18:49
Niklas Landin leaves his goal area to make a save and the action is reviewed - it results in a penalty, taken successfully by Aleix Gómez against Kevin Møller in the latter's first moments on court. Denmark lead 11:9.
18:40
Spain are having to play catch-up against the powerful Danish side. Looking nicely rested after their day off on Wednesday, Mikkel Hansen and Mathias Gidsel are leading the scoring for the world champions with two goals apiece, or half of the current total.
But it's really Niklas Landin who has made the difference. He just keeps pulling off save after save after save.
18:35
The pace has picked up and we've had the same number of goals in the last five minutes as in the first 10. The goalkeepers' efficiency rates have dropped from ridiculous (Niklas Landin was at 72 per cent at one point) to very good, and Denmark lead 6:4.
18:26
The first 10 minutes have been very physical, with both teams defending for all they're worth - and both goalkeepers on extraordinary form with a series of excellent saves.
We've just had two goals in a matter of seconds though, giving Denmark a 3:2 lead.
18:20
Spain's first couple of attacks have not gone to plan - the first one saw them lose the ball in seconds, and there was a turnover in the second one too. They got a shot away in the third but it was weak and rolled past Niklas Landin's feet. However, Denmark aren't having much more luck, also suffering a couple of turnovers - but they did secure a penalty, which Mikkel Hansen scored.
18:09
There's a bit of extra excitement in the air in Budapest, with more screens and pyrotechnics as the teams are announced. 61 matches have been played at the EHF EURO 2022 - these last four are the ones which really count!
18:00
So the delayed first semi-final will throw off in 15 minutes. Both sides are back-to-back champions of a major competition: Spain won the EHF EURO 2020 and 2018, while Denmark raised the trophies at the World Championships in 2021 and 2019. However, Spain have not won an official match against Denmark since 2015, when they knocked Denmark out in the World Championship quarter-final stage and Denmark won both the World Championship 2021 and Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games semi-finals against Spain — 35:33 and 27:23, respectively.
Although Denmark's perfect EHF EURO 2022 campaign stuttered on Wednesday when they lost to France they have generally made things look easy this tournament. Spain have ground out several hard results, but they're here, and they have a strong record at the EURO.
17:49
Another update: semi-final 2 will now throw off at 20:45 CET.
17:43
The first semi-final has been delayed 15 minutes and will now throw off at 18:15 CET.
17:29 | FULL-TIME
ICELAND 33:34 NORWAY
The seconds are counting down, and Harald Reinkind grabs his moment and shoots - the ball lands just as the buzzer goes off. The Spanish referees check it and confirm it is good. Norway have won a thriller, and booked their place in the World Championship next year. It's not the medal they wanted, but they're clearly delighted with the result. Remember in 2020 they lost the semi-final to Croatia in a very similar fashion.
Iceland's Ómar Ingi Magnusson, who remains the top scorer of the tournament for now, is named Grundfos Player of the Match but it is scant consolation for a team who look devastated. But it's still their best performance at an EHF EURO since 2014 and for a young side, with Covid hindering their campaign, they can go home heads high.
17:24
Norway earn a penalty, and Sander Sagosen nets it to give Norway a 33:32 lead.
17:21
Spain are watching from the tunnel, eager to start their warm-up, but this match ain't over - 32:32 with three minutes of this period of extra-time left.
17:18
The first five minutes of extra-time have seen a flurry of goals - each team scoring three times. Janus Dadi Smarason got two of Iceland's, with Ýmir Gíslason netting the first. Norway's have come from Sander Sagosen, Harald Reinkind and Christian O'Sullivan.
17:08
We're into extra time! Iceland steal the ball and Elvar Jónsson tries a shot into the empty Norwegian goal - and it misses. He is clearly gutted and gets some hugs from his teammates.
There's now a short break before we start again. A lot can happen in 10 minutes of handball.
17:05
The Icelandic attack fails and, with 18 seconds left, Christian Berge takes his final timeout.
17:04
There are 39 seconds left, Iceland have possession, and it's 27:27. Tactician Gudmundur Gudmundsson calls a timeout ...
17:00
We're level at 26:26. If full-time ends in a draw, two five-minute halves of extra-time are played; if it's still a draw after that, there's another two five-minute halves of extra-time. If it's still level then, we go to penalties.
16:52
Iceland levelled the match at 24:24 in the 49th minute. A timeout called by Christian Berge was followed by a swift Sander Sagosen goal and the score has remained 24:25 since then, with several saves at both ends, turnovers, a suspension for Iceland and a lot of battling for the ball. Last eight minutes.
16:46
Iceland's 19th goal of the match was their 2,000th EHF EURO goal in history - and it was scored by their top scorer this tournament, Ómar Ingi Magnusson, who is now the clear leader in the competition with 56 goals so far.
16:44
Norway have lost Sebastian Barthold to a red card after he got in Sigvaldi Gudjonsson's way while he was shooting - it went to video replay and he was then disqualified. Has the momentum swung Iceland's way?
16:38
Sander Sagosen is suspended for fouling Elvar Jónsson and Ómar Ingi Magnusson has a chance to get Iceland back within two with a penalty.
Gudmundur Gudmundsson has replaced Viktor Hallgrímsson with Agust Elí Björgvinsson for the moment.
16:30
Iceland have started better and have pulled back three goals in the first five minutes of the second half.
16:14 | HALF-TIME
ICELAND 12:16 NORWAY
Norway have made life a bit tricky for Iceland in the first half with some stiff defence, preventing them from shooting as much as the Norwegians half. Luckily for Iceland, Viktor Hallgrímsson is having a solid outing again, as Courtney Gahan assesses - Norway have a lead, but it's not unassailable.