Football fans mock as England dumped out of Europe twice

Just days after English voters steered UK towards Brexit, England provided another shock as they crashed out of Euros

Wayne Rooney reacts as Dele Alli rests his foot on the ball. PHOTO: AFP

NICE:
England scored an ignominious double on Monday, becoming the first country to be dumped out of Europe twice in a week and in the process losing both its prime minister and national football team manager.

Just days after English voters steered the United Kingdom towards a "Brexit" from the European Union, England provided another shock, crashing out of the Euro 2016 competition to Iceland - the smallest country ever to appear in a major tournament.

"We embarrassed ourselves three of four days ago in the referendum, we've embarrassed ourselves now. It's a really, really sad time to be English," lamented English football fan Alex in the French city of Nice.

Hodgson quits as England boss after Iceland humiliation

"Brexit2" quickly became a top trending topic on Twitter after Iceland, with its population of just 332,000 people, beat England's bevy of highly paid players 2-1.



Manager Roy Hodgson resigned within minutes, following hot on the heels of Prime Minister David Cameron who quit on Friday after the vote to leave the EU.

The referendum result stunned European leaders, sent the British pound to multi-decade lows, and cost Britain its AAA credit rating.

Iceland stun England in one of greatest ever shocks

Experts called it the biggest blow to the EU project since its inception after World War 2. The response to the football shock was dramatic too as fans contemplated the 50th anniversary of England's 1966 World Cup win in about one month's time.


Pundits ranked the defeat for a country that claims to have invented the game and is ranked 11th in the world among the worst since it lost to the amateurs of the United States in the 1950 World Cup.

"Mon dieu! Brexit X2 in a week from hell. Exit Europe, lose AAA rating, lose to Iceland in #Euro2016 utter nightmare! #Brexit2," mocked one French Twitter user.

Jokes also proliferated online about petitions being set up to get the match replayed - a mirror of the online campaign to get the referendum vote overturned by Parliament.

EU leaders push for divorce after Brexit vote

One suggested Hodgson should take over from Cameron because he would be the perfect man to lead the country out of Europe.

Another suggested the cost of the England squad should be spent on Britain's NHS public health service, a reference to the campaign promise by the "Brexit" camp that cash sent by London to Brussels each week would now be directed to the NHS instead.

The Brexit team has rowed back on that pledge since winning.



Fans of Britain's European neighbours were quick to see the link. "Both are embarrassing. Iceland really deserved the win. They played amazing football and England were completely overwhelmed for all their arrogance with their fans everywhere," said Benjamin Rimaud, 22, an Irishman from Dublin whose father is French, and who watched the game in a Paris bar.

"As far as the referendum is concerned it's embarrassing too. I don't think they realised what they were letting themselves in for."
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