Euro 2024: England Earn Narrow Victory Over Serbia in Group C Opener

The Euros started on June 14 and have generally been entertaining thus far, although a bit predictable. There have been no major upsets, but there’s been goals in every game and Albania did a good job frustrating the Italians yesterday. Today was the biggest match so far for this particular blog, with England taking on Serbia in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. The other two Group C teams, Slovenia and Denmark, drew 1-1 in the early match of the day, which meant that the winner of this one would top the group after the first round of matches.

England were the dominant team for the first ten minutes in terms of possession, with the Serbians unable to get out of their own half. The Three Lions were passing the ball effectively, although they didn’t create many opportunities initially. That all changed on 13 minutes though, when all-world midfielder Jude Bellingham got on the end of a deflected cross from winger Bukayo Saka. There was a Serbian defender in his path, but Bellingham dove for the ball and delivered a thumping header into the top corner from about eight yards out, with Serbia keeper Vanja Milinkovic-Savic unable to do anything about it. It was England’s first attempt on goal and really their first incisive move of the match, with Saka doing especially well to beat his marker to the end line and get a cross in. Bellingham is on an absolute tear right now for club and country, and the sky is the limit for the 20 year old from the West Midlands. His contributions will be vital towards England’s success at this tournament.

It was 1-0 after that and England continued to dominate possession until the last five minutes of the half or so. Serbia made some adjustments tactically and began playing more aggressively, although they did not fashion many good chances. Aside from a slightly inaccurate but powerful shot from striker Aleksandr Mitrovic, the Eastern European side looked fairly toothless. The only major complaint from any England fans would have been the lack of a second goal in the first half. They had several opportunities to put the match to bed, but they failed to do so and it remained 1-0 at halftime.

Serbia manager Dragan Stojkavic made some more changes at halftime, and the Serbs continued with their aggressive play to try and find an equalizer. England were lackluster in the first ten minutes of the second half or so, and Serbia really grew into the game. They still struggled to create clear chances though, as England were defending very well. Every time they’d get close, an England defender would step up and clear the danger. Good games in particular from center backs Marc Guehi and John Stones. Serbia felt they should have had a penalty on the hour mark after a collision in the box, but the referee did not give anything and VAR did not intervene.

As the second half wore on, it became clear that England manager Gareth Southgate was happy to sit on his side’s 1-0 lead. He made several defensive substitutions by bringing on midfielders Conor Gallagher and Kobbie Mainoo, and also brought on winger Jarrod Bowen for Saka. Bowen was impressive once he came on, and he almost got an assist if not for Savic parrying a header from striker Harry Kane onto the bar. Bringing on Bowen was the correct move, but I question the other subs from Southgate. He has a very conservative style of play once England have a lead, and that has bitten him in the behind before. A one-goal lead is a very narrow margin at this level of football, but he perpetually believes in England’s ability to defend that lead. Stubbornly so, at times. This style makes England dull to watch in attack on the best of days, but even more so on days like today when the opposition were hell bent on fouling England’s forwards every time they got on the ball. Kane, Bellingham, Saka, and others did well to win a number of free kicks in forward areas today.

This time (emphasis on this time), the conservative approach worked. Aside from a long-range effort from striker Dusan Vlahovic that England keeper Jordan Pickford tipped over the bar, the Serbs had very little to offer in terms of attacking threat. England won 1-0, and earned their first victory of the tournament! The lads defended well today, but Serbia had far too much possession for my liking and they were given too many opportunities to equalize.

While this was a win, Southgate has a lot to figure out. First and foremost, he needs to figure out what to do with winger/midfielder Phil Foden. Foden is not a natural left winger, and it was obvious he was not playing in his preferred position today due to him not contributing much. He is a natural attacking midfielder, but the problem there is that so is Bellingham. Foden is wonderfully talented, but he should never displace Bellingham in this team. However, that leaves limited options for him to play elsewhere. England got absolutely nothing out of the left side today in terms of production, and that is due to Foden being out of position and having little to no chemistry with left back Kieran Trippier. Foden may grow accustomed to his role on the left should he play there again, but it may take a bit of courage from Southgate to sit Foden in favor of a natural left winger, such as Anthony Gordon. Foden can come on as a sub for Bellingham, and that may be how he can help this team the most.

I also urge Southgate (in the highly unlikely event that he reads this) to not pull back and try to protect narrow leads in the future. Our players should be urged to try and retain possession while building towards a second or third goal. We can’t continue to sit back and just let other teams go at us throughout this tournament. Put simply, the other team has zero chance of scoring if they don’t have the ball! I realize it’s impossible to do this 100% of the time in a given match, but I think the main reason England got a positive result today is that Serbia are simply not very good. Outside of their two forwards and maybe a midfielder or two, they do not possess the quality and talent that England has. We should be beating teams like Serbia by two or three goals, not grinding out nervous 1-0 wins.

Of course, if we win every match from here to the final 1-0, no England fan will complain. We still won, and we’re still top of the group. Also, you never want to play your best game in the first match of a tournament. The conventional wisdom is that there should be room for improvement after the first match. However, the opposition is going to be better next time. Denmark have some question marks in defense, but they have world-class players in Cristian Eriksen, Rasmus Højlund, Andreas Christensen, and Kasper Schmeichel. England will need to be much sharper in attack than they were today. The match is next Thursday, June 20, at 9:00 a.m. PDT. With a win, England will have a superb chance of qualifying for the knockout stages.

Three Lions on the Shirts!

Red Devils Scrape By West Ham

Manchester United hosted London-based West Ham United earlier today at Old Trafford in the Premier League. With a dwindling amount of matches left before the winter break for the World Cup, it was vital for both clubs to accumulate as many points as possible. United manager Erik ten Hag named a largely unchanged side from the midweek victory over Sheriff Tiraspol. He was hoping his team would cement their grip on 5th place after Chelsea dropped points yesterday. West Ham are managed by former United manager David Moyes, who’s ten months in charge of the club directly after the departure of Sir Alex Ferguson are ones to forget for many supporters. Still though, Moyes has subsequently re-proven his ability as an effective manager for mid-table clubs. He was guaranteed to have a solid plan for frustrating United as much as possible.

United were on the front foot for most of the opening portion of the half, which has been the general trend in recent matches. It’s a testament to the structure of our midfield. ETH likes to deploy Casemiro as the defensive midfielder, which allows Christian Eriksen and Bruno Fernandes to press the opposition high up the pitch in their own area. Casemiro is so good defensively that Bruno and Eriksen don’t really have to worry about getting beaten over the top, which enables them to run straight at the opposition to recover the ball in strategically advantageous areas. The press is vital to ETH’s style of play, and it worked very well for the opening half today. The only issue, once again, was United’s finishing. Strikers Cristiano Ronaldo, Marcus Rashford, and Bruno were all either denied by Hammers keeper Łukasz Fabiański or off the mark. West Ham, for their part, were keen to sit back and defend and then use players like Saïd Benrahma, Jarrod Bowen, and Michail Antonio on the counter-attack. They also looked a threat from set pieces.

United capitalized on their dominance however on 38 minutes via a thunderous header from Rashford. Right back Diogo Dalot won a throw in from the right hand side in the attacking third, and he called Eriksen over before taking the throw and tossing it to him. Eriksen played a nifty 1-2 with Bruno before crossing the ball in the air from just inside the right side of the penalty area. Eriksen had looked up before crossing it to see Rashford running towards the back post, and Rashford leapt in the air to power home the ball back across Fabianksi for 1-0. It was an absolutely brilliant build-up and finish. Old Trafford was rocking as the halftime whistle went.

The second half got underway and almost right away there was an urgency from West Ham that was not present in the first half. It made sense to a degree, as they were now behind and had to score if they wanted to take something away from the match. They were suddenly winning thhe 50/50 balls more consistently, and admittedly United were helping them by giving the ball away at inopportune moments. But try as West Ham might, they kept running into a red wall composed of Luke Shaw, Harry Maguire. Lisandro Martinez, and Dalot. I’d like to highlight Dalot and Martinez in particular, as both were massive today. West Ham have some very large players, but it seemed like every time a defensive header or a last-ditch tackle was needed, one of those two was on-hand to deliver it. West Ham bossed the second half for the most part, but they simply could not find a way through.

The final 10 minutes and stoppage time however belonged to one man: United keeper David De Gea. West Ham realized they couldn’t work the ball into the box, so they began shooting from distance. De Gea made no fewer than three world-class saves from Antonio, Declan Rice, and Kurt Zouma late on. All three saves were as vital as Rashford’s goal. It was a very nervy finish for United, but through the collective efforts of De Gea and the back-4 they were able to grind out the result and win 1-0.

So not a flashy result or one that will be remembered for ages, but a vital result nonetheless. Three points the old-fashioned way, as it were. United now sit 5th in the Premier League table, just one point behind Newcastle in 4th but with a game in hand. If United can go into the winter break in the top-4, that would be more than satisfactory given the horrific start to the season. All credit to ETH for instilling a set of tactics that work with the players that we have. The defense has been fantastic in recent matches as well. United have not conceded a goal at Old Trafford since September 8th!

Martinez, Raphael Varane, Tyrell Malacia, and even Maguire have been a big part of that clean sheet run, but Dalot needs to be highlighted in particular today. The Portuguese right back was my Man of the Match, and his transformation under ETH has been remarkable. He came to the club with plenty of skill in the attacking phase of the game, but was extremely suspect defensively. His positioning was usually poor and he lacked a little bit of physicality in his game. All of that has changed this season and today was a fantastic example of it. His positional awareness has improved drastically, and it was his idea to call over Eriksen which eventually led to United’s goal. He was right to wave off Casemiro and take the more risky option in Eriksen. Well done today and the past few weeks, Diogo Dalot!

Rashford now has 100 goals for the club, and the United youth academy graduate is still just 25 (happy birthday Marcus!) years old. Interestingly he has never really been known as a good header of the ball, as he usually scores with his feet. But his last two goals were fantastic headers, and it’s good he’s added that skill to his resume. England manager Gareth Southgate, in attendance today, will surely have plane ticket to Qatar for Rashford at the end off November.

Up next is the biggest match of the season so far, the final Europa League group stage game against Real Sociedad in San Sebastien, Spain on Thursday. United need to win by a minimum of two goals in order to win the group, while any other result will see the Spanish side win the group and avoid the tricky play-off fixture. Only four matches left until the winter break!

Glory Glory Man United!

A Stoppage Time Winner Versus West Ham

Manchester United continued their Premier League campaign today at Old Trafford versus West Ham in the Premier League. United came into the match looking to continue the good form they showed against Brentford in midweek, but West Ham were sure to be a much tougher test. They came into this match in an impressive 4th place (given their relatively modest budget) and are helmed by former United manager David Moyes. He knows Manchester United very well in terms of the club’s philosophies and individual players’ strengths and weaknesses. United’s current manager Ralf Rangnick was looking for continued efforts from the players in terms of desire and physicality.

The first half was rather tepid from a neutral point of view. If you wanted to see a lot of goals, this was not the match for you. United really only had one clear-cut chance in the first half, and that was on 20 minutes when striker Cristiano Ronaldo just barely missed getting his head on a brilliant aerial cross from his Portuguese compatriot Bruno Fernandes. Although United did not look strong in attack, the defense was rock solid in that opening 45 minutes. West Ham were really struggling to create chances, as United were very good at winning the ball back if they ever lost it. The back 4 and the two holding midfielders were really cohesive and West Ham lost chances to score with every clearance from United.

The second half was much more entertaining, as both clubs seemed to take more risks going forward. Fred forced a fine save from West Ham keeper Alphonse Areola just 3 minutes after the kick off, and West Ham saw a shot from midfielder Jarrod Bowen go just wide of keeper David De Gea’s post just 5 minutes later. French center back Raphael Varane then came close to a goal with a header from a United corner, but his effort went over the bar. West Ham did not mark him correctly, and I think he knew that he should have scored from that position. The chances then petered out for about 20 minutes, before West Ham came close from a corner on 87 minutes. The whipped-in cross got a slight touch off the head of midfielder Tomáš Souček, but he couldn’t generate enough contact on the ball and it ended up going wide. Much like Varane’s chance though, he probably should have scored. Ronaldo then had a shot called back for offside, after which West Ham midfielder Declan Rice forced an awkward save from De Gea from a tight angle at his near post.

But then the moment came; the moment feared by all away fans when they come to Old Trafford: Fergie time. The last final few seconds before a close match ends when United can sometimes find a winner, named for our legendary former manager Sir Alex Ferguson. Alex Telles played the ball forward from his left back position, and after the ball came off a West Ham player’s head it fell straight into the path of Ronaldo. Ronaldo took a touch or two before playing in substitute striker Anthony Martial, who then made a very intelligent layoff pass to (another substitute) striker Edinson Cavani just off his left shoulder. Cavani spotted striker (and yet another substitute) Marcus Rashford streaking towards the far post, so Cavani played it to him with a crisp pass. Rashford poked it home from 3 yards out with his marker beaten, and Old Trafford erupted in celebration. A quick and decisive goal that would make both Rangnick and Ferguson very pleased to see. VAR checked to see if Cavani was offside, but when the goal was upheld Old Trafford roared again in celebration. There was no time for West Ham to respond, and United won 1-0. You have to see it to believe it!

Make no mistake, this was the best 90 minutes of football that United have played during Rangnick’s tenure as manager. He deserves all the credit in the world for his second half substitutes, as all three of them combined to score the goal. I raised my eyebrows when Martial was brought on, as he has been out of form for several months now and is believed to be close to leaving the club sometime this month. I didn’t think he would contribute much. But he, along with Cavani and Rashford, were much-needed sparks in the United attack. The most important aspect of this match though was the desire, belief, determination, and physicality on display from the Red Devils. In this sport, you always have to fight until the very end. When it’s close like it was today, things can turn in your favor (or against you) in a matter of seconds. That’s exactly what happened today. Truthfully I would have been mostly happy with a 0-0 given how the match went, but a Fergie time winner is always something to be celebrated. West Ham are tough opposition and not even the elite clubs can win every match 3-0. Sometimes you have to grind out a win, and that’s exactly what United did today.

A few final thoughts – United’s set piece and corner routines continue to be atrocious. Whatever we are doing in training when it comes to scoring from set pieces, it’s not working. In matches such as this one it’s risky to rely on a Fergie time winner, and scoring from a corner would normally be the most reliable way of getting a goal. That must improve. A big shoutout to Rashford though, who has now scored in successive matches and has scored more stoppage-time winners than anyone else in Prem history (4). Also, I want us to sign Rice as our defensive midfielder. He is truly excellent at breaking up play and United is still in desperate need of a true DM. I also like him because he’s one of England’s best players, and Manchester United needs to be a home for English talent. Time to open up the checkbook, Glazers!

United are on break for the next two weeks or so, but they resume play against Championship side Middlesbrough in the 4th Round of the FA Cup on February 4th. I am hopeful that this match serves as a confidence booster to the lads and that this form continues. United are currently 4th now after this win, but Tottenham and Arsenal still have games in hand behind us. No matter, all we can do is focus on winning and building positive momentum.

Glory Glory Man United!

A Draw – But Now Just One Point Away from the Champions League

It’s been a tumultuous few days for Manchester United, after exiting the FA Cup at the weekend in rather tepid fashion at the hands of Chelsea. I was going to write a separate post about the match, but I figured since United took the match off from playing I could take a match off from writing. It truly was a dismal performance, which was down to a combination of fatigue, injuries, a forced change in tactics, and a poor team mentality. Ultimately, after I calmed down a little bit, I realized that an FA Cup exit was worth it if it meant securing the top tier of European football next season.

I’ve discussed the importance of the Champions League before, but I think it bears explaining again. Not only is it the highest level of football in terms of level of skill, it is also very lucrative. Teams can expect an extra £20 million in revenue from the extra televised matches, and in United’s case it would mean saving an additional £22 million in rebates to Adidas, our kit maker. That £42 million could really come in handy next season for signing new players or much-needed upgrades to Old Trafford.

Thanks to Tottenham Hotspur beating Leicester last week, United were level on points with Leicester City and only a point behind Chelsea in the race for the top-4. A win would put United in strong position to secure a place in the top-4, while a draw would also be helpful but less so. The only thing that would be disastrous is a loss. The opposition today was an East London club called West Ham United, sometimes shortened to just West Ham or the Hammers. They came into the match on the lower end of the table, but knew that a draw and the resulting point would mean that they are mathematically safe from relegation this season. Their main striker Michail Antonio has been in sensational form since the restart, scoring the most goals out of anyone in the Premier League. With solid midfielders like Declan Rice, Mark Noble, and Tomas Soucek, it’s a wonder that West Ham aren’t doing better than they are.

In contrast to recent matches, United looked very sharp in the first five minutes. Marcus Rashford and Bruno Fernandes both went close to giving the Red Devils an early lead. West Ham settled in more though and grew into the game as the half wore on. United looked slow in possession and gave away the ball far too easily on many occasions – a trend that would continue throughout the match.

West Ham worryingly got the opening goal via the penalty spot from Antonio, who sent David De Gea the wrong way. No valid complaints about the penalty call. West Ham had a free kick on the edge of the penalty area, when Rice struck it towards United’s wall of players and Paul Pogba put his hands up to stop the ball from hitting him in the face. It was a clear penalty unfortunately, although I suppose it’s a natural reaction to raise one’s hands to prevent something from hitting it. Still though, Pogba should have taken it on the face. As a footballer, that’s part of the game. Pogba, for his part, apologized to the team after the match so he clearly knew he screwed up. Down 1-0 at halftime though was still terrible and I had a very apprehensive feeling in my mind.

But to their credit, United kept pressing forward in the early part of the second half and were rewarded for their endeavoring play. Pogba made some amends for his earlier error by bringing the ball forward and playing it to striker Mason Greenwood on the edge of the Hammers penalty area. Greenwood played some incredible 1-2 passes with fellow striker Anthony Martial, with Martial doing very well to draw defenders and create space for Greenwood. After 4 quick passes the ball was at the feet of Greenwood, and he made no mistake with the finish past West Ham keeper Lukasz Fabianski. Still thoroughly impressed with the teenager Greenwood and I loved Martial’s hard work to create the chance for him. Center forwards do more than just score goals, and I think Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has finally implanted that idea firmly in Martial’s head.

The match slowed down more after the United goal, despite both sides striving for a winner. De Gea made a great save to tip the shot of West Ham midfielder Jarrod Bowen over the bar, and substitute striker Odion Ighalo went close later on for United after some great dribbling by Greenwood in the penalty area. Although it was nervy at times, the match ended 1-1 and United temporarily moved into 3rd place in the table.

A win would have been better, but a draw will a do in this situation. United, at least temporarily (as Chelsea played later on in the day) had a 1 point advantage over Leicester and a goal differential tiebreaker over Chelsea despite being level on points, which meant that United jumped two places in the table from 5th to 3rd.

United’s players look tired; it must be said. OGS is in between a rock and a hard place here. Many fans are calling for midfielders Fred and Scott McTominay to get more playing time so as to rest Bruno, Pogba, and Nemanja Matic more, but it does not appear to be that simple. Despite Fred and McTominay playing well before play was suspended, they haven’t consistently looked their best since play resumed. Neither of them is a naturally creative midfielder, either. They typically do not look to play that killer forward pass like Bruno or Pogba would. Matic is our only natural defensive midfielder at the moment, and his possession and ball retention are key to shaping the United attack. McTominay and Fred do not appear to have these skills at the same level as Matic, at least not currently. Our best XI has a midfield 3 of Matic-Pogba-Bruno, but when we rest any one of those 3 players we don’t look good enough.

Only one Premier League game left, though. Sunday morning America-time away to Leicester City. A win or a draw will ensure United qualify for the top 4, no matter what.  If United were to lose, they would then have to hope that Chelsea also lose to Wolverhampton Wanderers.

Only one point away from ensuring that we continue on our return to glory. One measly point. Leicester can score, but their defense is suspect. Come on United!

Rival Watch

Chelsea knew that a point would ensure that they finish in the top-4, but they were playing the champions-elect Liverpool at Anfield, always a very tough place to get any kind of result. I won’t do a whole recap, but the match ended 5-3 in favor of Liverpool. It was a thriller of a game and it was interesting that Liverpool very much did United a favor today. Chelsea are a very inconsistent team and their manager Frank Lampard has to wonder what more he has to do to get them to play consistently. One thing he could do it seems would be to play American midfielder Christian Pulisic more. He had a hell of a game today and almost single-handedly rescued Chelsea from an even more-embarrassing result with an impressive goal and even more impressive assist. He looked like the best player on the pitch once he came on. I knew this guy was good, and he seems to be growing into a true superstar. Americans, take note!

Prem Table:

3. United – 63 points

4. Chelsea – 63 points (-15 GD)

5. Leicester City – 62 points