Wales were eliminated in the second round of Euro 2020 as they were thrashed by Denmark, whose inspiring journey at the tournament continues to the quarter-finals.
Backed by a fervent and almost exclusively Danish crowd, Kasper Hjulmand’s side led as Kasper Dolberg curled in a fine 27th-minute strike from the edge of the penalty area.
Dolberg struck again in the 48th minute as he seized on a defensive error from Wales substitute Neco Williams to smash in from close range.
That goal deflated Wales, who never looked like clawing their way back into the game as Joakim Maehle added a late third for the jubilant Danes.
Substitute Harry Wilson was then shown a straight red card for a late foul on Maehle before Martin Braithwaite struck a fourth goal in added time as Wales’ campaign ended miserably.
Robert Page’s men had performed well to get out of a difficult Group A which also featured Italy, Switzerland and Turkey, but this impressive Danish side proved a challenge too far.
Denmark had already provided the uplifting story of these finals, showing admirable resolve to reach this stage having been galvanised by midfielder Christian Eriksen’s recovery from a cardiac arrest.
The next stop on their fairytale voyage will be Baku for a last-eight tie with the Netherlands or the Czech Republic next Saturday.
As for Wales, they will return home exhausted but, in time, proud of their efforts in reaching the knockout stages again in only their third appearance at a major tournament.
Wales’ journey to this point had been long and arduous. Where Denmark had the luxury of playing all three of their group games at home in Copenhagen, Page’s side had travelled to the tournament’s eastern outpost in Baku for two matches before facing Italy in Rome.
This was effectively a third away game from four for Wales and, initially, they seemed to relish the challenge as they made a purposeful start to the game.
Captain Gareth Bale looked dangerous on the right, cutting inside on to his left foot and sending a 20-yard shot wobbling just wide before finding space again to creating openings for his fellow attackers.
That proved to be a false dawn as Dolberg’s excellent goal changed the game.
From that point Wales found themselves retreating further into their own half in the face of pressure, as well as having to contend with an injury to right-back Connor Roberts and a yellow card for striker Kieffer Moore which curbed his threat as a physical pivot to the attack.
Moore felt aggrieved at not winning a free-kick in the build-up to Denmark’s second goal as he was manhandled by Simon Kjaer, who he was adjudged to have fouled for his booking earlier.
But the goal was still largely Wales’ own doing as Williams’ attempted clearance fell to Dolberg, who had the simple task of finishing inside the box.
That was a body blow to Wales, who seemed devoid of energy and ideas as they tried in vain to mount a comeback.
A two-goal defeat would have been disappointing enough, but a wretched final five minutes saw them fall apart, conceding two late strikes and Wilson’s red card bringing their campaign to a thoroughly depressing conclusion.
Denmark’s home from home
Denmark not only had the advantage of having thousands of fans with them in Amsterdam, but also the backing of locals and neutrals at the Johan Cruyff Arena, Eriksen’s former home when he played for Ajax.
Pre-match estimates of 5,000 Danes were way off – almost every single one of the 16,000 people inside the stadium was wearing their colours and giving this game the strong sense of a home fixture for Hjulmand’s side.
Denmark were initially a little slow to make that advantage count but, once Dolberg put them in front, they took total control.
Dolberg, another former Ajax player, was a handful for Wales’ centre-backs, while he was well supported in wide areas by fellow forwards Mikkel Damsgaard and Braithwaite.
It was Barcelona striker Braithwaite who made the key pass for the second goal, surging past Joe Rodon and firing in the low cross which Williams diverted into Dolberg’s path.
Denmark were now utterly dominant, giving their fans further reason to cheer when Maehle, unmarked at the back post, fired into the top corner.
The Danish supporters had to wait to celebrate Braithwaite’s injury-time goal. Initially disallowed for offside, a VAR decision meant they could continue their party and progress in the tournament.

24 Comments
Poor video
9:44 how is that a red?
❤️🇩🇰❤️
Danmark 🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰
❤️🇩🇰❤️
Why do you edit the video like this? Really annoying!
🇫🇮🤝🇩🇰
I really like denmarks team because they are up there in the top 10 fifa rankings and they have almost no star players. It really shows that the most important thing is to have a well organised team and good team spirit.
Worst editing i have seen in a long time. Still a good memory though.
hej jeg er fra Danmark (Hey im from Denmark)
Worst editing and clipping in the history of editing.
I remember watching this with my friends and screaming into eachothers face while drinking a cold beer, watching our amazing run to the semi final, eventhough we lost our greatest player. Not even mentioning the touching moment of when Eriksen fell to the ground, which gave the danish team alot of motivation, and im sure Eriksen is proud of our national Team.
Go Denmark!
0-1 Kasper Dolberg (27 min)
0-2 Kasper Dolberg (48 min)
0-3 Joakim Mæhle (89 min)
0-4 Martin Braithwaite (90+4 min)
I am Welsh and whilst I hate to see Wales lose, I didn't mind losing to Denmark (just a shame it was 4-0).
We were all still cheering you on when you played England, you had a lot of Welsh supporters that day too.
do you guys need a new editor?? anyway wonderful match
Who edited this? Jesus christ, sloppy work.
Kasper
Belgium should remember this: it is better (as at the 2018 World Cup) to finish 2nd in their group than first. In 2018 England had an easier course and should have gone to the final (Croatia not being a very formidable opponent) Here, Denmark inherits Wales while Belgium must "stuff" Portugal then Italy! The Welsh play far too brutally, the red card is well deserved!
They said Braithwate was offside but then you showed the end so I have no clue what’s going on
On to his favourite left? Mæhle is right footed 😀
Great stuff 🇩🇰👍
This reminds me of the defeat v Portugal. We've got a thin squad and we just ran out of steam.
I guess the editor will have another beer
De kan noget 👌
Both teams played kind of well..