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2019 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 1

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Group 1 of the 2019 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualifying competition consisted of six teams: Czech Republic, Croatia, Greece, Moldova, Belarus and San Marino. The composition of the nine groups in the qualifying group stage was decided by the draw held on 26 January 2017,[1][2] with the teams seeded according to their coefficient ranking.[3]

The group was played in home-and-away round-robin format between 7 June 2017 and 15 October 2018. The group winners qualified directly for the final tournament, while the runners-up advanced to the play-offs if they were one of the four best runners-up among all nine groups (not counting results against the sixth-placed team).[4]

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Standings

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Qualification tiebreakers
Notes:
  1. Head-to-head results: Greece 1–1 Croatia, Croatia 2–0 Greece.
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Matches

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Perspective

Times are CET/CEST,[note 1] as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).

More information Belarus, 1–0 ...
Attendance: 200
Referee: Omar Pashayev (Azerbaijan)

More information San Marino, 0–2 ...
Attendance: 483
Referee: Genc Nuza (Kosovo)

More information Moldova, 0–3 ...
Attendance: 1,242
Referee: Aleksandrs Anufrijevs (Latvia)
More information Belarus, 0–2 ...
Attendance: 4,250

More information Greece, 5–1 ...
Attendance: 311
Referee: Jovan Kaludjerović (Montenegro)
More information Czech Republic, 1–1 ...
Attendance: 3,126
Referee: Lasha Silagava (Georgia)

More information Croatia, 2–1 ...
Attendance: 1,500
Referee: Jens Maae (Denmark)
More information Moldova, 0–2 ...
Attendance: 2,350
Referee: Sven Bindels (Luxembourg)

More information Croatia, 5–1 ...
Attendance: 1,800
Referee: Mete Kalkavan (Turkey)
More information Belarus, 3–1 ...
Attendance: 2,550
Referee: Suren Baliyan (Armenia)
More information San Marino, 0–5 ...
Attendance: 227
Referee: Alexandr Aliyev (Kazakhstan)

More information Croatia, 5–0 ...
Attendance: 300
Referee: Georgi Vadachkoria (Georgia)

More information Czech Republic, 3–1 ...

More information Greece, 1–1 ...
Attendance: 2,836
More information Moldova, 1–3 ...
Attendance: 2,000
Referee: Robert Hennessy (Ireland)

More information Greece, 4–0 ...
Attendance: 500
Referee: Fyodor Zammit (Malta)
More information Czech Republic, 2–1 ...

More information San Marino, 0–2 ...
Attendance: 500
Referee: Jason Barcelo (Gibraltar)
More information Greece, 3–0 ...
Attendance: 2,000
Referee: Vilhjalmur Thorarinsson (Iceland)
More information Croatia, 4–0 ...
Attendance: 500
Referee: Jari Järvinen (Finland)

More information San Marino, 0–2 ...
Attendance: 281
Referee: Luis Teixeira (Portugal)
More information Moldova, 2–2 ...
Attendance: 1,100
Referee: Giorgi Kruashvili (Georgia)

More information Moldova, 1–0 ...
Attendance: 485
Referee: Daniyar Sakhi (Kazakhstan)
More information Czech Republic, 1–2 ...
Attendance: 2,038
Referee: Christian Dingert (Germany)
More information Belarus, 0–4 ...
Attendance: 1,500

More information Belarus, 1–0 ...
Attendance: 270
Referee: Anders Poulsen (Denmark)
More information Croatia, 2–0 ...

More information Czech Republic, 1–0 ...
Attendance: 2,123
Referee: Glenn Nyberg (Sweden)
More information Greece, 2–0 ...
Attendance: 300
Referee: Nejc Kajtazovic (Slovenia)
More information San Marino, 0–4 ...
Attendance: 217
Referee: Juxhin Xhaja (Albania)
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Goalscorers

There were 91 goals scored in 30 matches, for an average of 3.03 goals per match.

7 goals

5 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

Notes

  1. CEST (UTC+2) for dates between 26 March and 28 October 2017 and between 25 March and 27 October 2018, and CET (UTC+1) for all other dates.

References

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