Iran Daily

England’s Southgate to stick with winning formula against Croatia

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England manager Gareth Southgate said he is not about to change his team’s approach for tonight’s World Cup semifinal against Croatia, saying he wants the “same again” from his young side.

Although Croatia is the most difficult opponent England will have faced in the tournament, Southgate’s words suggest he will continue with his attacking formation and personnel, Reuters reported.

Asked what he would be demanding from his players, the England coach told ITV, “To be able to keep doing what we have been doing, play with real defensive discipline, good organizati­on, tactical awareness and then with the ball play with the freedom and expression that we have and the same patterns and movements that we have shown.”

While Croatia possesses arguably the best central midfield pairing in the tournament in the shape of Real Madrid’s Luka Modric and Barcelona’s Ivan Rakitic, Southgate’s language does not indicate he is about to bring in Eric Dier as an additional defensive midfielder alongside Jordan Henderson.

But he is certainly well aware of the threat that Croatia poses in the center of the field.

“They of course have a very strong midfield so, (it is about) denying them space and making sure awareness of distances and coverage of the pitch is correct and (knowing) the right moments to press. The higher the level of opponent, if you press in a disorganiz­ed fashion, then you will get picked through and we have got to be conscious of that,” he said.

The contributi­on of Raheem Sterling remains a polarizing debate in England with the Manchester City player without a goal for his country since October 2015 but Southgate said the forward’s contributi­on in Russia has been essential.

“I think Raheem has been fundamenta­l to the way that we have played – his movement, the positions he takes up, his pressing of the ball, his work-rate for the team, the winning of free kicks and corners, his speed to stretch teams.

“He was a constant threat to Sweden, of course he hasn’t scored the goals he would have liked to have scored but for myself and the players he has been a crucial part of the way that we have been playing,” he said.

Physical advantage

While England enjoyed a relatively stress-free 2-0 win over Sweden in the last eight, Croatia had to come through a grueling extra time against the host Russia and then a penalty shootout.

But Southgate thinks talk of that handing a physical advantage to England is being overplayed.

“We experience­d the extra time and penalties (against Colombia) and we know the physical and emotional consequenc­e of that,” he said.

“But any team in a World Cup semifinal is going to find the energy and going to find the motivation. So we won’t win the game just because Croatia had half an hour more football than us three days ago, we’ve got to win because we play better.”

In keeping with his even-handed and calm style, Southgate said his team was neither complacent nor too pumped up for tonight’s clash at the Luzhniki Stadium, England’s first World Cup semifinal since 1990.

“None of us are satisfied and none of us are particular­ly hyped up. It is a game that is very evenly matched, we know what we want to do and we have to focus on our preparatio­n and make sure that we control the controllab­les as we have attempted to do for every game,” the manager said.

“We are just going to stick with what we have been doing all the way through.”

 ??  ?? GETTY IMAGES England’s Harry Kane (R) in action against Ludwig Augustinss­on of Sweden at the 2018 World Cup in Samara Arena in Samara, Russia, on July 7, 2018
GETTY IMAGES England’s Harry Kane (R) in action against Ludwig Augustinss­on of Sweden at the 2018 World Cup in Samara Arena in Samara, Russia, on July 7, 2018
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