Euro 2020(1) Semifinal Day 1 – Italy Edge Spain on Penalties, Plus England-Denmark Preview

I did pick Italy to win yesterday, but I did not think it would be as close as it was. Indeed, Spain did an excellent job today against the Italians in terms of disrupting their normal tactics, but Italy showed a real resiliency as the match wore on.

The first half was goalless but based on possession and chances created, you would say that Spain were the better side. They took a page out of Italy’s book and decided to incorporate more pressing into their normal possession-based tactics. Spain played the same as they always do when they were on the ball, which is to spring some passes together in midfield and eventually move the ball up to the edge of the box. They tried to work several openings free in the first half, with attacking midfielder Dani Olmo looking very lively. His dribbling and passing was causing the Italians problems, but they always managed to get a final block in.

The most notable aspect of their press though was when they went at Italy goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma. He normally likes to play it short to one of his defenders when it comes to clearing the ball or taking a goal kick, but he could not do that today due to Spain’s forwards playing tight to the defenders. That forced Donnarumma into longer passes up the pitch, something he clearly was not comfortable doing today. Spain fashioned several half-chances using this method of pressing, but while they did not score this also prevented Italy from growing into the game and creating their own chances.

I have to say that in the first half, the epic battle in the midfield was won by Spain. Sergio Busquets and Pedri were dominating the middle, and Spain manager Luis Enrique deployed midfielder Koke (CO-kay) to man- mark Italian midfield general Marco Veratti. When Veratti is allowed time on the ball he can play some devastating passes to his teammates, but with Koke constantly harassing him, he never really found time on the ball to makes those passes. The same could be said for Italy’s defensive midfielder Jorginho. When he was on the ball, Busquets and others were always on him quickly so he could not find an outlet pass. This resulted in Spain winning possession much more frequently than Italy would have liked.

Despite Spain being the better team, the Italians went ahead on the hour mark after a now-familiar error in the Spanish defense. Italy hit them on a counter-attack, and a slick backheel from striker Ciro Immobile found Federico Chiesa on the left-sided edge of the penalty box. Spain didn’t have many men back and failed to clear the pass. Chiesa launched a shot at goal, and it found the top corner of the net. The positioning of the defenders and the angle of the shot did not give Chiesa a lot to aim for, but he put the ball probably in the one place it stood a chance of going in. Misery for Spain as they had been the better team. With a 1-0 lead fairly late on in the game, I figured the Italians would shithouse the rest of the match and escape with the win.

All credit to Spain though, as they kept fighting and created several good chances in an effort to equalize. Mikel Oyarzabal was guilty of missing a gilt-edged chance when he missed making contact with a cross by a matter of centimeters. Spain were rewarded for their efforts though 20 minutes later when Olmo found himself in a good position with the ball on the edge of the Italian penalty box. He played a lovely 1-2 with substitute striker Alvaro Morata, who exorcised some of his earlier tournament demons by finishing along the ground from close range. No chance for Donnarumma, and we had ourselves a semifinal.

There weren’t many further chances in normal time, and it ended 1-1 after 90 minutes. The same pattern of play continued in extra time, with Spain probably being the better of the two sides but stalwart Italian defending kept them out. It was just incredibly crowded in the box every time Spain got close, and that made it very difficult to have time for a shot. Italy sometimes broke out and attempted to hit Spain on the counter, but some tired legs and timely challenges from Spain kept it 1-1. Penalties were needed.

Football is such a fickle sport, and penalties are the most fickle part. Both sides missed their first respective penalty, with Olmo and substitute Manuel Locatelli both missing. That would be the last penalty the Italians would miss though. It stayed tied until Morata stepped up on the 3rd penalty for Spain and hit a rather tame effort low and to Donnarumma’s left. Donnarumma made the correct choice with his dive, and he saved Morata’s effort. Jorginho then took the decisive fourth penalty, and he showed some real ice in his veins by calmly sending Spain keeper Unai Simon the wrong way with his shot. The Italians stormed the field having won, and Spain were left to wonder what could have been.

Commiserations to Spain. They were the better team on the day, but Italy has been the best team this tournament. Italy showed an ability to adapt today that only elite-level teams have. They completely changed their usual tactics and still managed to execute the game plan almost to perfection. That’s very difficult to do in the middle of a tournament. They deserve a lot of credit, with manager Roberto Mancini deserving in particular. You have to feel also that a lack of finishing, both today and throughout the tournament, was a major problem for the Spanish. Morata did well to finish his chance, but they had several other opportunities to score today that they did not cash-in on. I do hope that the idiots on social media do not blame Morata for this loss. It’s not on him, at least not solely. Yes he should have done better with his penalty, but this is a team sport. Spain could have helped him out a lot more today by scoring other chances, and had they done so penalties might not have even been necessary.

Italy will play in the Euro 2020(1) final at Wembley next Sunday, July 11. They await the winner of England/Denmark. Whoever they play, it will be very difficult to beat them. They don’t quit, they have a lot of talent, and they know how to manage different scenarios well.

England vs. Denmark – Preview

Noon (PDT) at Wembley tomorrow. 60,000 fans are expected to fill Wembley to 3/4 capacity and the atmosphere should be electric.

Denmark

Denmark came into the semis as the lowest-ranked remaining team, but they don’t care about that. Not at all. England have played against more talented teams this tournament, but I am not sure we have played a team quite like Denmark so far. That is not to say they are without talent – indeed they have players who ply their trades in the top divisions across Europe, including the Premier League. What I mean is that this is a team that truly believes it is a team of destiny, and it’s hard to argue against that point. Yes they lost their two opening group games, but they have shown a resilience and team spirit in this tournament that vastly makes up for their lack of superstar talent. This is a team on a “Cinderella run” in every sense of the phrase. They are playing for Christian Eriksen, and that kind of motivation is impossible to duplicate. Denmark actually won the Euros back in 1992 and they were a “Cinderella” team back then as well, but they haven’t really come close to winning it again since then. This is the most unified and determined team left at this tournament, and that unity and determination gives them a strong sense of confidence in themselves.

It could be argued that the Danes have had an “easy” path so far, seeing off Wales in the Round of 16 and then the Czech Republic in the quarterfinals. That take is slightly disrespectful to those two other countries, but when you consider that the Swiss had to beat France and England had to beat Germany, you get the sense that the draw has been kinder to them than to other teams. The last time the Danes lost was to Belgium in the group stage, a team with an actual degree of quality about them. Yes the Danes scored first but they conceded two after that as they were not capable of dealing with the technical abilities of Kevin De Bruyne. Sometimes, an overwhelming amount of talent is really the only thing that can beat a stubborn defensive unit.

The Danes do have some talented attacking players, and I think tomorrow they will use their speedier players to try and break out quickly and hit England on the counter-attack. I don’t think they have the talent in midfield to hold possession against England for long spells, so the counter and opportunities from set pieces will be key. They scored four in a knockout match earlier this tournament in the Round of 16 against Wales, so they are capable of getting goals when they need to.

Players to Watch: Youseff Poulsen, Mikkel Damsgaard, Joakim Mæhle, Kasper Dolberg, Simon Kjær, Kasper Schmeichel 

Side note on Schmeichel: he is a Premier League winning goalkeeper with Leicester City and is the son of one of the greatest goalkeepers of all time: Peter Schmeichel. It was Peter who helped the Danes to glory in 1992, and now his son is trying to do the same thing! It’s a great story, and while Kasper is probably not quite as good as his father, he definitely has the ability to morph into a brick wall on a given day. Harry Maguire and probably a few other England players will be fully aware of his talents, having played both with and against him. Kasper perhaps was a tad braggadocios today by making jokes about the phrase “it’s coming home” in his media interview, and I hope England players saw that. People in the media or online coming with banter is one thing, but it’s completely different when an opposition player is saying something. Perhaps could serve as a motivation to England’s forwards. Speaking of!

England

England, both the team and that nation, are positively rocking right now. The match against Ukraine was the best I have seen this team play in a tournament probably ever. We hadn’t scored 4 goals in a tournament knockout match since 1966, and we will have a distinct home advantage at Wembley. 95+% of the fans in attendance will be supporting England, and I expect every single one of them to be in full throat for all 90 minutes.

Given that the best way to beat Denmark appears to be to overwhelm them with attacking talent, I suggest England does that very thing. Manager Gareth Southgate doesn’t need to change the lineup much or if at all, as the most important thing will be an aggressive approach. The entire game plan can be summed up in one two words: aggression, ruthlessness. We need to come out and be ruthless from the get-go, and if we can score another early goal it will get us a long way to the final. The longer it stays 0-0, the more confident Denmark will feel. We need to be on the ball, dribbling with the ball, and making forward runs. When we are not on the ball, I would like to see England constantly haranguing the Danes and trying to win the ball high up the pitch. No matter who is on the pitch for us, they need to be playing with unrelenting aggression and ruthlessness. Even if the Danes can withstand it for the first 45 minutes, they will eventually tire. Once again, you can expect England’s depth of talent on the bench to factor in heavily if things are not going our way.

Denmark’s defense has been “good enough” this whole tournament. They’re doing enough to win matches, but I do not think Denmark will be able to keep England at bay for 90 minutes. They have conceded at least 1 goal in every match they’ve played in so far except for one. England were dangerous from both set pieces and open play in the match against Ukraine, and we have proven to be exceptionally efficient at crossing the ball over the top. Most of our goals this tournament have come from crosses over the top. The wingers and full backs, in particular Luke Shaw, have been nothing short of incredible.

We are the first team in the history of the Euros not to concede a goal in their first five matches. Jordan Pickford looks locked to win the Golden Gloves for fewest goals conceded. The back line communicates well with each other and we have the athleticism at the back to keep up with anyone. As good as we are at heading the ball in for goals, we are equally as good at heading them away from goal when defending. Denmark’s best chances for a goal will probably come from set pieces, so alertness and concentration will be vital when those inevitably happen.

This match is England’s to lose. Having said that, it would be very English of us to come this far and do this well only to falter in the semis. I must say though, it feels different this time. I hope that line doesn’t come back to bit me in the ass, but it really does. The draw has been somewhat kind to us as well after beating Germany, and we must take advantage. The stars will not align like this for England again.

Players to Watch: Harry Kane, Raheem Sterling, Jadon Sancho, Shaw, Jack Grealish, Phil Foden, Marcus Rashford, Mason Mount

No prediction because of course not, I’m not stupid.

England Advance to the Round of 16 as Group D Winners After Victory Over Czech Republic

England played their final group match of Euro 2020(1) today at Wembley against Czech Republic. The Czechs came into the match as group leaders, so England knew this team would not roll over for them. Their side featured co-top scorer at the Euros in Patrik Schick, and they have a good amount of experience in the side. England and Czech Republic were both already through to the Round of 16 due to Belgium defeating Finland yesterday, so while there wasn’t that much importance behind the match it was important for seeding purposes going forward. An England group win also meant that the next match would be at Wembley and England would not need to travel to Copenhagen for the next match.

England made a few changes from the side that sputtered to a rather dismal draw with Scotland on Friday. Bukayo Saka and Jack Grealish were included from the outset, with Phil Foden dropped to the bench on a yellow card. Mason Mount and Ben Chilwell were not included either due to being in COVID protocols. So while some of the changes were made out of necessity, I was in strong support of Saka and Grealish being on from the start. Still not sure what Jadon Sancho has to do to get into this team, but we’ll come back to him later.

Just like in the past two matches, England got off to a very fast start and had the Czechs under pressure from the get-go. Grealish was excellent in possession, and Saka was making all kinds of runs forward that the Czechs didn’t know how to deal with. The only goal came in the 12th minute via Raheem Sterling, who had just missed a very good chance off the post early on. The ball was retrieved by Grealish on the left wing and he clipped a looping cross over the top back towards the goal. The ball was too high for Saka but Sterling was in an excellent position behind him, and he nodded in for 1-0. I was calling for Sterling’s head after his lackluster performance in the Scotland match, but he rewarded England manager Gareth Southgate’s faith in him today by scoring his second of the tournament. Harry Kane then forced a very fine save from Czech keeper Tomas Vaclik after wriggling his way into the box. Kane was frustrated by the save, but he was much better today than he was against Scotland as well.

The Czechs grew into the game a little bit after the early England dominance though and created a few chances via set pieces and some haphazard (if ultimately effective) England defending. West Ham midfielder Tomas Soucek went closest for the Czechs, just barely missing the left post with a shot from about 13 yards out. England have been defensively sound so far but there were some nerves present today, especially in the first half. A better side may have cashed in on those nerves and lack of decision making, but the Czechs did not. I was happy to see Manchester United captain Harry Maguire back in the team today after a long injury layoff, and while Tyrone Mings has been more than capable of deputizing in his absence, Maguire is probably England’s best defensive player and you want his leadership on the pitch. I think the defense will only improve as Maguire settles in.

The second half was nowhere near as entertaining as the first, as England seemed content to defend and didn’t really create much until late on. Jordan Henderson came on for Declan Rice at the start of the second, and the Czechs made some attack-minded changes as well. Despite not scoring again, England never really looked threatened. The Czechs weren’t as effective in the second half from set pieces, and they do not have the talent to consistently create chances against England from open play. I remember England keeper Jordan Pickford not really being tested, aside from some routine catches and clearances. Henderson was somewhat unlucky to not get his second after his short-range effort was deemed to be offside after some good work in the box from fellow substitute Marcus Rashford to create the chance. This one wasn’t close though – Henderson was at least a yard offside when he poked it home. England then managed the game out and were able to secure all 3 points without too much ado.

So what’s next? Unclear right now, as the final group matches will all be played tomorrow. England play next Tuesday night at Wembley, but that’s all we know for sure at this point. Usually, winning your group is supposed to result in an easier matchup in the next round. That is the proverbial carrot at the end of the stick that theoretically motivates teams to go out and win their group. This time though, England will face the runners-up from Group F, which unfortunately contains the likes of France, Portugal, and Germany. All three of those teams are football powerhouses and will present a major challenge to England. The big teams usually don’t meet at tournaments like these until the quarterfinals or later, but this time around it’s worked out that they will. Some have complained about the tournament format as a result, but I don’t really agree with that too much. You’ll have to play a tough team at some point in any major tournament, and if you want to be the best you have to beat the best. No point in shying away from it just because it’s in an earlier round than we may have wanted.

The objective today was to gain some momentum back going into the knockout stages. Positive performances lift the fans, the players, and the manager; and I think we achieved that to an extent today. The second half was mostly dull but England can build on their good play from the first half. It was important to restore a bit of excitement around the team for the fans, and the dynamic attacking play today in the first half helped to do that.

But, I still don’t think England have played their best game yet at this tournament. This is partly due to the fact that we still haven’t figured out our best attacking formation. Kane was better today, but still hasn’t scored. Sterling has scored (and is our only scorer so far), but he goes missing for big portions of games. Rashford did ok today but he’s looked off the pace for awhile now due to injury and fatigue. Sancho finally got on the pitch at the end, but didn’t really have time to impact the game. Indeed, England’s best attackers today were not forwards, as Grealish is an attacking midfielder and Saka is a winger. It doesn’t matter who scores of course as long as someone does, but the lack of goals is a concern going forward. It is still unknown how we will do against better opposition. Southgate has a selection headache or three coming up, as several players have put in good performances thus far. But as the old saying goes, a selection problem is a “good problem” to have.

All of the questions present now will be answered next Tuesday, though. England will watch the Group F matches tomorrow with great interest and will have a week to prepare for whoever ends up 2nd in that group. There is the added bonus of not having to fly to another city to play. Yes we will have to play a tough team, but the circumstances could not be much better for England to do so.

Man of the Match: Bukayo Saka

England Struggle to a Goalless Draw Against Scotland

One of the most anticipated matches of the group stage at Euro 2020(1) is also the oldest – England and Scotland played the first ever international association football (soccer) match back in 1872. The two sides are the most familiar and fiercest of foes, having now played each other for the 115th time. The last time England played Scotland in a tournament though was Euro 96, with England winning 2-0. This fixture is loaded with British history and usually provides a very entertaining spectacle.

The thing about Scotland is that how they play against all other countries is not how they play against England. They’re not a side loaded with talent, certainly not when compared with the depth England has. But that doesn’t matter to Scotland. They know they aren’t as talented as us. But they play against England like absolute devils. They work their socks off for all 90 minutes and they never quit. The Scots have a bit of a “little brother” complex when it comes to England and there is a nothing a little brother enjoys more than beating his big brother. They knew going in that if they stayed defensively organized and harassed England when off the ball, they had a chance to win or at least draw.

Going into the match, England were on 3 points and 2nd in Group D on goal difference behind Czech Republic, with the Scots still on zero points due to losing to the aforementioned Czechs. Scotland losing would have all but eliminated them, while a win for England would have mathematically ensured their passage to the Round of 16. The atmosphere at Wembley at kickoff was electric and emotional, even though there was only 22,500 people inside due to COVID restrictions. Fans are so important to this sport and I’m glad that at least a percentage were able to attend. This fixture without fans would be dismal.

I really thought England would win. I really did. Our team has so much talent and depth in it that I didn’t think Scotland would be able to hang with us for 90 minutes. I figured they would tire out and England would be able to take advantage of physical/mental mistakes. What I should have factored in more heavily however was England’s never-ceasing ability to shoot themselves in the foot and make things way more difficult than they need to be.

I am disappointed with the players and I will come back to them later, but manager Gareth Southgate needs to be blamed first. He played another conservative formation and his substitutions were mostly nonsensical. For one, I don’t think we needed two defensive midfielders against Scotland. Declan Rice and Kalvin Phillips did a good job today at stopping Scottish attacks when they came, but neither of them are creative going forward. Why not just play Rice and/or Phillips and then add another attacking midfielder in front of him? Scotland had 8-9 men behind the ball for most of the match, using their 5-3-2 to great effect. Southgate had to have known that was going to happen, so why not add more creativity going forward from the get-go? Just because this formation worked against Croatia does not mean it will work against Scotland. They are two very different teams.

The lack of creativity against a stiff Scottish defense was the theme of the whole match. England had two good chances in the opening 20 minutes, with John Stones hitting the post despite having a free header from a corner and Mason Mount scuffing wide from close range. Scotland striker Che Adams forced a fine save from England keeper Jordan Pickford, but aside from those chances I don’t recall either team being very close to scoring. There was a lot of congestion in the midfield, and England at times seemed perfectly content to pass it around near the center circle.

Southgate was correct to bring on Jack Grealish and Marcus Rashford as England searched for a goal, but the players he took off didn’t make sense. Grealish came on for Phil Foden, which is perhaps understandable from a positional standpoint but Foden had actually done relatively well. He wasn’t amazing, but he was having a better day than several others. Rashford came on later for Harry Kane, which also didn’t really make sense either. Kane wasn’t playing well it’s true and needed to be off, but Rashford is not the same kind of striker as Kane. Rashford is way faster than Kane but perhaps not as strong on the ball, and as a result he is more effective on the left or right wing rather than in the dead center. The biggest mystery however centers on why Raheem Sterling wasn’t taken off when he was the worst player on the pitch for England today. Lost possession, dribbles going nowhere, not making runs into the box, nothing. Jadon Sancho (who never came on today) should have been in his place from the beginning. Also, Southgate, you have 5 substitutions. If you want to win this match, why not use all 5? My theory is that at a certain point late on he made the conscious decision to play for a draw, and I don’t like that. Some are speculating that he played for the draw to try and finish 2nd in the group and therefore perhaps get an easier draw in the Round of 16, but I don’t really buy any of that. I think he got his tactics wrong, his subs wrong, and he was lucky Scotland didn’t steal a victory.

As mentioned above though, Southgate’s tactics and subs were only part of the problem. I have never seen a more lazy, lethargic, and overall toothless effort from England players in such a big game. This is a major tournament against our biggest geographical rival, show some fucking determination! Show some grit! There was no one actively trying to get behind the Scots defense today, and no one consistently making runs at their back line. No one really seemed interested in pressing them and forcing Scotland’s less-talented players into mistakes either. The defense and defensive midfield were fine today mostly, but the attackers were completely anonymous. We are in need of a shake-up and someone needs to give those lads a swift kick up the rear end. Very disappointed. Yes Southgate did them no favors, but it doesn’t matter what your tactics are if the forward players just stand on the edge of the 18 yard box like clueless statues.

England will need to be much improved for the match on Tuesday against the Czechs. We are still in good position to get out of Group D, but we will need a victory to proceed as group winners. Croatia and Scotland can both still progress as well, but either side would need a victory to do so. I want Sancho, Rashford, and Dominic Calvert-Lewin to start. The regular starters need a message sent to them that they will be dropped if they play poorly, in particular Kane and Sterling. If Sterling starts again it will be hard to continue having faith in Southgate as manager, for me.

Scotland and their manager Steve Clarke do deserve some credit for having an effective game plan and executing it well. Billy Gilmour, Lyndon Dykes, and Scott McTominay all played very well for them. They shut down England’s attacking options and caused a fair few concerning moments going forward. Well done, I suppose. But none of that should have mattered in my opinion. If England had half a clue as to what they were doing, they would have won today.

England Secure Victory Over Croatia Plus Other Early Headlines from Euro 2020(1)

It’s been an interesting tournament so far, even if there haven’t been many major surprises. Italy strolled to victory over Turkey in Rome in the opening match, Belgium steamrolled Russia, and Wales managed to earn themselves a draw against Switzerland. Lots of football left in the tournament of course, but both Italy and Belgium have shown so far that they have the talent to win the whole thing. I was impressed with Italy’s aggressive tactics and ruthlessness in particular.

The big headline though is not really football-related, sadly. The match between Denmark and Finland was delayed yesterday after star Danish midfielder Christian Eriksen collapsed on the pitch as a throw-in was being played towards him. It’s always scary when someone goes down unchallenged, and this incident truly had people holding their breath. The medical staff were on the field instantly though and appeared to be administering CPR to Eriksen while his teammates formed a shield of bodies around Eriksen and the trainers. Positively harrowing. It came out today that Eriksen (only 29) suffered a heart attack on the pitch and they had to revive him quickly. Indeed, he was described as being “gone” briefly before resuscitation started. Thanks to the quick response of the medical staff in Copenhagen Eriksen appears like he is going to survive, but there are questions as to whether he ever plays again. Tributes from superstars across the globe have been pouring in, and everyone in the footballing world just wants to see him healthy again. It’s unclear at this time what caused it, but this should be a reminder for everyone to check their heart health. If a 29 year old professional athlete can have a cardiac arrest, anyone can. The match was resumed after the Danish players ensured Eriksen was safe in hospital, and even though they lost 1-0 they should still be credited for going out and finishing the match. Not sure I could do the same, from an emotional standpoint.

We tend to forget that football is a game, and that no trophy is as valuable as a human life. All credit and praise to the medical team on the pitch and the medical professionals who cared for Eriksen at the hospital.

******

England took on Croatia today at a sun-drenched and sweltering (by English standards) Wembley Stadium in west London early this morning America-time. The first match of the Euros has traditionally been difficult for England, having never won the opening group match at this tournament. The task did not appear to be any easier today, given that Croatia are probably the 2nd-best team Group D talent-wise. Players such as Ivan Perisic, Ante Rebic, Luka Modric, Mateo Kovavic, and Marcelo Brozovic all have a wealth of experience at the international level; even if they are all getting a bit long in the tooth.

Despite a somewhat conservative lineup from England manager Gareth Southgate, they dominated the first 20 minutes of this match and created several good chances. Phil Foden was unlucky to see his shot hit the post, and newer addition Kalvin Phillips had a stinging shot saved by Croatia keeper Dominik Livakovic. The intensity died down a little after that opening period though, with no real chances created by either side up to halftime.

The opener came somewhat against the run of play early in the second half when Phillips made a charging run forward that created confusion in Croatia’s defense. His run into the middle left a gigantic hole for forward Raheem Sterling to run into behind him, and the pass to him from Phillips into the box was perfect. Sterling hit it low and with power, and Livakovic could only get a weak touch on it that failed to keep the ball out. There was a huge sigh of relief from the roughly 2/3rds capacity crowd inside Wembley, and joyous celebrations for the England players. England had looked slow and sluggish to start the second, so to get a goal like that was absolutely crucial. The goal will do wonders for Sterling as well, as he had been low on confidence coming into this tournament. Getting him back into goal scoring form will be nothing but beneficial for the English attack.

I would like to applaud the midfielders today, in particular Phillips and Declan Rice. Both of them were excellent defensively today, as they caused the normally fluid Croatian midfield to sputter. Captain and Mr. Croatia Luka Modric is usually an expert at finding passes that unlock defenses, but there was simply no way through for Croatia. They struggled to create opportunities the whole match and didn’t really put any kind of sustained pressure on England keeper Jordan Pickford. The passing lanes that are normally there simply were not. Credit to England’s players of course, but Croatian fans will be feeling disappointed. I didn’t feel any sense of urgency from Croatia, even after they went down 1-0. Everything was slow and deliberate from them, and they seemed content to just pass it around in midfield when in possession. Modric was running around everywhere like he normally does, but Perisic, Rebic, and Kovacic all had poor games by their standards. No creativity going forward for Croatia today.

England will have to be more creative against other teams going forward, but we showed today that we have the right mentality when it comes to playing against teams with talent. We defended very well today and as alluded to above, we severely limited Croatia’s ability to create chances for themselves. If that was the game plan from Southgate, then it worked to perfection. It should be pointed out that England did not have to dig down too deep into the bench today, and we didn’t even need the creative talents of Jack Grealish and Jadon Sancho to get a victory. When you consider that it’s Croatia, in the first match of the tournament in fairly warm weather, you feel very satisfied with a 1-0 win. England fans moaning and complaining that we aren’t creating enough need to realize that this game was always going to be close and the fact that we managed to win is huge for the team’s confidence. It doesn’t matter if you win 1-0 or 5-0, a win is a win when it comes to major tournaments. This result seems to fit what has become somewhat of a pattern for England under Southgate – it’s not pretty to watch, but he usually gets the result needed.

A very special shoutout to Borussia Dortmund midfielder Jude Bellingham, who at 17 years and 349 days became the youngest ever player to get on the pitch at the Euros. There is no denying his quality and he will be a key player for England not only at this tournament but also for the next 10-12 years. Man of the Match today though is Leeds United midfielder Kalvin Phillips. He was excellent at breaking up Croatian attacks and also provided the assist to Sterling for the goal. Now he just needs to work on his haircut. Indeed, there are several dodgy haircuts from England players in this squad!

England next play Scotland at Wembley on Friday, 8 pm England and noon on the west coast of America. The atmosphere will be electric and Scotland will want nothing more than to beat us. God Save the Queen!

Tepid England Earn a Narrow Win Over Iceland

UEFA’s latest money grab that they have entitled the Nations League has resumed play after the conclusion of the club seasons across Europe that were delayed due to COVID-19. There was a host of international fixtures recently, with all of them being played behind closed doors with no fans.

England were tasked with travelling to Reykjavik to play Iceland in their national stadium, Laugardalsvöllur. Please do not ask me to pronounce the name of the stadium. Manager Gareth Southgate had called up 20 or so players to choose from, and as usual there was controversy with some of the picks. Manchester United players Marcus Rashford, Harry Maguire, and Mason Greenwood were all called up, even though Rashford withdrew due to fatigue and Maguire due to his ongoing legal issues in Greece. It was a first-time call up for 18 year-old Greenwood, with Southgate saying before the game that it was hard to argue against calling him up after the season he had despite his youth.

England got off to a slow start and indeed never really got going throughout the match. It was clear that they were rusty having not played a match together since November 2019. Wingers Jadon Sancho and Raheem Sterling looked dangerous on the wings, but as usual Iceland looked well-drilled and they kept England at bay for the most part. England were unlucky to not have a goal about midway through the first half when a pass/shot from the left side found Tottenham striker Harry Kane, who bungled the ball over the line for what looked like 1-0. The linesman’s flag went up though and the goal was called back for offside. Replays appeared to show Kane onside and no contact from any other England player, but VAR is (for some reason) not being used in the Nation League matches. Why does every other competition in Europe in have it, but not these matches? If UEFA wants them to be treated as competitive matches by the players, it needs to make VAR available so that calls can be checked for error.

The match was largely uneventful and remained at 0-0 almost to the end. England had all of the possession, passes, and shots – but no goals. It wasn’t until the 70th minute when things started getting interesting. England defender Kyle Walker picked up a second yellow card after a rather rash tackle on an Iceland player and got himself sent off. With England down to 10 men and only 20 minutes left, the match looked to be headed to a frustrating 0-0 draw.

But the referee got himself involved again, this time to England’s benefit when Sterling fired a shot at the Iceland goal which was handled by Iceland defender Sverrir Ingason. Iceland argued the ball came off his shoulder, but his arms were up and away from his body and replays showed the shot came off the underside of the arm. Soft, but there was enough there. He was also already on a yellow and his handball got him sent off as well. Both sides were down to 10 for the remainder of stoppage time, something that doesn’t happen often. Sterling stepped up to the spot and rolled the ball down the middle slowly, but the Iceland keeper had already jumped to the left and the ball rolled in behind him. A penalty shot like that is risky because if it gets saved you look like a moron, but Sterling did just enough to get it over the line. He probably was England’s most consistent player of the day in terms of creativity.

But the drama was not over. Almost straight away from the restart, a long ball was played forward by Iceland into their attacking third. Liverpool center back Joe Gomez was running back to cover but in the process appeared to grab Iceland forward Albert Gudmonsson, who fell to the ground after that. I am not sure this was a penalty either, as the contact started well outside the box and it seems that Gudmonsson made the most of it. Midfielder Birnik Bjarnason stepped up to the penalty spot, but he skied his shot over the bar and off to the right. England keeper Jordan Pickford had indeed gone the wrong way, but the penalty was so far off it didn’t matter. The final whistle blew shortly after that and the match ended 1-0 England. 70 minutes of boring and 20 minutes of drama.

James Ward-Prowse and Eric Dier were in England’s midfield today and I was not really impressed with their creativity. Phil Foden, a Manchester City midfielder on his England debut, was also largely ineffective. Iceland were well-coordinated defensively to be sure and it’s always difficult to play them in their national stadium, but England still needed to be better. Frequently too slow in attack and too many missed passes in the final third.

As alluded to above, it was clear that England were rusty. I also question their intensity of play today due to the fact that the Premier League is due to re-start soon and I don’t think anyone wanted to get injured. It was cool to see Greenwood get handed his England debut when he came on for Kane, despite not having much time to get going. You can’t really take away much from this game overall, unfortunately. The red card for Walker put the cat among the pigeons tactically and the lack of coherence from having not played a game recently was obvious.

I expect England to improve for their next match against Denmark on Tuesday. Denmark are a better team than Iceland so England cannot afford to be wasteful with their possession and chances like they were today. I expect Southgate to change things up a little to see if we can get more shots on goal and be more cohesive in attack. Perhaps it is time for Aston Villa midfielder Jack Grealish to be employed in the middle of the formation. Many have called for his inclusion in the squad after he helped keep Villa in the Premier League last season. You are always satisfied with a victory and in this case three points, but there is a lot of room for improvement.

Manchester is Red and City Can Naff Off

U.N.I.-T.E.D.

United are the team for me

With a knick knack paddy whack

Give a dog a bone

Why don’t City fuck off home?

Very big smiles today as United beat cross-town rivals Manchester City at Old Trafford 2-0 in the Manchester Derby. This was one of the most enjoyable games I have watched in recent memory thanks to two wonderful goals from Anthony Martial and Scott McTominay.

It was not a day for individual heroics though. This was a team victory in every single way. Virtually every player did their job wonderfully and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer schooled City manager Pep Guardiola tactically. Guardiola is a very good manager known for his complex tactics and passing play, but OGS’s 3-4-3 formation in attack with a switch to a 5-3-2 in defense left Guardiola completely at a loss. City simply could not break down the United back line for the entirety of the match.

The tactics weren’t a surprise though, from either side. City build attacks and create chances through possession and short but quick passes, while United are designed to absorb pressure from those attacks and then create their chances through quick counters of their own. That is exactly what happened today. City had 70%+ of the possession for most of the match, yet possession does not win you matches. Goals do, and City just couldn’t put one in the back of the net.

The importance of the play of Brandon Williams at left wing back and Aaron Wan-Bisska over at right wing back cannot be understated. Wan-Bissaka had dangerous city forward Raheem Sterling in his back pocket the whole match, and Williams did a fantastic job of getting forward to provide width in attack. Brazilian midfielder Fred is also miles ahead of where he was when we first signed him, and he was a key link up between our attack and defense.

Bruno Fernandes was once again key in the attacking midfield role, despite having a sort of withdrawn performance later on in the match as United were forced to defend more. His intelligence for where the forward pass needs to be played is second to none, even in open play. From the dead ball though he showed today he can be equally as incisive. An…interesting…foul was given against City on the left side near the edge of the box. Bruno played a sneaky little chipped ball over the top of the defense which Martial ran onto and the ball fell in front of him over his shoulder, and he poked the ball past City keeper Edison first-time for 1-0 right at the half-hour mark. Ederson probably should have done better to cover his near post, but it was a very well-worked set piece. We’ve been dismal from set pieces this season, but since the addition of Bruno we’ve improved dramatically. Better planning, practicing, and a more talented player delivering the ball has worked wonders.

United’s defense then took over, and each time the ball came forward towards the back line, it was cleared by a United defender. City only really created 1-2 honestly good chances were I was concerned they could potentially score. Haven’t seen such a masterful defensive performance from this team against quality opposition in ages. If ever there was space for City’s attacking players like Sergio Aguero, Sterling, or Phil Foden, there was a United defender there to shut it down. Aguero actually did manage to have the ball in the net at one point, but was correctly called back for offside.

Some very questionable referee decisions in this match by Mike Dean (as hinted at above), but VAR confirmed that Aguero’s shoulder was just off when the ball was played to him. United also should have had a penalty in the first half after Fred was tripped in the box, but despite clear contact on Fred’s ankle, Dean decided to yellow-card Fred for diving. Terrible call and I was concerned that United might be screwed over by the ref like we were against Everton a week ago.

It stayed 1-0 for the majority of the match, despite Guardiola bringing on attackers Gabriel Jesus and Riyad Mahrez in the 2nd half. Jesus forced a half decent save from David De Gea, and Mahrez was was causing Williams all kinds of problems defensively. OGS then brought on center back Eric Bailly and McTominay to shore things up defensively, and United shifted to a back-4 for the rest of the match. Odion Ighalo also came on to provide a bit of physicality up front and an outlet to relieve pressure.

The 2nd goal wrapped up the points as it was well into stoppage time, and it was due to a much bigger error from Ederson this time. Lindelof won the ball back after a City attack, and played the ball to Fred in the left channel. He found Ighalo with a pass who shielded off his defender, then gave it back to Fred. Fred played in Daniel James but the ball was a little to heavy and Ederson collected it with his hands. His distribution was very poor though, and his pass only found McTominay in open space. McTominay was about 35-40 yards out, but Ederson was severely out of position and McTominay did well to lob the ball into the net before Ederson could back to cover. Ederson had almost conceded a 2nd goal earlier in the half after Martial caught him napping in possession, and he truly had a nightmare of a match. Bad tactics from Guardiola and a shit performance from Ederson sealed City’s doom.

Old Trafford was in ecstasy after McTominay’s goal. He doesn’t score often but he is a product of the United academy, and you could see the passion and joy he felt from the goal. To seal three points in the rain of Old Trafford against City is a level of happiness I can only dream of achieving!

OGS now has done a Premier League double over both Chelsea and Manchester City. The man knows how to play against the big clubs, undoubtedly. Everyone online and in the press who has questioned his managing credentials has been made to look like a complete idiot. Now with the support of Bruno and the surging form of Fred and McTominay, United are finally finding consistent form. We are unbeaten in 10 matches and are still a scant 3 points off of Chelsea in 4th place. Imagine this team with a fully fit Paul Pogba and Marcus Rashford…

We play Austrian side LASK next, away in Linz, Austria on Thursday. After that we have Tottenham away at the weekend. Given the form we are in, I say bring them both on.

MANCHESTER IS RED!!!!