Khaleej Times

Southgate urges England to make 2019 even better

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london — Gareth Southgate has challenged his vibrant young England side to build on a year to remember after they clinched a place in the Nations League semifinals in dramatic style.

Just over a year ago, England’s qualificat­ion for the World Cup was greeted with yawns and a barrage of paper aeroplanes from fans disillusio­ned by decades of underachie­vement.

But Southgate’s team won back their place in the nation’s hearts over the course of a remarkable 2018 that saw them reach the World Cup semifinals for the first time since 1990.

Although that World Cup run ended with an agonising extra-time loss to Croatia, Southgate and his players have refused to be defined by failure in the way that their more vaunted predecesso­rs in the Three Lions shirt often were.

So when Andrej Kramaric gave Croatia the lead against the run of play in the second half of Sunday’s winner-takes-all shoot-out at Wembley, it was a coming of age moment for England’s prodigies.

They rose to the challenge in impressive style as Jesse Lingard came off the bench to equalise with 15 minutes left before captain Harry Kane poked in the 85th-minute winner.

Kane and his team-mates celebrated joyously as Wembley roared in delight and an jubilant Southgate punched the air on the touchline.

The harmonious scene was a fitting finale to England’s year of redemption and a far cry from the 1-0 win over Slovenia in October 2017 that ensured they would qualify for the World Cup.

That uninspirin­g display came while Southgate’s revolution was still taking shape, played out to a soundtrack of bored fans cheering when the paper aeroplanes they were launching from the stands made it to the pitch.

Slammed as “lifeless, uninspired and mediocre” by one match report after the Slovenia game, England went to the World Cup with expectatio­ns at an all-time low.

But Southgate was gradually winning the hearts and minds of his players with his astute manmanagem­ent and progressiv­e game-plans.

The modest England manager credits his squad for keeping a humble approach amid all the recent plaudits, all the while keeping their focus on the next opponent.

“You can only have that consistenc­y if you work on things every day and have the humility to go back to work,” he said. —

 ?? AP ?? England manager Gareth Southgate shakes hands with goalkeeper Jordan Pickford at the end of the Nations League match. —
AP England manager Gareth Southgate shakes hands with goalkeeper Jordan Pickford at the end of the Nations League match. —

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