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Ryan Giggs: Wales Triumph Is One Of The Greatest Nights Of My Life

Ryan Giggs hailed Wales’ Euro 2020 qualification triumph as one of the greatest nights of his life as he looked ahead to the finals next summer.

The Wales manager insisted his achievement in leading Wales to another tournament – four years after the glories of Euro 2016 – compares with any of the highlights of his glittering playing career.

Two goals from Aaron Ramsey eased Wales to a dominant and straightforward 2-0 victory over Hungary at the Cardiff City Stadium.

The result, which was remarkably smooth and angst-free, given what was at stake and the country’s history of high anxiety on these occasions in the past, means Giggs has finally succeeded as a manager in the task he was never able to complete in his medal-laden and distinguished playing days.

“It’s a special night – especially after what happened in the summer,” said Giggs after his side had leapfrogged Hungary into second spot in Group E.

“We showed great determination and quality, and we never gave up. It’s a fantastic achievement because even though we had games to make up the point gap, there was no real room for error.

“I achieved a lot as player, but this is different. I never got nervous as player, but as a manager you feel nerves 24/7.

“You prepare the team, but come game day it’s out of your hands, really.

“This is up there as one of the greatest night of my life. We were not in a great place after summer – coming away from two away games with nothing. There was no margin for error.

“But I set out to qualify for a major championships, but also to leave Welsh football in a better state.

“It’s just the beginning. We have seen what the young players have achieved over the last 18 months, but we can definitely get better.”

Asked whether the success will convince some of the doubters among the Wales fan base who did not welcome his appointment following the departure of Chris Coleman, Giggs added: “I hope so. I’m struggling if it doesn’t!”

“I asked the players who’d been there and done it to climbs the mountain again – Bale, Ramsey, Hennessey, Joe Allen. You can’t do it without those older players. Amd it’s not easy leaving out the greatest captain the country has probably ever seen in Ashley Williams.”

Ramsey, making his first Wales start in over a year after being dogged by injuries, scored in each half as Wales seized control and never relinquished it.

The Juventus midfielder headed Wales into a 15th-minute lead to settle the nerves of a capacity Cardiff City Stadium crowd.

Ramsey’s second just after the restart was his 16th international goal, taking him past the great John Charles on the all-time Wales scoring list and into joint-seventh place.

Victory secured Wales’ third appearance at a major tournament, coming just four years after their second when the Dragons reached the semi-finals of Euro 2016.

If the build-up to this winner-takes-all clash had suggested tension, then Wales belied any sense of nerves or apprehension with a totally dominant display.

From the moment Ramsey put his side ahead with an emphatic header from Gareth Bale’s cross in the 15th minute, the outcome never felt in much doubt.

Ramsey’ second goal, just a minute into the second-half, gave Wales a firmer grip and the Hungarians’ belief and conviction seemed to drain from them long before the end.

Wales had the cushion of a home play-off tie, but Giggs’ side were unbeaten in five games since losing to Hungary in June and confidence was high that automatic qualification would be achieved.

Hungary had also lost four of their last five matches and arrived in Cardiff weakened by injury and suspension.

Central defenders Willi Orban and Tamas Kadar and left-back Mihaly Korhut were all missing to leave a makeshift Magyars defence worrying what was to come.

Hungary boss Marco Rossi had expressed concern about the quality of Wales’ attacking players and Ramsey’s welcome return bolstered that department even further.

Gareth Bale lined up on the right, Ramsey was central and Daniel James – whose pace Rossi had compared to France flyer Kylian Mbappe – on the left.

Hungary started in confident fashion, relaxed in possession and skipper Balasz Dzsudzsak attempting a speculative effort inside 45 seconds.

But Bale had the first on-target effort, straight at goalkeeper Peter Gulacsi, and Wales were ahead within another two minutes,

Connor Roberts slipped the ball down the flank for Bale to cut back onto his left foot and deliver a delicious cross.

Hungary were left counting the cost of those missing central defenders as Ramsey was granted the freedom of the penalty area to nod home his first Wales goal since September 2018.

Botond Barath headed over a Dzsudzsak free-kick but Wales almost doubled their lead from a swift counter attack as Hungary, needing to win themselves to guarantee qualification, showed signs of taking risks.

James, Ben Davies and Ramsey were all involved before Bale sent over a teasing cross which Kieffer Moore put just wide of the post.

Wales appeared comfortable but they received a huge let-off after 33 minutes.

Giant striker Adam Szalai nodded the ball down to present Dominik Szoboszlai with a shooting opportunity from 12 yards.

Wayne Hennessey pushed the effort out and saved Sallai’s follow-up to leave boss Rossi wringing his hands on the touchline.

It was to prove a costly miss as Wales doubled their lead within two minutes of the restart.

Moore met Davies’ free-kick and his skewed shot fell into the path of Ramsey, who lifted the ball over Gulasci and into the roof of the net from a tight angle.

Bale was inches away from adding another with a free-kick on the edge of the box as Wales piled on the pressure and the Hungary fans reacted by throwing some flares.

Ramsey almost completed his hat-trick after James surged down the left, but Gulacsi stuck out a leg to prevent the ball from arrowing into the bottom corner of his net.

But Wales saw the game out comfortably and the celebrations could begin.

 

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