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England, Portugal and Belgium among top seeds for Euro 2016 draw
UEFA has confirmed the seedings for the Euro 2016 finals draw, to be held on 12 December.
UEF announced the seedings for the Euro 2016 finals draw in November, with England, Belgium and Portugal all included in Pot One.
World champion Germany is also named among the top seeds, along with Euro 2012 winner Spain and host nation France, which will automatically be drawn in Group A.
Italy - despite winning qualifying Group H - is in Pot Two, along with Switzerland, Russia, Austria and Croatia. Bosnia-Herzegovina will join it should it win its play-off tie, while Ukraine will take the remaining slot if it wins and Mehmed Bazdarevic's side loses, with Czech Republic in line for the position should both teams suffer defeat and it wins.
Iceland, Wales, Albania and Northern Ireland are confirmed in Pot Four, while the remaining places will depend upon play-off results and the impact theuy have on the respective teams' UEFA coefficient rankings.
"The national team coefficients are calculated on a country's recent results. In the current rankings, 20 per cent weighting is given to UEFA Euro 2012 results (qualifying/final tournament), and 40% each to the 2014 FIFA World Cup (qualifying/final tournament) and UEFA Euro 2016 (qualifying)," UEFA confirmed.
The seedings for the play-off ties - to be held next month - have also been decided, with Bosnia-Herzegovina, Sweden, Ukraine and Hungary designated as the seeded teams. They will each face one of the Republic of Ireland, Norway, Denmark or Slovenia.
Poland, Slovakia, Turkey and Romania are the four remaining qualified sides who must wait for the completion of the play-offs before knowing their seeding for the finals draw, which takes place on December 12 in Paris.
Speaking after the 3-0 win over Lithuania which confirmed England would earn a place among the top seeds, Roy Hodgson admitted it could prove valuable to his side's chances in France next year.
"If it's true that this victory will ensure we're seeded for the Euros I think that's important too," the England manager said to ITV. "More and more we see in European football how hard it is to get results.
"All games are won by the odd goal, the really big teams are having to work harder and the teams we don't maybe rank as highly are getting tougher and better organised."