England meet Denmark on Wednesday evening (9 p.m.) in its Wembley stadium in London for the second semi-final of the Euro.

The winner will face Italy, which eliminated Spain on penalties on Tuesday (1-1, 4 tab to 2).

Unexpected opposition to close the semi-finals of the Euro.

England and Denmark clash on Wednesday evening (9 p.m.) at Wembley Stadium in London in an attempt to invite themselves to the European Championship final on Sunday.

The winner will find in this same setting Italy, which brought down Spain on Tuesday at the end of the penalty shoot-out (1-1, 4 tab to 2).

The English hope to win a first European final, they who have never won the competition, while the Danes can repeat their victorious journey of Euro 1992.

England v Denmark: kick off at 9


p.m. Wembley Stadium, London

The offensive point: Kane against Dolberg, two scorers in form.

 This is the match within the match.

Tottenham's English striker Harry Kane, three goals in England's last two matches, will face Danish Kasper Dolberg, OGC Nice scorer and also successful with three goals in this Euro.

These players hold the key to rocking the semi-final one way or another.

>> READ ALSO - Euro: the rebirth of Harry Kane with England

The poll point.

 According to you, England will win on Wednesday night at the expense of Denmark. You are indeed 62% to predict a qualification of the English on our Twitter poll. Verdict of the match expected around 23 hours or later in the event of extra time and penalties.

The supporters point. 

As almost every time since the start of the Euro, the English will play at home in their Wembley stadium in London.

The Three Lions will therefore be able to count on popular support in a box filled with a 75% gauge, that is to say 60,000 spectators.

A valuable asset especially since the British government is currently slowing the arrival of foreigners on its territory because of the health context.

The Danes could still receive the support of the fans who live there, and of the supporters who would have anticipated the quarantine measure upon their arrival.

>> READ ALSO - Euro: will there be Spanish, Italian and Danish supporters at Wembley?

Update on their journey.

 England leave as a legitimate favorite after a successful European campaign.

The Three Lions finished first in their Group D ahead of the Czech Republic and Croatia, with two wins and one draw.

His remarkable round of 16 against Germany (2-0 victory) and his recital against Ukraine (4-0 victory) truly instilled confidence in the entire English team.

For Denmark, the course was much more complicated.

At the foot of the wall after two defeats, the Danes rose magnificently to qualify, and string together three straight victories against Russia (4-1), Wales (4-0) and the Czech Republic (2-1 ).

>> READ ALSO - Euro: why Denmark is the most exciting team?

The stats point.

The England-Denmark poster at Wembley has always ended in a narrow 1-0 victory for one of the two teams. In seven confrontations, the English have won five times, against two victories for the Danes.

Update on their latest opposition.

 The two teams last met a few months ago, on October 14, 2020 at Wembley, during a Nations League meeting. And it was Denmark who won thanks to a penalty kick from Christian Eriksen. The meeting had the particularity of being played behind closed doors due to the restrictions due to Covid-19, so in an atmosphere that will be very different on Wednesday evening. In official competition, the two selections faced each other in the round of 16 of the 2002 World Cup, for a clear victory for the English (3-0).

The historical point.

 The two nations will play their third European Championship semi-final in their history. England lost each time at this stage of the competition, first in 1968 against Yugoslavia (1-0) then against Germany, at home at Wembley, at the end of the penalty shoot-out. in 1996 (1-1, 6 tab to 5). For the record, it is the current coach of the "Three Lions", Gareth Southgate, then defender who missed the decisive shot on goal. Denmark also played twice in the semi-finals, losing in 1984 to Spain (1-1, 5 tab to 4) and a victory in 1992 over the Netherlands (2-2, 5 tab to 4) before heading for the title that year.