
| 6 | Albania | Russia | ||||
| 7 | Turkey | Italy | ||||
| 10 | Austria | Bulgaria | ||||
| 2 | Slovenia | Lithuania | ||||
| 5 | Switzerland | Georgia | ||||
| 8 | Norway | Belgium | ||||
| 8 | England | Iceland | ||||
| 5 | Spain | Estonia | ||||
| 9 | France | Romania | ||||
| 6 | Portugal | Moldova |
| 3 | Montenegro | Andorra | ||||
| 4 | FYROM | Faroe Islands | ||||
| 3 | Armenia | Czech Republic | ||||
| 2 | Ukraine | Finland | ||||
| 1 | Greece | Germany | ||||
| 1 | San Marino | Belarus |
The 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship comprises a qualifying group stage and play-off round to determine which seven teams join hosts Israel in the final tournament.
Qualifying group stage
Teams are split into ten groups – two of six teams and eight of five – and play each other on a home and away basis. The ten group winners and four runners-up with the best record against the teams first, third, fourth and fifth in their sections advance to the play-offs.
Play-offs
Play-off matches are played according to the knockout system, with each team playing each opponent home and away. The team which scores the greater aggregate of goals qualifies for the next round, with away goals, extra time and then penalties used to determine the winner in the event of a draw.
Final tournament
The final tournament comprises the seven play-off winners and Israel, who qualify automatically as hosts. The eight teams are split into two groups of four. Each team plays each other once in their group with the winners and runners-up advancing to the semi-finals where the winner of Group A plays the Group B runner-up and vice-versa. The winners advance to the final.
Further details, including the criteria for separating teams that finish level on points in a group, can be found in the official competition regulations.
With Greece losing at home against Germany, Belarus seized second place in UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualifying Group 1 with a 2-0 victory in San Marino.
Dmitri Khlebosolov finished confidently from the penalty spot on 34 minutes after San Marino goalkeeper Mattia Manzaroli was penalised for a foul on Sergei Levitski in the box. The No1 can take plenty of credit for having kept the scoreline respectable as Belarus's athleticism showed after the break, but he could not prevent Aleksandr Kugan making it 2-0 on 54 minutes with a simple finish after Levitski had outpaced the Sammarinese defence.
Mikhail Kravchuk headed against the San Marino bar in the first minute, and Manzaroli was called on to block an Artem Rakhmanov shot before pouncing to deny Kravchuk an easy finish, but he paid the full price for an unwise challenge on Levitski when Khlebosolov scored from the spot.
The goalkeeper showcased his skills further, clawing away another Khlebosolov effort after the break and preventing a Kugan cross from sneaking under the crossbar before the same player made it 2-0. Substitute Artem Skitov should have scored ten minutes from time when left with only Manzaroli to beat, but once more the goalkeeper came up trumps.
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