Greece defeats Georgia, 2-1

Greece defeats Georgia, 2-1

Published Oct. 11, 2011 1:00 a.m. ET

Greece reached its third straight European Championship on Tuesday after substitute Giorgos Fotakis and veteran Angelos Charisteas scored late goals to secure a 2-1 win over Georgia in their final qualifier.

Fotakis blasted an equalizer past Georgia goalkeeper Nukri Revishvili from outside the area in the 79th minute and Charisteas added the winner six minutes later.

The 2004 champions won Group F ahead with 24 points, two better than Croatia which beat Latvia 2-0 to secure at least a spot in next month's playoff. A draw would have been enough to put Greece through to next year's tournament in Poland and Ukraine.

Greece ensured its place despite David Targamadze putting the Georgians ahead after 19 minutes at the Mikheil Meskhi stadium. The Georgia striker's pinpoint free kick bounced past Greek goalkeeper Alexandros Tzorvas into goal.

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The Greeks, missing five key players through injury and suspensions, lacked imagination and were unable to dent Georgia's defense with defender Nikos Spyropoulos clearing off the line in the 58th.

But the game turned in Greece's favor when the hosts lost Targamadze to injury in the second half. Coach Temuri Ketsbaia had already made all three substitutions to leave his team struggling with 10 men for the last 20 minutes.

Greece is unbeaten in the the 16 games since coach Fernando Santos took over after last year's World Cup.

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Lineups:

Georgia: Nukri Revishvili, Shota Grigalashvili (Aleksander Iashvili, 51), Guram Kashia, Kakha Kaladze, Aleksandr Amisulashvili, Zurab Khizanishvili, Otar Martsvaladze, Jaba Kankava (Ucha Lobzhanidze, 41), Levan Mchedlidze (Alexander Gurili, 66), Levan Kobiashvili, David Targamadze.

Greece: Alexandros Tzorvas, Nikos Spyropoulos, Alexandros Tziolis (Giorgos Fotakis, 56), Angelos Charisteas, Giorgos Karagounis, Loukas Vyntra, Dimitris Salpingidis (Stephanos Athanasiadis, 68), Fanis Gekas (Panagiotis Kone, 90), Sokratis Papastathopoulos, Costas Katsouranis, Kyriakos Papadopoulos.

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