Gulf News

Kane tips balance in high-stakes hustle

ROUGH TACTICS BY COLOMBIA FAIL TO INDUCE A WRONG STEP FROM ENGLAND HITMAN

- BY JASON BURT

Four years ago in Brazil, Wayne Rooney sat in what they call the “exit press conference” after another embarrassi­ng World Cup failure and declared that a major factor in the demise was England’s lack of having the “street-wise” ability that other nations possess.

They were just too nice, he said. They did not have that “nastiness”. They did not have the ability to scrap it out, manage a game, delve into the dark arts if necessary. Do a Colombia. Be tough and, yes, uncompromi­sing. It is a World Cup.

Here the challenge was set. Colombia were Sergio Ramos and Pepe and then some. It was nerve-racking at times, as England veered close to reacting and it was crushing that they could not see it out in normal time. Even Yerry Mina’s injury-time equalising goal led to time-wasting as he took an age to return to his half for the re-start.

It had seemed, though, that England would do it in the 90 minutes and that owed a great deal to Harry Kane and the cute way he won and dispatched his penalty. He showed how to deal with such uncompromi­sing tactics. Unfortunat­ely, others could not follow. He had already been the victim of a cynical elbow by Santiago Arias, who slammed into his back as they contested a header.

The free-kick was given and Kane simply did not react. If there is one man who Colombia were not going to unsettle with their approach, then it was Kane and, finally, even the haplessly weak American referee Mark Geiger cracked, as he punished Carlos Sanchez for climbing all over the forward at a subsequent corner.

Even then the Colombians surrounded the officials, three, four, five of them and the delay continued, as Kane waited patiently to take the penalty. The delay — carried on — David Ospina tried to get into Kane’s face and the intimidati­on was just not dealt with.

That delay amounted to three and a half minutes and replays showed that defender Johan Mojica was raking the penalty spot as the arguing continued.

But Kane scored. He showed incredible composure. He won that penalty, he made sure Sanchez brought him down, he showed the street-wise edge that was needed.

In the absence of James Rodriguez, whose swollen calf meant he could not even be risked as a substitute and, despite the guile of their other playmaker Juan Quintero, there was an obvious approach by the South Americans led by their giant, wall-like centrehalf Mina even if he was not averse to throwing himself to the turf to try and seek punishment for Raheem Sterling, who he towered over, and who he pushed and pulled, but claimed dragged him down.

This is the World Cup, after all, and the stakes do not get any higher; which is why Wilmar Barrios pushed his head into Jordan Henderson’s face as yet another set-piece developed into a mess, a melee, an occasion when Video Assistant Referees needed even more cameras.

Barrios was only given a yellow card. It was a red card or nothing.

The Colombians would have been delighted when John Stones was so frustrated that he simply pushed over Barrios who was at the centre of the relentless feistiness.

Once in front, England needed something else they so often lack: game management.

This is a young England team and this was a reminder of that lack of experience and that price was paid with Mina’s injury-time equalising goal.

It went to extra-time. More than ever England needed that mental strength, that resolve, that desire to go again. This was a World Cup, after all.

It had seemed, though, that England would do it in the 90 minutes and that owed a great deal to Kane and the cute way he won and dispatched his penalty.

 ?? Reuters ?? England’s Harry Kane takes a selfie with fans after the match against Colombia. Kane showed incredible composure in winning the penalty under a challenge from Carlos Sanchez, displaying the street-wise edge that England supporters have long cried for.
Reuters England’s Harry Kane takes a selfie with fans after the match against Colombia. Kane showed incredible composure in winning the penalty under a challenge from Carlos Sanchez, displaying the street-wise edge that England supporters have long cried for.
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