Search
Close this search box.

Malta and Switzerland winners semifinals

The results of both the semifinals are known. Malta won the first one and Switzerland the 2nd one. Where the qualifiers of the 2nd semifinal were very clear (number 11, Denmark, follows with a distance), it was a close call at the first semifinal. Norway was 10th with 115 points while Croatia was 11th with 110 points.

The full results are:

1st semifinal

  1. Malta, 325 pts.
  2. Ukraine, 267 pts.
  3. Russia, 225 pts.
  4. Lithuania, 203 pts.
  5. Israel, 192 pts.
  6. Cyprus, 170 pts.
  7. Sweden, 142 pts.
  8. Azerbaijan, 138 pts.
  9. Belgium, 117 pts.
  10. Norway, 115 pts.
  11. Croatia 110 pts.
  12. Romania, 85 pts.
  13. Slovenia, 44 pts.
  14. Australia, 28 pts.
  15. North Macedonia, 23 pts.
  16. Ireland, 20 pts.

 

2nd semifinal

  1. Switzerland, 291 pts.
  2. Iceland, 288 pts.
  3. Bulgaria, 250 pts.
  4. Portugal, 239 pts.
  5. Finland, 234 pts.
  6. Greece, 184 pts.
  7. Moldova, 179 pts.
  8. Serbia, 124 pts.
  9. San Marino, 118 pts.
  10. Albania, 112 pts.
  11. Denmark, 89 pts.
  12. Austria, 66 pts.
  13. Estonia, 58 pts.
  14. Poland, 35 pts.
  15. Czech Republic, 23 pts.
  16. Georgia, 16 pts.
  17. Latvia, 14 pts.

photo credits: EBU

Share

Related news

Eurovision 2025

Eurovision 2025 in Geneva or Basel

Swiss broadcaster SRG has announced the final two candidates to host the 69th Eurovision Song Contest: Basel and Geneva. SRG has narrowed down the initial bids to these two cities. One of them will host the contest in Switzerland in May 2025, with the final decision to be made in late August. Cities had until the end of June to submit their bids based on a detailed list of requirements. Important criteria included arena facilities, public transport, sustainability, hotel availability, security, waste management, investment, event experience, and city support. A Eurovision Song Contest working group reviewed the bids from Basel, Geneva, Zurich, and Berne/Biel. This review involved both quantitative and qualitative criteria, as well as the cities’ commitment and creative ideas. The goal is to make Eurovision 2025 an unforgettable event. The accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) supervised the assessment of the bids. Following the recommendations of the working group, the ESC 2025 Steering Committee, led by SRG Director General Gilles Marchand, chose Basel and Geneva as the final candidates. Geneva, Commons.wikimedia.org Basel, Commons.wikimedia.org Switzerland will host the 69th Eurovision Song Contest in 2025 because of Nemo’s win in Malmö with the song “The Code,” which scored 591 points in the Grand Final, marking Switzerland’s third Eurovision victory. Share

Share
Read More »
Eurovision 2025
Martijn

Eurovision 2025 in Geneva or Basel

Swiss broadcaster SRG has announced the final two candidates to host the 69th Eurovision Song Contest: Basel and Geneva. SRG has narrowed down the initial bids to these two cities. One of them will host the contest in Switzerland in May 2025, with the final decision to be made in late August. Cities had until the end of June to submit their bids based on a detailed list of requirements. Important criteria included arena facilities, public transport, sustainability, hotel availability, security, waste management, investment, event experience, and city support. A Eurovision Song Contest working group reviewed the bids from Basel, Geneva, Zurich, and Berne/Biel. This review involved both quantitative and qualitative criteria, as well as the cities’ commitment and creative ideas. The goal is to make Eurovision 2025 an unforgettable event. The accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) supervised the assessment of the bids. Following the recommendations of the working group, the ESC 2025 Steering Committee, led by SRG Director General Gilles Marchand, chose Basel and Geneva as the final candidates. Geneva, Commons.wikimedia.org Basel, Commons.wikimedia.org Switzerland will host the 69th Eurovision Song Contest in 2025 because of Nemo’s win in Malmö with the song “The Code,” which scored 591 points in the Grand Final, marking Switzerland’s third Eurovision victory. Share

Share
Read More »