The Star Malaysia

Southgate rubbishes talk of Kane choosing club over country

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LONDON: England manager Gareth Southgate has dismissed talk of a club vs country row following Tottenham Hotspur striker Harry Kane’s withdrawal from his squad.

Kane, the English Premier League’s joint top scorer, pulled out of England’s squad to face Germany and Brazil in friendlies after sustaining a knock in Spurs’ 1-0 win over Crystal Palace last weekend.

Spurs manager Mauricio Pochettino subsequent­ly said he expected Kane to be fit to face Arsenal on Nov 18, but Southgate dismissed suggestion­s the striker had put his club before his country.

“I knew Harry Kane was in trouble (against Palace) because he stayed down. Harry Kane doesn’t stay down,” Southgate told a press conference at England’s St George’s Park training base in Burton-onTrent yesterday.

“Both him and Harry Winks were scanned. Our medical department reviewed both scans and no way they were available for our two games. Spurs might risk them for the game with Arsenal, but it’s a different matter.

“I’m hearing this talk of club vs country and it’s a nonsense. The players are injured and cannot play.”

Southgate’s preparatio­ns for today’s friendly against Germany at Wembley have been disrupted by a raft of withdrawal­s.

In addition to Kane and Winks, Dele Alli, Raheem Sterling, Jordan Henderson and Fabian Delph have also pulled out of the squad.

Southgate has called up Everton defender Michael Keane, uncapped Burnley midfielder Jack Cork and West Bromwich Albion’s Jake Livermore as cover.

England’s last game against Germany, a 1-0 friendly defeat in Dortmund in March, was marred by a small number of England fans who booed the German anthem and sang songs about World War II.

England’s Football Associatio­n subsequent­ly handed out their first life bans to two supporters who were found to have performed Nazi gestures.

Southgate urged England’s supporters to be on their best behaviour and praised Germany’s decision to join England in wearing poppy armbands to coincide with Britain’s Armistice Day commemorat­ions.

“I think it was unacceptab­le, completely unacceptab­le,” Southgate said of the scenes in Dortmund.

“We have a huge percentage of fans who follow us brilliantl­y. We experience­d that in Lithuania (in England’s last World Cup qualifying match) when we went over to the supporters at the end of the game.

“Things that were shouted that night were totally unacceptab­le. We’ve moved on from those times. They don’t represent us as a team, the people who do that.

“But we’re talking about individual­s. The mass majority of supporters are brilliant. To add to that, Germany have taken a huge step in agreeing to wear the poppy in this fixture, so that should also be noted.

“We appreciate what they’re doing.”

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