Denmark will not be at the World Cup this summer. They were, until extra time on March 31 in Prague, when the Czech Republic equalized a late Joachim Andersen header to send the playoff to penalties. Denmark missed. Czechia took the slot. Brian Riemer's team flew home to a country that has been here before — the 1992 Euro miracle remains one of the great underdog stories in any sport, but Denmark has only been to six World Cups in 60 years, and the heartbreak of qualifying-round exits is a familiar Scandinavian sweater.
This is the country that produced Michael Laudrup (the most graceful player most Americans have never watched), Peter Schmeichel (Manchester United's loudest goalkeeper ever), and now Christian Eriksen — whose cardiac arrest on a field in Copenhagen at Euro 2020 was the most frightening live sports moment most of us will ever watch, and whose recovery and continued top-flight career is one of soccer's quiet ongoing miracles. He'll likely retire from international football now without one more World Cup. That's the cost.
If you're looking for a team to root for in their absence, Denmark fans tend to pick the country that beat them or, more romantically, an underdog. They will be quietly cheering Norway because of the Scandinavian solidarity, and quietly cheering against England because, well, watch a Premier League match — they are ready to be cheered against. Light a candle for Eriksen. Pour a Carlsberg. Move on.