England have secured their place at Euro 2020 after topping Group A in a dominant qualification campaign.
The Three Lions crowned their 1000th game with a 7-0 mauling of Montenegro at Wembley and now they can start making plans for next summer’s showpiece tournament.
The likes of Spain, Italy and Germany have also booked their spots and now all eyes will be on the draw later this month.
Due to Euro 2020 being completely different to any international competition that has come before, there will be no ordinary draw.
The draw for next summer’s tournament will take place on Saturday, November 30 and will be held at the Romexpo in Bucharest, Romania.
It will start at 5pm UK time – that is 7pm in Bucharest.
This will be held prior to the play-offs taking place, therefore the four remaining spots will be identified as play-off winners 1 to 4.
The draw will be shown live on UEFA’s official website which will be free to watch via live stream on your computer, tablet and mobile devices.
Each team will be ranked according to their Euro 2020 qualifying results to determine their pots, with the four play-off winners going into Pot 4.
Teams that have qualified and are one of the 12 hosts will automatically be placed in the group designated to those venues – for example England will be playing their group games at Wembley next summer.
Host nation Scotland can still qualify through the play-offs and have been provisionally designated to Group D with England..
There will be four seeded pots which will be drawn into six groups.
Some of the groups have already been partly drawn as some of the host nations are not the top seeds – Group B already includes Belgium, Russia and Denmark while Group C will be made up of Ukraine and Netherlands.
There are also four pairs of teams that will avoid each other due to political reasons should they both qualify: Kosovo and Bosnia & Herzegovina, Kosovo and Russia, Kosovo and Serbia and Russia and Ukraine.
Pot 1
England
Belgium
Italy
Spain
Germany
Ukraine
Pot 2
France
Russia
Poland
Switzerland
Croatia
Netherlands
Pot 3
Turkey
Czech Republic
Portugal
Denmark
Austria
Sweden
Pot 4
Wales
Finland
Play-off winners x 4
The play-offs will see 16 teams that have not qualified directly, but ranked highly enough through the Nations League face off in four separate pathways.
Each ‘Path’ is made up of four teams who will then play out semi-finals and a final to determine who earns a place in next summer’s tournament.
The teams that have confirmed their place in the play offs are:
Path A: Iceland, Bulgaria / Isreal / Hungary / Romania
Path B: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovakia, Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland
Path C: Scotland, Norway, Serbia, Bulgaria / Isreal / Hungary / Romania
Path D: Georgia, North Macedonia, Kosovo, Belarus
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