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Finalists gather in Aalborg for U21 draw

After surviving a gruelling group stage then holding their nerve in the play-offs, the seven qualifiers join hosts Denmark in Aalborg for the final tournament draw live on UEFA.com.

The trophy on display in Aalborg
The trophy on display in Aalborg ©Getty Images

Twenty months after qualifying for the 2011 UEFA European Under-21 Championship began, the eight finalists meet in Aalborg on Tuesday 9 November for the final tournament draw.

Joining hosts Denmark are seven battle-hardened sides who progressed through a gruelling group stage then held their nerve in the play-offs to seal their place. Given the pedigree of some of the teams that fell along the way there is no doubting the quality of those that made it this far.

The Czech Republic, Spain and Iceland are seeded, along with hosts Denmark, based on their results in qualifying. England, runners-up in 2009, Switzerland, Belarus and Ukraine are the four unseeded sides. They will be drawn into two groups of four, with matches to be played in Aarhus, Aalborg, Herning and Viborg from 11 June 2011, and the final in Aarhus a fortnight later.

The Czech Republic are the only team to have remained undefeated and, after stopping holders Germany in their tracks in Group 5, they have high hopes of winning the tournament for the first time since 2002. Tomáš Pekhart finished qualifying as the nine-goal top scorer, but it was Iceland, runners-up to the Czech Republic, who really caught the eye in front of goal. They struck a tournament-leading 33 times, including a stunning 4-1 rout of Germany, to reach their first finals.

It is a measure of just how tough qualifying was that only three of the countries that contested the 2009 finals in Sweden are back this time – Belarus, England and Spain – and that of the eight finalists just England (twice), Spain (twice) and the Czechs (once) have won it before.

If Iceland were the surprise package of qualifying then Belarus pulled off the most astonishing result – overturning a 2-0 play-off first-leg defeat by five-times champions Italy with a 3-0 triumph in Borisov. Two goals within the first five minutes from Vladimir Yurchenko set up that win, and he will be one of many rising stars attempting to follow a line of illustrious predecessors in gracing the U21 finals stage.

Among the talent on display next summer, Spain can boast two FIFA World Cup winners in Javi Martínez and Juan Mata; England, the only nation to have qualified for the finals for a third successive time, can call on the blossoming Jack Wilshere, while Switzerland will look to Xherdan Shaqiri to continue the significant strides he has made this year.

Ukraine, finalists in 2006, have a squad brimming with UEFA Champions League pedigree and will want to build on the promise of their UEFA European U19 Championship triumph in 2009. It is over two years since Denmark played a competitive match, but given the hosts' success in recent years – with the Netherlands victorious in 2007 and Sweden getting to the last four in 2009 – with home support, Keld Bordinggaard's side have plenty to look forward to.

Full draw details can be read in the official press kit.