translated from Spanish: Denmark crushed Wales and is already in the quarter-finals of the European Championship

Denmark was reborn after the first day, in which they fell to Finland and also lost their great captain Christian Eriksen after the scare at the Parken Stadium. The Inter player recovered and his team also did so throughout a tournament where he has shown all his credentials. On Saturday he started creating less danger than his opponent, but he did not lose his composure against an anarchic Wales whose resources passed through the feet of Gareth Bale. The Real Madrid man – on loan to Tottenham this season – was the first to warn with a deflected shot and his team-mate Moore also tried his luck minutes later. Denmark had barely stepped foot on the opposite field and had not tested the Welsh goalkeeper when – on the verge of the half hour – it was 1-0 on the ‘Vikings’ first shot. A whiplash at the height of the ankle that ended up sneaking through the left stick of the goalkeeper, a real goal. Kasper Hjulmand’s pupils held out with fortitude and were hurting their opponent not only with the scoreboard, but also with their way of understanding the match. The Danes did not lose patience and found their moment three minutes into the second half. Again Dolberg was the great leader. On this occasion after a play by Braithwaite.The Barcelona battering ram started on the right side and his pass from the death ended up intercepted by a Welsh defender. However, the ball fell into the boots of an unforgiving Dolberg. The 23-year-old Nice striker capped off his big afternoon as an international and put the lock on the match even though there were still plenty of minutes to go. Denmark, with many more chances, especially starring Braithwaite, ended up getting the third in the last minute after a good play by Maehle, which culminated with a dunk his action. To top it off for the Welsh, who had all the meat on the grill, Williams was sent off as the clash came to an end. Already in the discount came the 4-0 with a lot of suspense. Braithwaite made his European Championship debut and set the icing on the cake for the Danes. Denmark, which will face the Netherlands or the Czech Republic, will return to the quarter-finals of the ‘Euro’ 17 years later (Portugal 2004) and leaves on the road a Wales that had always reached the quarter-finals – at least – in its previous two final stages (1954 and 2016).



Original source in Spanish

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