Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest 2014

Eurovision Song Contest 2014
Country Moldova
National selection
Selection processO melodie pentru Europa 2014
Selection date(s)Semi-finals:
11 March 2014
13 March 2014
Final:
15 March 2014
Selected artist(s)Cristina Scarlat
Selected song"Wild Soul"
Selected songwriter(s)
  • Ivan Akulov
  • Lidia Scarlat
Finals performance
Semi-final resultFailed to qualify (16th)
Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄2013 2014 2015►

Moldova participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2014 with the song "Wild Soul" written by Ivan Aculov and Lidia Scarlat. The song was performed by Cristina Scarlat. The Moldovan broadcaster TeleRadio-Moldova (TRM) organised the national final O melodie pentru Europa 2014 in order to select the Moldovan entry for the 2014 contest in Copenhagen, Denmark. 64 entries competed to represent Moldova in Copenhagen, with 24 being shortlisted to participate in the televised national final after auditioning in front of a jury panel. After two semi-finals and a final which took place in March 2014, "Wild Soul" performed by Cristina Scarlat emerged as the winner after gaining the most points following the combination of votes from a jury panel and a public televote.

Moldova was drawn to compete in the first semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 6 May 2014. Performing during the show in position 11, "Wild Soul" was not announced among the top 10 entries of the first semi-final and therefore did not qualify to compete in the final. It was later revealed that Moldova placed sixteenth (last) out of the 16 participating countries in the semi-final with 13 points.

Background

[edit]

Prior to the 2014 Contest, Moldova had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest nine times since its first entry in 2005.[1] The nation's best placing in the contest was sixth, which it achieved in 2005 with the song "Boonika bate doba" performed by Zdob și Zdub. Other than their debut entry, to this point, Moldova's only other top ten placing at the contest was achieved in 2007 where "Fight" performed by Natalia Barbu placed tenth. In the 2013 contest, "O mie" performed by Aliona Moon qualified Moldova to compete in the final and placed eleventh.

The Moldovan national broadcaster, TeleRadio-Moldova (TRM), broadcast the event within Moldova and organised the selection process for the nation's entry. TRM confirmed their intentions to participate at the 2014 Eurovision Song Contest on 22 November 2013.[2] Moldova has selected their entry via a national selection show since 2008, a procedure that was continued for their 2014 participation.[3]

Before Eurovision

[edit]

O melodie pentru Europa 2014

[edit]

O melodie pentru Europa 2014 was the national final format developed by TRM in order to select Moldova's entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2014. The event included two semi-finals and a final to be held on 11, 13 and 15 March 2014, respectively. All shows in the competition were broadcast on Moldova 1, Radio Moldova and Radio Moldova Tineret as well as online via the broadcaster's official website trm.md and the official Eurovision Song Contest website eurovision.tv.[4][5]

Format

[edit]

The selection of the competing entries for the national final and ultimately the Moldovan Eurovision entry took place over three rounds. The first round occurred on 25 January 2014 where a jury panel shortlisted forty entries from the received submissions based on criteria such as the quality of the melody and composition, vocals and manner of the performance and the originality of the song, however, TRM decided that the remaining 24 entries would also proceed to the second round due to a technical mistake.[6][7] The second round was a live audition of the 64 entries in front of a jury panel that took place on 1 February 2014. Entries were assessed on criteria such as voice quality, stage presence and strength of the composition.[8] The panel selected 24 semi-finalists to proceed to the third round, the televised national final. 12 semi-finalists competed in each semi-final on 11 and 13 March 2014. Eight songs qualified to the final from each semi-final; seven of the qualifiers qualified based on the combined votes from an expert jury and public televoting results, while the eighth qualifier in each semi-final was the entry that achieved the highest televote score from the remaining entries after a second round of public televoting took place during an after-show. The sixteen qualifying entries competed in the final on 15 March 2014 where the winner was selected by the 50/50 combination of an expert jury vote and a public televote. In the event of a tie, the entry that receives the highest score from the expert jury vote was declared the winner.[9]

Competing entries

[edit]

Artists and composers had the opportunity to submit their entries between 26 December 2013 and 23 January 2014. Artists were required to be of Moldovan nationality, while songwriters could hold any nationality. Artists could submit more than one song, however, if they were chosen as a semi-finalist with more than one song, the artist would have to choose one entry to continue with in the competition.[9] At the conclusion of the submission deadline, 64 valid entries were received by the broadcaster. A jury consisting of Anatol Chiriac (composer), Valentin Dânga (composer), Nelly Ciobanu (singer, 2009 Moldovan Eurovision entrant), Marcel Ștefăneț (conductor and instrumentalist), Aliona Triboi (singer and musicologist), Andrei Sava (composer) and Angela Rudenco (musicologist, Radio Moldova editor and presenter) initially selected 40 out of the 64 received entries to proceed to the audition round, however TRM ultimately decided to include all received entries to proceed to the auditions after an appeal by three of the artists regarding the rules of the competition due to a technical mistake in the initial screening process.[6][7]

The live audition round took place on 1 February 2014 at Casa Radio in Chișinău where 24 semi-finalists were selected to advance. The auditions were broadcast online via trm.md. The jury panel that evaluated the songs during the live auditions and selected the 24 semi-finalists consisted of Anatol Chiriac (composer), Valentin Dânga (composer), Nelly Ciobanu (singer and 2009 Moldovan Eurovision entrant), Aliona Triboi (singer and musicologist), Andrei Sava (composer), Alex Calancea (instrumentalist and producer), Ilona Stepan (conductor), Igor Cobileanski (director) and Tatiana Postolachi (lyricist).[10][11] "Is This The Way (You Want Me)" performed by Ray Gligor and "Take a Look at Me Now" performed by Nicollette were withdrawn from the competition in favour of both songs competing in the 2014 Lithuanian Eurovision national final and therefore the artists did not attend the auditions.[8] The 24 semi-finalists were allocated to one of the two semi-finals, each containing 12 entries, in a draw that was held on 27 February 2014 at TRM Headquarters in Chișinău.[12] Among the semi-finalists was 2010 Moldovan Eurovision entrant Flux Light (Olia Tira).

On 12 February 2014, Boris Covali withdrew his song "Flying" from the competition after a managerial decision and replaced with "Perfect Day", which was also performed during the audition round but not selected for the semi-finals.[13] Controversy later arose surrounding one of the submitted songs "Taking Care of a Broken Heart" performed by Felicia Dunaf, which was later entered into the Swedish Eurovision selection Melodifestivalen 2016 to be performed by Anna Book in Swedish under the title "Himmel för två". The song was therefore disqualified from the competition as it had already been published online and performed publicly during the auditions.[14]

Artist Song Songwriter(s)
Alina Sorochina "Ascultă-mă tăcere" Marian Stârcea, Radmila Popovici-Paraschiv
Ana Cernicova "Dragostea divină" Ana Cernicova
Anna Gulko "Happy Tomorrow" Anna Gulko
Aurel Chirtoacă "Urme de iubiri" Aurel Chirtoacă, Viorica Nagacevschi
Boris Covali "Flying" Michael James Down, Primož Poglajen, Jonas Gladnikoff, Dimitri Stassos
Boris Covali "Perfect Day" Brandon Stone, Jodie Rose
Carolina Gorun "Turn the Tide" Mathias Kallenberger, Andreas Berlin, Andreas Anastasiou, Lawrence Bridge, Stephen Rudden
Cristina Scarlat "Wild Soul" Ivan Aculov, Lidia Scarlat
Curly "Your Recovery" Grigore Chirsanov, Luca Inga
Dana Markitan "Queen of the Dancefloor" Nikola Radunović, Dejan Nikodijević
Diana Brescan "Hallelujah" Eugen Doibani, Radmila Popovici-Paraschiv
Diana Staver "One and All" Hannah Mancini, Raay, Charlie Mason
Doiniţa Gherman "Energy" Doiniţa Gherman, Vadim Luchin, Cătălin Gondiu
Edict "Forever" Valeriu Cataraga, Sonyat Cioceacova
Felicia Dunaf "The Way I Do" Eugen Doibani
Flux Light "Never Stop No" Alexandru Buhnă
Glam Girls "You Believed In Me" Niklas Peterson, Bridget Benenate, Mikael Albertsson, Andreas Anastasiou
Lana Lights "Solar Wind" Serghei Forman, Ana Colesnicov
Lucia S. "Frozen" Vitalie Catană, Gloria Gorceag
Margarita Ciorici and Metafora "Vis" Alexandru Gorbos, Vica Demici
Mikaella "Follow Your Dreams" Vladislav Bobotrîn
Paralela 47 "Fragmente" Paralela 47, Alecu Matrăguna
Rodica Olişevschi "Without You" Rodica Olişevschi
Tatiana Heghea "I'm Yours" David Daieres
Vlad Ray "Freedom" Vladislav Bobotrîn

Shows

[edit]

Semi-finals

[edit]

The two semi-finals took place on 11 and 13 March 2014 at TRM Studio 2 in Chișinău. The first semi-final was hosted by Evelina Vîrlan and Sergiu Beznițchi with Daniela Babici reporting from the green room, while the second semi-final was hosted by Nicu Ţurcanu and Djulieta Gânu with Vlad Ardovan reporting from the green room. In each semi-final twelve acts competed and seven songs qualified to the final based on the combination of votes from a public televote and the votes of an expert jury, while an eighth qualifier was selected by an additional televote between the remaining non-qualifiers and was revealed during a post semi-final discussion show. The jury that voted in the semi-finals included Alex Calancea (instrumentalist and producer), Andrei Sava (composer), Cristina Pintilie (singer), Tatiana Postolachi (lyricist), Ruslan Ţaranu (singer/composer), Ilona Stepan (conductor), Nelly Ciobanu (singer, 2009 Moldovan Eurovision entrant), Anatol Chiriac (composer) and Ina Jeltova (journalist).[15][16]

In addition to the performances of the competing entries, Nelly Ciobanu, 2008 Moldovan Eurovision entrant Geta Burlacu, 2012 Moldovan Eurovision entrant Pasha Parfeny and singers Cristina Croitoru, Gicu Cimbir, Irina Kitoroagă and Karizma performed as guests in the first semi-final, while the band Millenium performed as a guest in the second semi-final.

  First round (jury and televote) qualifier   Second round (televote-only) qualifier

Semi-final 1 – 11 March 2014
Draw Artist Song Jury Televote Total Place
Votes Points Votes Points
1 Boris Covali "Perfect Day" 98 12 1,170 12 24 1
2 Flux Light "Never Stop No" 74 7 375 5 12 4
3 Alina Sorochina "Ascultă-mă tăcere" 50 3 105 0 3 10
4 Vlad Ray "Freedom" 40 2 167 3 5 9
5 Felicia Dunaf "The Way I Do" 71 6 495 6 12 4
6 Doinița Gherman "Energy" 54 4 869 8 12 4
7 Ana Cernicova "Dragostea divină" 80 8 596 7 15 2
8 Diana Brescan "Hallelujah" 98 10 235 4 14 3
9 Tatiana Heghea "I'm Yours" 21 0 1,046 10 10 7
10 Rodica Olișevschi "Without You" 23 0 56 0 0 12
11 Paralela 47 "Fragmente" 60 5 123 1 6 8
12 Carolina Gorun "Turn the Tide" 33 1 139 2 3 10
Detailed Jury Votes
Draw Song A. Calancea A. Sava C. Pintilie T. Postolachi R. Ţaranu I. Stepan N. Ciobanu A. Chiriac I. Jeltova Total
1 "Perfect Day" 12 12 11 11 11 11 11 10 9 98
2 "Never Stop No" 10 9 10 7 5 7 9 9 8 74
3 "Ascultă-mă tăcere" 7 6 5 3 6 9 3 6 5 50
4 "Freedom" 6 4 4 8 8 3 1 3 3 40
5 "The Way I Do" 5 11 9 6 9 8 4 8 11 71
6 "Energy" 8 7 7 5 4 2 7 7 7 54
7 "Dragostea divină" 4 8 2 10 12 10 12 12 10 80
8 "Hallelujah" 9 10 12 12 10 12 10 11 12 98
9 "I'm Yours" 2 2 3 1 1 1 8 1 2 21
10 "Without You" 3 1 1 4 2 4 2 2 4 23
11 "Fragmente" 11 5 6 9 7 6 5 5 6 60
12 "Turn the Tide" 1 3 8 2 3 5 6 4 1 33
Semi-final 2 – 13 March 2014
Draw Artist Song Jury Televote Total Place
Votes Points Votes Points
1 Cristina Scarlat "Wild Soul" 102 10 554 10 20 1
2 Anna Gulko "Happy Tomorrow" 45 2 169 3 5 11
3 Curly "Your Recovery" 79 8 497 8 16 3
4 Diana Staver "One and All" 9 0 493 7 7 6
5 Dana Markitan "Queen of the Dancefloor" 53 5 134 1 6 9
6 Aurel Chirtoacă "Urme de iubiri" 75 7 120 0 7 6
7 Edict "Forever" 47 3 250 5 8 5
8 Margarita Ciorici and Metafora "Vis" 43 1 428 6 7 8
9 Lucia S. "Frozen" 103 12 243 4 16 3
10 Mikaella "Follow Your Dreams" 73 6 2,126 12 18 2
11 Glam Girls "You Believed In Me" 49 4 141 2 6 9
12 Lana Lights "Solar Wind" 24 0 41 0 0 12
Detailed Jury Votes
Draw Song A. Calancea A. Sava C. Pintilie T. Postolachi R. Ţaranu I. Stepan N. Ciobanu A. Chiriac I. Jeltova Total
1 "Wild Soul" 12 12 12 11 10 11 11 12 11 102
2 "Happy Tomorrow" 5 5 5 4 8 4 6 5 3 45
3 "Your Recovery" 11 10 10 9 6 9 10 6 8 79
4 "One and All" 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 9
5 "Queen of the Dancefloor" 9 4 9 8 3 7 7 2 4 53
6 "Urme de iubiri" 7 9 7 10 11 10 8 7 6 75
7 "Forever" 4 6 6 6 4 3 3 8 7 47
8 "Vis" 3 2 2 7 5 6 4 9 5 43
9 "Frozen" 10 11 11 12 12 12 12 11 12 103
10 "Follow Your Dreams" 6 8 8 5 9 8 9 10 10 73
11 "You Believed In Me" 8 7 4 3 7 2 5 4 9 49
12 "Solar Wind" 2 3 3 2 2 5 2 3 2 24

Final

[edit]

The final took place on 15 March 2014 at TRM Studio 2 in Chișinău, hosted by Iurie Gologan and Olivia Furtună with Vlad Ardovan and Daniela Babici reporting from the green room. The sixteen songs that qualified from the preceding two semi-finals competed and the winner was selected based on the combination of a public televote and the votes of an expert jury. The jury that voted in the final included Mihail Culev (composer), Victoria Bucun (choreographer), Petru Vutcărău (director and actor), Nelly Ciobanu (singer, 2009 Moldovan Eurovision entrant), Tatiana Postolachi (lyricist), Ilona Stepan (conductor), Eugen Negruţă (musician), Liviu Știrbu (composer), Anatol Chiriac (composer), Andrei Sava (composer) and Max Chisaru (composer, lyricist and producer). In addition to the performances of the competing entries, 2013 Moldovan Eurovision entrant Aliona Moon, the ballet company Free Dance and acoustic funk band Cuibul performed as guests. "Wild Soul" performed by Cristina Scarlat was selected as the winner.[17][18]

Final – 15 March 2014
Draw Artist Song Jury Televote Total Place
Votes Points Votes Points
1 Diana Staver "One and All" 0 0 459 0 0 14
2 Doinița Gherman "Energy" 47 3 1,622 6 9 5
3 Boris Covali "Perfect Day" 111 8 11,978 12 20 2
4 Tatiana Heghea "I'm Yours" 7 0 1,192 3 3 12
5 Lucia S. "Frozen" 114 10 3,048 7 17 3
6 Margarita Ciorici and Metafora "Vis" 35 0 433 0 0 14
7 Ana Cernicova "Dragostea divină" 61 6 1,220 5 11 4
8 Edict "Forever" 35 0 157 0 0 14
9 Flux Light "Never Stop No" 62 7 850 1 8 6
10 Aurel Chirtoacă "Urme de iubiri" 59 5 162 0 5 8
11 Paralela 47 "Fragmente" 39 1 307 0 1 13
12 Diana Brescan "Hallelujah" 57 4 636 0 4 9
13 Mikaella "Follow Your Dreams" 34 0 3,768 8 8 6
14 Curly "Your Recovery" 39 2 950 2 4 9
15 Cristina Scarlat "Wild Soul" 122 12 8,305 10 22 1
16 Felicia Dunaf "The Way I Do" 36 0 1,197 4 4 9
Detailed Jury Votes
Draw Song M. Culev V. Bucun P. Vutcărău N. Ciobanu T. Postolachi I. Stepan E. Negruţă L. Știrbu A. Chiriac A. Sava M. Chisaru Total
1 "One and All" 0
2 "Energy" 9 3 6 7 9 5 4 4 47
3 "Perfect Day" 7 9 10 10 10 11 11 10 10 11 12 111
4 "I'm Yours" 5 1 1 7
5 "Frozen" 10 12 12 12 12 10 12 9 8 10 7 114
6 "Vis" 6 7 7 1 1 7 6 35
7 "Dragostea divină" 12 5 8 2 5 5 11 7 6 61
8 "Forever" 4 2 4 2 8 1 5 9 35
9 "Never Stop No" 1 5 6 7 6 3 7 2 5 9 11 62
10 "Urme de iubiri" 3 3 4 4 3 9 8 12 2 6 5 59
11 "Fragmente" 4 8 2 5 7 6 6 1 39
12 "Hallelujah" 8 1 9 9 8 3 9 8 2 57
13 "Follow Your Dreams" 6 9 1 4 7 4 3 34
14 "Your Recovery" 2 10 2 5 8 2 3 4 3 39
15 "Wild Soul" 11 11 11 11 11 12 10 11 12 12 10 122
16 "The Way I Do" 8 1 3 6 4 1 3 2 8 36

Promotion

[edit]

Cristina Scarlat made several appearances across Europe to specifically promote "Wild Soul" as the Moldovan Eurovision entry. On 31 March, Cristina Scarlat performed during the Eurovision in Concert event which was held at the Melkweg venue in Amsterdam, Netherlands and hosted by Cornald Maas and Sandra Reemer.[19] On 20 April, Scarlat performed the final version of "Wild Soul", featuring digitally adapted violine and dubstep elements, during the Russian Pre-Party event, which was organised by ESCKAZ and held at the Karlson restaurant in Moscow, Russia.[20]

At Eurovision

[edit]
Cristina Scarlat presenting herself and "Wild Soul" at the Eurovision Song Contest 2014

According to Eurovision rules, all nations with the exceptions of the host country and the "Big Five" (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom) are required to qualify from one of two semi-finals in order to compete for the final; the top ten countries from each semi-final progress to the final. The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) split up the competing countries into six different pots based on voting patterns from previous contests, with countries with favourable voting histories put into the same pot. On 20 January 2014, a special allocation draw was held which placed each country into one of the two semi-finals, as well as which half of the show they would perform in. Moldova was placed into the first semi-final, to be held on 6 May 2014, and was scheduled to perform in the second half of the show.[21]

Once all the competing songs for the 2014 contest had been released, the running order for the semi-finals was decided by the shows' producers rather than through another draw, so that similar songs were not placed next to each other. Moldova was set to perform in position 11, following the entry from Belgium and before the entry from San Marino.[22]

The two semi-finals and the final were televised in Moldova on Moldova 1 as well as broadcast via radio on Radio Moldova. All broadcasts featured commentary by Daniela Babici.[23][24] The Moldovan spokesperson, who announced the Moldovan votes during the final, was Olivia Furtună.[25]

Semi-final

[edit]
Cristina Scarlat during a rehearsal before the first semi-final

Cristina Scarlat took part in technical rehearsals on 29 April and 2 May, followed by dress rehearsals on 5 and 6 May. This included the jury show on 9 May where the professional juries of each country watched and voted on the competing entries.[26]

The Moldovan performance featured Cristina Scarlat dressed in a vertically split dress in blue and gold, designed by Moldovan designer Janna Berezovskaia, and performing on stage with four dancers dressed as warriors that performed choreography with elements of Samurai fighting.[27] Scarlat also partly wore a wig, which she tore off in the middle of the song accompanied by the use of a wind machine. The stage featured white lighting and LED screen projections of a dark and deep forest with dark green leaves in the beginning, which later transitioned to blossoming red poppy flowers.[27][28] The four dancers that joined Scarlat on stage are Dragos Hioara, Eugen Simac, Lilian Caraus and Vadim Bianchin.[29]

At the end of the show, Moldova was not announced among the top 10 entries in the first semi-final and therefore failed to qualify to compete in the final. It was later revealed that Moldova placed sixteenth (last) in the semi-final, receiving a total of 13 points.

Voting

[edit]

Voting during the three shows consisted of 50 percent public televoting and 50 percent from a jury deliberation. The jury consisted of five music industry professionals who were citizens of the country they represent, with their names published before the contest to ensure transparency. This jury was asked to judge each contestant based on: vocal capacity; the stage performance; the song's composition and originality; and the overall impression by the act. In addition, no member of a national jury could be related in any way to any of the competing acts in such a way that they cannot vote impartially and independently. The individual rankings of each jury member were released shortly after the grand final. In the semi-final, Moldova's vote was based on 100 percent jury voting due to either technical issues with the televoting or an insufficient number of valid votes cast during the televote period.

Following the release of the full split voting by the EBU after the conclusion of the competition, it was revealed that Moldova had placed fifteenth with both the public televote and the jury vote in the first semi-final. In the public vote, Moldova scored 14 points, while with the jury vote, Moldova scored 24 points.

Below is a breakdown of points awarded to Moldova and awarded by Moldova in the first semi-final and grand final of the contest, and the breakdown of the jury voting and televoting conducted during the two shows:

Points awarded to Moldova

[edit]
Points awarded to Moldova (Semi-final 1)[30]
Score Country
12 points
10 points
8 points
7 points
6 points  Montenegro
5 points
4 points  Albania
3 points
2 points  Ukraine
1 point  Russia

Points awarded by Moldova

[edit]

Detailed voting results

[edit]

The following members comprised the Moldovan jury:[32]

Detailed voting results from Moldova (Semi-final 1)[33]
Draw Country A. Chiriac A. Tostogan T. Postolachi N. Ciobanu I. Badicu Jury Rank Points
01  Armenia 10 12 7 12 13 12
02  Latvia 11 15 15 14 14 15
03  Estonia 9 11 14 15 15 13
04  Sweden 4 3 3 2 6 2 10
05  Iceland 15 14 13 13 11 14
06  Albania 12 6 12 9 12 11
07  Russia 1 2 1 1 1 1 12
08  Azerbaijan 5 9 4 3 3 5 6
09  Ukraine 2 4 6 4 4 3 8
10  Belgium 3 5 2 6 7 4 7
11  Moldova
12  San Marino 13 10 11 8 8 10 1
13  Portugal 6 13 9 5 9 8 3
14  Netherlands 14 7 8 10 10 9 2
15  Montenegro 7 8 5 7 5 6 5
16  Hungary 8 1 10 11 2 7 4
Detailed voting results from Moldova (Final)[34]
Draw Country A. Chiriac A. Tostogan T. Postolachi N. Ciobanu I. Badicu Jury Rank Televote Rank Combined Rank Points
01  Ukraine 4 4 3 4 5 3 3 2 10
02  Belarus 12 14 8 12 6 8 7 6 5
03  Azerbaijan 7 5 9 7 9 7 18 13
04  Iceland 24 23 26 19 24 26 25 26
05  Norway 21 18 14 24 15 20 15 19
06  Romania 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 12
07  Armenia 9 21 11 25 10 15 5 8 3
08  Montenegro 25 13 24 16 16 21 26 24
09  Poland 10 22 17 18 4 12 8 9 2
10  Greece 11 25 23 11 11 16 14 16
11  Austria 3 9 4 2 3 4 4 4 7
12  Germany 13 7 6 14 17 9 20 15
13  Sweden 2 3 2 3 7 2 6 5 6
14  France 14 26 25 26 18 25 23 25
15  Russia 5 6 5 8 8 6 2 3 8
16  Italy 20 24 20 23 19 24 19 21
17  Slovenia 19 17 21 20 20 22 21 22
18  Finland 26 16 22 21 13 23 22 23
19  Spain 16 15 7 6 25 10 16 14
20   Switzerland 15 8 10 13 26 13 10 11
21  Hungary 6 2 12 5 2 5 12 7 4
22  Malta 17 19 13 17 23 18 24 20
23  Denmark 22 10 15 15 21 17 17 18
24  Netherlands 18 20 16 10 12 14 11 12
25  San Marino 8 12 18 9 22 11 9 10 1
26  United Kingdom 23 11 19 22 14 19 13 17

References

[edit]
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