There were a number of extremely close finishes in some of the qualifying groups. In
Group 2,
Portugal edged out the
Soviet Union by beating them narrowly 1–0 on a penalty by
Rui Jordão in Lisbon on the final day. Meanwhile, in
Group 5, again on the final day,
Romania managed to hold on for a tense 1–1 draw in
Bratislava and qualify at the expense of
Czechoslovakia. A major surprise in this group was the poor performance of then-World Cup holders
Italy, who were rebuilding after the retirement of many of their
1982 heroes and quickly dropped out of contention. Another surprise was the qualification of
Denmark in
Group 3 at the expense of
England. Having conceded a 2–2 draw at home against England, the hitherto unknown Danes performed well in their other qualifiers and capped their impressive campaign with a 1–0 win at
Wembley, while England dropped a point at home against
Greece that ultimately cost them the qualifying berth. There was also heartbreak for
Northern Ireland in
Group 6. After managing to beat hot favourites
West Germany both home and away earlier in the campaign, they came within 11 minutes of making it to France, but could only look on as Gerd Strack scored a crucial late winning goal for the West Germans in their own final fixture at home to
Albania. In
Group 7,
The Netherlands thought they had done enough to qualify, given that their closest rivals
Spain went into the final match needing to beat
Malta by eleven goals in order to qualify. And when Spain went in at half-time in
Seville leading the Maltese minnows by a margin of only 3–1, the Dutch could have been forgiven for assuming they were home and dry. Spain, incredibly, then proceeded to score nine more goals in the second half, the last of them coming in the 83rd minute from
Juan Señor, to book an unlikely passage to the finals. UEFA has since changed its rules: all teams now play their final game at exactly the same time and date, so that none of the teams has an advantage. Also, overall goal difference is now de-emphasised in the tie-breakers in favour of head-to-head results. Things were tightest of all in
Group 4, where
Wales,
Bulgaria and
Yugoslavia were all in contention until the final few seconds of the last match in the group, between the latter two teams in
Split. A draw would have put the onlooking Welsh through to the finals, but just moments after Bulgaria had squandered a glorious chance to score the winning goal and seal their own qualification, Yugoslavian defender
Ljubomir Radanović wrote himself into Balkan footballing history with the 90th-minute header that sent him and his teammates to France. ==Tiebreakers==