UEFA Nations League RESULTS: Romelu Lukaku scores twice, England held to goalless draw

Express Sport brought you all the scores from tonight’s UEFA Nations League fixtures

  • England held to a goalless draw against Croatia in an empty stadium
  • Harry Kane and Eric Dier struck the woodwork
  • Romelu Lukaku scored twice as Belgium beat Switzerland 2-1
  • West Ham striker Marko Arnautovic scored the only goal for Austria to beat Northern Ireland

Nations League | Live scores

Croatia 0-0 England, Belgium 2-1 Switzerland | Lukaku (58, 84), Gavranovic (76)

Austria 1-0 Northern Ireland | Arnautovic (71), Estonia 0-1 Finland | Pukki (91)

Greece 1-0 Hungary | Mitroglou (65), Belarus 1-0 Luxembourg | Saroka (43)

Moldova 2-0 San Marino | Ginsari (31, 67)

What is the Nations League?

The tournament involves all 55 UEFA member countries and aims to replace meaningless friendlies with increased competition.

When does the first Nations League tournament take place?

It starts in September and continues across the October and November international breaks. The finals will be played in June 2019.

What is the tournament format?

The 55 competing nations have been placed into four tiers based on their current UEFA ranking and each tier is split into four leagues – A, B, C and D – made up of three or four teams. Between September and November the teams in each league will play each other home and away.

The team finishing top of each group is promoted to a higher league and the team finishing bottom of each group is relegated to a lower league, except in the lowest tier (D).

The four teams who win their respective League A groups (the bit England are involved in) will qualify for the knockout finals in June 2019 – semi-finals, final and third-place play-off – to decide the Nations League winner. One of those four teams will act as the hosts of the event – with a decision on that to be taken in December.

Will there still be a regular qualifying campaign for Euro 2020?

Yes. The Euro 2020 qualification draw takes place in Dublin in December with all the matches due to be played between March and November 2019.

The top two teams from 10 groups will automatically qualify for the finals. That will account for 20 of the finalists. The final four places are where the Nations League comes in again.

So the Nations League can be a route to qualification for the Euros?

Yes. The four group winners from each league – A, B, C and D, so 16 teams in all – will play off in March 2020 in a bid to secure one of the four remaining places. The format will be one-off play-off semi-finals, followed by a final, per league, with the winning team from each of leagues A, B, C and D taking the last four spots at the Euros.

If a country has already qualified by the conventional route, their place will go to the next highest-ranked team from their respective Nations League tier.