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14.11.2017 at 19:45 Aviva Stadium Attendance:
Republic of Ireland 1 - 5 Denmark
Referee: Szymon Marciniak World Cup Play Off / Prog-match

Goalscorers
Shane Duffy (6)
Andreas Christense 29 mins,
Christian Eriksen, 32, 63,74 mins
Nicklas Bendtner 90 mins,
Opening squads
Darren Randolph
Shane Duffy
Ciaran Clarke
Stephen Ward
Cyrus Christie
Jeff Hendrick
Harry Arter
Robert Brady
David Meyler
James Mc Clean
Daryl Murphy
Kasper Schmeichel,
Simon Kjaer,
Andreas Christensen,
William Kvist,
Thomas Delaney,
Nicolai Jorgensen,
Christian Eriksen,
Andreas Bjelland,
Jens Larsen,
Yussuf Poulson,
Sisto Emirmija.
Substitutes
Keiren Westwood
Colin Doyle
Kevin Long
John O'Shea
Paul Mc Shane
Conor Hourihane
Callum O Dowda
Glen Whelan
Wesley Hoolahan
Scott Hogan
Aidan Mc Geady
Shane Long
Jonas Lossl,
Frederik Ronnow,
Mike Jensen,
Jannik Vestergaard,
Peter Ankersen,
Nicklas Bendtner,
Mathias Jorgensen,
Jonas Knudsen,
Martin Braithwaite,
Lukas Lerager,
Lasse Schone,
Andreas Cornelius.
Substitutions
Aidan Mc Geady -> David Meyler (46)
Wesley Hoolahan -> Harry Arter (46)
Shane Long -> Ciaran Clarke (71)
Peter Ankersen for Larsen 54mins,
Andreas Cornelius for Yussuf Poulsen 70 mins,
Nicklas Bendtner for Jorgensen 84 mins,
Yellow cards
None. None
Red cards
None. None
Other statistics
0 Shots 0
0 Shots on goal 0
0 Offsides 0
0 Corner kicks 0
0 Free kicks 0
0 Penalties 0
Match report


Pictures from the match
The Republic of Ireland failed to reach the World Cup as Christian Eriksen's hat-trick gave Denmark an emphatic victory in the play-off to reach Russia 2018.

After a goalless first leg, the hosts made the perfect start by scoring after just six minutes as defender Shane Duffy nodded in his second international goal when the visitors failed to clear a free-kick.

But the Danes netted twice in the space of three first-half minutes, courtesy of Cyrus Christie's own goal and Eriksen's stunning strike.

That left the Republic - who could have gone further ahead after taking the lead, but saw striker Daryl Murphy flick an effort into the side netting and winger James McClean drive wide following a slick team move - needing to score twice more to qualify.

But in the second half Tottenham midfielder Eriksen curled in from the edge of the box and then thumped in from inside the area to secure his treble and seal the tie.

Former Arsenal striker Nicklas Bendtner came on with six minutes to go and slotted a late penalty after he was brought down as Denmark, who failed to qualify for Brazil 2014, booked their trip to Russia next year.

Hat-trick scorer Eriksen said: "It's an incredible feeling. We've been fighting for so long to get to the World Cup. We are very much looking forward to it. It's not often I score any hat-trick so of course it is incredible.

"I know how nervous I was all day and night. We got the ball, we played better than the first game."

Martin O'Neill's Ireland side had lost just one of their previous 11 competitive games at home and they were heading to a World Cup for the first time since 2002 when Brighton's Duffy nipped in ahead of Leicester goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel for the opener.

However, having decided to sit back on their advantage and play on the counter-attack, individual errors saw the game turn in Denmark's favour.

When the speedy Pione Sisto worked space on the left and played in Andreas Christensen, the Chelsea centre-back's effort came back off the post, but Christie was unable to react quickly enough to clear and only managed to send the ball into his own net.

With the Republic rattled, they conceded again just three minutes later. Burnley's Stephen Ward gave the ball away in his own half and the visitors constructed a swift attack that ended with Tottenham's Eriksen curling in via the crossbar.

The home side pushed forward in the second period, but Eriksen found space on the edge of the box to finish off a break for his second, before Ward's miss-control in his own area allowed the Spurs midfielder to slam home his side's fourth.

"The second one was the most technical one, better than the others," said the 25-year-old.

"Mentally I have grown up. I take the more clinical shot rather than passing. I am thinking more like a striker."

Eriksen now has 21 goals for his country, 11 of which came in this qualifying campaign.

With a minute remaining, there was still time for further disaster as McClean tripped Bendtner in the area and the striker stroked home the fifth Danish goal from the spot.

O'Neill and assistant Roy Keane agreed new contracts with the Football Association of Ireland back in October but questions are now likely to be asked as to whether they are the right men to take the country forward.

Veteran manager Age Hareide took over after Morten Olsen's failure to reach Euro 2016 and under his guidance the team end 2017 unbeaten, having claimed five victories and four draws.

They last suffered defeat over a year ago when they were beaten by Montenegro, but once they went ahead against the Republic they controlled the game, keeping possession and clinically taking their chances.

They could have had more than five, with former Wigan midfielder William Kvist forcing Darren Randolph into a stunning, full-stretch save low to his right, while the Middlesbrough goalkeeper also pushed away Sisto's drive.

"It was very good, especially when we came from behind," said Hareide. "We didn't get stressed. We tried to play and we got the goals.

"I am very pleased with the team and the performance. This is a difficult place to play football - scoring five goals against the Republic of Ireland does not happen.

"I was surprised. They played with a diamond and that gave us lots of space and I just say thank you very much.

"Eriksen is a fantastic player. An inspiration for those around him. He is a world class player. The lads stuck together and gave a fantastic performance in a difficult game."

Denmark, who have qualified for only the fifth time, will now wait to find out the result between Peru and New Zealand (Thursday, 02:15 GMT) to see whether they are in pot 2 or pot 3 for the tournament.

The first leg between the Peruvians and Kiwis ended goalless in New Zealand.

If the South Americans go out, Denmark will go into the higher pot as one of the second seeds alongside fellow European teams England, Spain and Switzerland.

Republic of Ireland: Darren Randolph, Cyrus Christie, Ciaran Clark (Shane Long 71), Daryl Murphy, Robbie Brady, James McClean, Jeff Hendrick, Stephen Ward, David Meyler (Wes Hoolahan 46), Shane Duffy, Harry Arter (Aiden McGeady 46)

Substitutes: Keiren Westwood, Colin Doyle, John O' Shea, Paul McShane, Glenn Whelan, Shane Long, Callum O' Dowda, Conor Hourihane, Scott Hogan, Kevin Long

Denmark: Kasper Schmeichel, Simon Kjaer, Andreas Christensen, William Kvist, Thomas Delaney, Nicolai Jorgensen (Nicklas Bendtner 84), Christian Eriksen, Andreas Bjelland, Jense Stryger Larsen (Peter Ankersen 54), Yussuf Poulsen (Andreas Cornelius 70), Pione Sisto

Substitutes: Frederik Ronnow, Jonas Lossi, Mike Jensen, Jannik Vestergaard, Mathias Jorgensen, Jonas Knudsen, Martin Braithwaite, Lukas Lerager, Lasse Schone,

Super Eriksen - the stats

Republic of Ireland have failed to qualify for the last four World Cup finals.

Ireland conceded five or more goals in a home game for the first time since October 2012 against Germany (6-1).

Christian Eriksen has been directly involved in 14 goals in the World Cup 2018 qualification process (11 goals, three assists), 10 more than any other Denmark player.

Eriksen has scored more goals in European 2018 World Cup qualifiers than any other midfielder.

Cyrus Christie is the first player to score an own goal for Republic of Ireland since Ciaran Clark against Sweden in June 2016.
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