Television
pictures showed Danish players and officials in tears as medical stuff
tried to revive the Inter Milan player, who suddenly collapsed near the
touchline.
Christian Eriksen collapsed on the pitch
Christian Eriksen, a Denmark football star collapsed on the pitch in
Saturday’s Euro 2020 game against Finland in Copenhagen, causing the
suspension of the match in the first half.
Television pictures showed Danish players and officials in tears as
medical stuff tried to revive the Inter Milan player, who suddenly
collapsed near the touchline.
Before the incident, Denmark had started with Jonas Wind up front as
they aim for a winning start to Euro 2020 in Saturday’s Group B game
with underdogs Finland.
There are few surprises in coach Kasper Hjulmand’s selection, with
Barcelona forward Martin Braithwaite and RB Leipzig’s Yussuf Poulsen on
the wings backing up the 22-year-old Wind, an FC Copenhagen striker who
is playing at his home ground against the Finns.
Nice forward Kasper Dolberg was left on the bench, as has promising Bologna winger Andreas Skov Olsen.
The Parken Stadium in the Danish capital, which hosts 16,000 fans —
about 45 percent of capacity, also saw playmaker Christian Eriksen
pulling the strings behind Wind before collapsing.
A full-strength line-up also includes Thomas Delaney and Pierre-Emile
Hojbjerg in midfield in front of a well-drilled defence featuring
Champions League winner Andreas Christensen and goalkeeper Kasper
Schmeichel.
Teemu Pukki starts for the Finns despite having only played a few
minutes since injuring his ankle at the end of the English season with
Norwich City.
The 31-year-old, who has scored 30 goals for his country, had said on
Friday that he felt ready to play in Finland’s first ever match in a
major international tournament.
Pukki is only two goals behind Finland’s all-time highest goalscorer
Jari Litmanen, who is widely considered the country’s greatest ever
footballer.
Captain Tim Sparv also took the field after recovering from a knee
injury that had kept the midfielder out of action since the end of
March.
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