frick (for Wales)
- Ian Azzopardi (for Sweden)
- Brian Said (for Portugal)
|
- Seweryn Gancarczyk (for Slovakia)
- Michał Żewłakow (for Northern Ireland)
- Dorel Stoica (for Serbia)
- Ján Ďurica (for Northern Ireland)
- Ashley Williams (for Germany)
|
References
External links
2010 FIFA World Cup qualifiers |
|
AFC |
First Round · Second Round · Third Round · Fourth Round · Fifth Round (play-off for 5th place)
|
|
CAF |
First Round · Second Round · Third Round
|
|
CONCACAF |
First Round · Second Round · Third Round · Fourth Round
|
|
CONMEBOL |
|
|
OFC |
First Round (South Pacific Games) · Second Round (OFC Nations Cup)
|
|
UEFA |
First Round (Group 1 · Group 2 · Group 3 · Group 4 · Group 5 · Group 6 · Group 7 · Group 8 · Group 9) · Second Round (play-offs)
|
|
Play-offs |
AFC v OFC · CONCACAF v CONMEBOL
|
|