Croatia overcame some nerves and a stubborn Armenia team to win 1-0 and secure the last automatic qualifying spot for next year’s European Championship.
The Croats needed a win to guarantee qualification along with Group D winner Turkey. But it was tense in Zagreb until midfielder Ante Budimir headed in Borna Sosa’s cross in the 43rd minute.
The celebrations were tinged with relief for 38-year-old midfielder Luka Modric and a Croatia team that had 23 attempts on goal.
A slipup would have given Wales hope if it beat Turkey in Cardiff, but coach Rob Page’s team drew 1-1. Neco Williams put the Wales ahead early before attacking midfielder Yusuf Yazici equalized with a penalty in the 70th.
The top two finishers from each of the 10 groups advance, while host Germany was automatically qualified.
Wales now hopes to be one of the three teams qualifying via the playoffs in March with 12 teams involved.
Elsewhere, France’s perfect record in qualifying came to an end when it drew 2-2 at Greece in Athens. Kylian Mbappé hit the crossbar in the final seconds after coming off the bench for World Cup runner-up France.
After conceding a record 14 goals to France, tiny Gibraltar lost 6-0 at home to the already qualified Netherlands.
Forward Calvin Stengs scored a hat trick, while midfielders Mats Wieffer and Teun Koopmeiners each scored before striker Cody Gapko completed the scoring.
Gibraltar finished qualifying with 41 goals conceded in eight games and none scored. In comparison, two-time European champion France netted 29 goals and allowed three.
Group I winner Romania beat visiting Switzerland 1-0 in a match with nothing at stake since both had already qualified to Euro 2024. Centre forward Denis Alibec scored the only goal early in the second half.
In the other Group I matches, third-place Israel won 2-0 at Andorra thanks to an own goal and a late effort from midfielder Gadi Kinda to finish three points ahead of Belarus, which won 1-0 at Kosovo courtesy of forward Dmitri Antilevski’s effort late in the first half.
QUALIFIED TEAMS
Along with Germany, the qualified nations are Albania, Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Croatia, Denmark, England, France, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Romania, Scotland, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland and Turkey.