Iceland Beating England in Euro 2016 is Life-Changing, Says Coach
Iceland scored two goals in their Round of 16 clash against England via Ragnar Sigurdsson and Kolbeinn Sigthorsson.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: June 28, 2016 11:06 am IST
Highlights
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Iceland beat England 2-1 in the Euro 2016 Round of 16
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Iceland will face France in the quarter-finals of Euro 2016
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Iceland is the smallest country to participate in Euro
Iceland's co-coach Heimir Hallgrimsson toasted a potentially life-changing win for his team after the small nation stunned England at Euro 2016 on Monday.
"If you want the best out of life you have to be ready when the opportunity comes. That is a fact and these boys were ready today and this opportunity that was put in our hand was huge, it can change their lives," said Hallgrimsson, who combines his role as co-coach alongside Lars Lagerback with his job as a dentist.
Iceland fell behind in the fourth minute in Nice when Wayne Rooney converted a penalty for England but Ragnar Sigurdsson quickly equalised and Joe Hart then allowed a Kolbeinn Sigthorsson shot to dribble into the net for what proved to be the winner in the 18th minute.
In their debut appearance at a major tournament, Iceland can now look forward to a fairytale quarter-final against hosts France at the Stade de France on Sunday.
"This will probably be a day that we will talk about for the rest of our lives and now we get an even bigger chance in a week," added Hallgrimsson, who will take sole charge of the team after the Euros.
"We are optimistic. Some Icelanders maybe think we are too optimistic, that we don't think we can fail, but we have a game plan."
Football can create the most incredible stories. Well played, @footballiceland!#EURO2016 pic.twitter.com/WYIKmn07tv
- UEFA EURO 2016 (@UEFAEURO) June 27, 2016
Iceland's equaliser came just 34 seconds after the restart from Rooney's penalty and Lagerback accepted scoring so quickly was vital.
"It was a key moment in the game. It was a shock to concede a goal so early but to answer right back probably had more effect on England than the first goal that we conceded," said the Swede.
Lagerback has admitted that he learnt a lot from Roy Hodgson when he worked in Sweden in the 1970s but his stunning triumph also marked the downfall of Hodgson as England manager.
"A part of why I am sitting here now is thanks to Bob Houghton (the Englishman who coached Malmo to the 1979 European Cup final) and Roy Hodgson when they came to Sweden, so I'd like to express my big respect to them," he said.
"I learned a lot from them. They changed the training methods in Sweden and the coaching and education in the long run and I really benefited from that."