There have been a few great
goals, and plenty of late ones, but how is the expanded European
Championship shaping up as a tournament to remember?
After 13 days
and with 36 of the 51 games played, the traditional heavyweights are
all safely through the group stage, along with all of the home nations,
the Republic of Ireland - and a few so-called minnows too.
Has it been enjoyable to watch though?
BBC Sport's pundits Rio Ferdinand, Thierry Henry, Alan Shearer, Danny Murphy, Mark Lawrenson and Neil Lennon
give their verdict on the spectacle so far in France, which teams and
players have impressed them, and how things might change in the last 16.
There are more teams here, with more to play for, but there have
been fewer goals. This is the first European Championship to feature 24
teams, and 23 of them were in contention for a place in the last 16
going into the last round of group games - the exception being Ukraine.
But there has been an average of 1.92 goals per game so far, only the
second time it has been lower than two per match in a group stage since
the first finals in 1980.
Alan Shearer: In the final
set of group games especially, we saw lots of teams defend very deep
just to get a point so they could get through, like Slovakia against
England for example.
That's what happens when you have third-placed sides getting out of
groups. I don't think the quality so far has been as high as previously
but, with an extra eight teams here, that has not surprised me.
Rio Ferdinand:
It has made the groups interesting until the end. On Wednesday in Group
F, for example, all four teams were going for it in their final games
because they needed to win.
Having a third-placed team go through has given some of the countries
who haven't been here before an opportunity to progress but I think we
will see a better standard of football now the knockout stage is here.
Danny Murphy:
Overall, it is a huge positive to have more teams here. Yes, some of
the quality might not have been so good but it has given a few teams and
tens of thousands of their supporters the chance to experience a
tournament that otherwise they never would have done. That is beneficial
for those nations and football generally.
But I am excited now
because we are at the point where the games really start to matter.
People are going home if they lose and that should create some better
games, a bit more end to end and people having a go.
Mark Lawrenson: This tournament has reminded me a lot of the
Champions League. There have been a few surprise results but all the
heavyweights got out of their groups. Once you get to the knockout
stages, the real competition starts.
45 of the 69 goals (65%) in the group stages were scored in the
second half, 27.5% of the goals came from the 80th minute onwards (19)
and 22% (15) of them have come in the last five minutes or stoppage time
- the highest percentage in finals history.
Danny Murphy:
It is related to the defensive approach that some of the lesser teams
here have adopted. If you look at quite a few of the group games, it has
been the stronger teams pressing and the lesser teams hanging on for
dear life. They just wear them down in the end, but it has still been
quite freakish how many late goals there have been.
It has added
drama and excitement, and long may it continue, but it is less likely as
the tournament goes on because there will be more even games.
Kevin Kilbane: It is almost as if the better nations always have
the theory that they will eventually break the other teams down. That is
the way it has been in a lot of games - all the teams are competitive
but eventually that goal has come. I am not expecting the lesser sides
to change their tactics in the knockout stages but, even if it takes
until extra time, the stronger sides will back themselves to score.
Alan Shearer: The moment I have enjoyed the most
has to be England's last-minute winner against Wales. We were sitting
in the studio with big John Hartson and Dean Saunders and you could see
the disappointment in their faces when that went in.
What about the atmosphere, and the organisation?
Alan Shearer: The thing that has angered me most is the scenes with England and Russia fans in Marseille and also when flares were chucked on to the pitch during the Croatia versus Czech Republic game.
For the vast majority, the fans have been absolutely outstanding and
just enjoying the tournament. Here in Paris we've got a great atmosphere
and we're seeing fans outside our hotel enjoying themselves, which is
the way it should be.
Alan Shearer: The thing that has angered me most is the scenes with England and Russia fans in Marseille and also when flares were chucked on to the pitch during the Croatia versus Czech Republic game.
For the vast majority, the fans have been absolutely outstanding and
just enjoying the tournament. Here in Paris we've got a great atmosphere
and we're seeing fans outside our hotel enjoying themselves, which is
the way it should be.
Danny Murphy: I am glad the trouble has cleared up but I have
to say some of the organisation at games I have gone to has been awful. I
went to Northern Ireland against Germany at Parc des Princes as a
punter with my wife, rather than as a pundit, and it was a nightmare
outside.
The security checks meant three or four thousand of us
were trying to get through three small access points. At one point it
was so tight, there was kid of about 10 near me crying because he was
trapped a little bit so I obviously helped him out. There was no drama
and no-one got hurt but they could have done - the barriers were rocking
with people trying to get through and I would not want to take my
children to games here.
Someone told me it was a similar story
before England played Slovakia in Saint-Etienne. I know the terror
threat means security is high but they have to have more access points
to the stadium otherwise if a lot of fans turn up late it will be
dangerous.
Which teams have stood out so far?
Alan Shearer: Spain have had one good performance, and so have
Belgium. Italy, when they were at full strength, have been like I
thought they would, and it is the same with Germany. But it is a very
open tournament, which has to be a positive for England.
Rio Ferdinand:
Spain did impress me, but then they lost to Croatia, who looked strong
too. There's no team that stands out at the moment and maybe that's one
of the exciting things. You can't say anyone is nailed on to be a
finalist or semi-finalist because every team has a chink in their
armour.
Kevin Kilbane: Watching live, I have really liked the look of
Croatia, who are so good going forward and especially in their half of
the draw, have to be dark horses to make it all the way to the final.
From the other half, Spain and Germany both look strong while France
haven't put a performance in yet, but they are still unbeaten and there
is more to come from them too.
Neil Lennon: Some of the
better teams are starting to warm up as the tournament goes on and I
would include England in that. They have been dominating games without
putting teams away and if games open up will they be able to exploit the
gaps that are left, but the flip side to that is they have not even
been tested defensively yet.
Mark Lawrenson: I would
actually go for Wales as the team who have impressed me the most, for
finishing top of Group B after being seeded fourth. They are not a
one-man team like many people say but that one man - Gareth Bale - has
shown he is a world-class player.
And which other players have impressed?
Rio Ferdinand: Dimitri Payet has been the go-to guy for France
so far - everyone expected it to be Antoine Griezmann or Paul Pogba.
But Payet has come out of the traps flying. He scored an unbelievable
goal in the first game with his left foot and a stunning goal with his
right foot when he went into the box in the second game.
We've
seen it from him all season in the Premier League. But to come out in
the Euros in a France shirt and do it - for me he's been the player of
the tournament so far.
Alan Shearer: I have loved watching
Payet. Not only his goals but his general play has been superb. I agree
with Rio, I think he has been the outstanding player up to now.
Thierry Henry: Payet has not surprised me. What I like about
him is that he plays like it is his last ever game. Obviously he is
getting all the press and he deserves it but for me the most consistent
French player so far is N'Golo Kante. I think he is the guy who has
surprised everyone in France. He is just outstanding. He is the first
guy who stops everything and he is the guy also who starts the
counter-attack.
Danny Murphy: Croatia have been impressive
partly because of the obvious people, Ivan Rakitic and Luka Modric, but
Ivan Perisic has been one of the stars of the tournament for me. His
power and running ability is phenomenal.
Kevin Kilbane: Perisic
is just so direct, he really hurts teams. There is talk of him leaving
Inter Milan at the moment but it would take an awful lot of money to get
him. Italy winger Antonio Candreva is another one I really like and I
also saw a bit of Albania - in terms of people who surprised me, there
was their wide-man Ermir Lenjani and also Armando Sadiku, who had great
movement up front.
Neil Lennon: Poland striker Arkadiusz Milik has really
impressed me - he always looks a threat and fits into the way they play
so well. And the Portugal left-back, Raphael Guerreiro, who I watched
live against Austria, has been quality too. He has just signed for
Borussia Dortmund and he stood out in that game.
Mark Lawrenson: I have not seen a better two players in midfield in Kante and Spain's Andres Iniesta. In my team of the group stage,
I've got Payet starting on the right even though most would expect him
on the left. The thing is, he scored his wonder goal against in the
first game against Romania cutting in from the right.
Bale has to be the lone forward, though, I don't think there can be any argument about that.