The National - News

SOUTHGATE TAKES HEART FROM ENGLAND’S LAST-GASP VICTORY

Manager insists ‘good teams score late goals’ after Kane’s winner earned his side a vital three points and shows that spirits are high in the squad, writes Richard Jolly

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History is England’s constant companion in major tournament­s. It is often their burden, too. Comparison­s with the past can both elevate expectatio­n and serve a reminder that underachie­vement on the global stage is a national trait. Yet they are unavoidabl­e.

Harry Kane’s injury-time decider against Tunisia was England’s latest winner since Gary Lineker and David Platt’s extra-time deciders against Cameroon and Belgium in the 1990 World Cup.

But for that, it would have been another opening draw: those in 1966, 1990 and 1996 may be regarded as good omens, those in 1992, 2010 and 2016 rather less so. As it is, England are positioned to avoid the first-round exit they suffered in 2014.

The manner of victory brought the set-piece specialist Sam Allardyce to mind – both goals stemmed from corners aimed at centre-backs, with John Stones winning the initial header for Kane’s opener and Harry Maguire for his winner. But the reality of it pleased his successor.

“In the end, you wear teams down and that’s what happened,” Gareth Southgate said. “Good teams score late goals.”

Talk of the spirit in the England camp feels more valid when a late goal provides proof. Southgate took solace in England’s patience and their possession on a night when they completed 180 more passes than Tunisia.

And yet England’s was a patchy performanc­e, blistering at the beginning, mixed thereafter, marked by creativity, profligacy and sterility within the same game.

The fast start revived memories of Steven Gerrard’s fourth-minute strike in the 2010 opener against the United States and the 2-0 lead England held after 18 minutes against Portugal in 2000; those games ended in a draw and a defeat respective­ly. They were microcosms of a team’s capacity for false dawns.

“It looked like it could be one of those nights again,” Kane said. His wretched Euro 2016, his installati­on as captain and status as the personific­ation of Southgate’s young, eminently polite England made it both imperative and symbolic he scored. “He is the optimal striker,” the beaten Tunisia manager Nabil Maaloul said. “The spaces that were created by Kane were very scary to us.”

England’s fear factor may only stem from their No 9. Raheem Sterling and Jesse Lingard spurned presentabl­e chances and Southgate’s England, scorers of a mere 29 goals in 19 games, are not clinical enough.

Meanwhile, Dele Alli was hampered by a quad injury that should have brought his removal earlier ion the match, but which he hopes will permit him to play against Panama on Sunday.

If not, or if Lingard is demoted for a game when his running off the ball may be less of a factor, Ruben Loftus-Cheek promoted his claims in an impressive cameo. The midfielder’s attributes had been outlined by former England manager Roy Hodgson, who oversaw his progress at Crystal Palace last season.

“He is very good at screening, keeping the ball,” he said. “He’s very good at beating players. His work-rate has been very good.” Each was apparent.

“The way we’ll change the game is by bringing on a different profile of player,” Southgate said.

Loftus-Cheek’s profile is unique in this England squad. Tellingly, the manager persevered with his 3-5-2 formation, altering personnel rather than system in the search for a winner.

There is a pleasing, and uncharacte­ristic, emphasis on England playing between the lines.

There was another endorsemen­t of Southgate’s decision-making in the choice of Jordan Henderson as the holding midfielder.

The Liverpool captain is a more penetrativ­e forward passer than is often acknowledg­ed, as he showed with some perceptive balls. If Kyle Walker’s unfamiliar­ity with the role of a right-sided centre-back may have been a contributo­ry factor when he conceded the penalty for Tunisia’s goal, Kieran Trippier excelled as a right wing-back.

Monday ended with the slightly surreal sight of the defender topping the lists for delivering most crosses and key passes in the World Cup. His set-pieces may retain an importance, especially if England struggle to source goals in other ways.

They can almost certainly expect to be confronted by a blanket defence when they face Panama.

But at least they have the cushion of three points. They cannot always say that after one game.

England’s fear factor may only stem from Kane. Southgate’s side, scorers of 29 goals in 19 games, are not clinical enough

 ?? Reuters ?? Harry Kane wheels away in celebratio­n after scoring England’s winner against Tunisia
Reuters Harry Kane wheels away in celebratio­n after scoring England’s winner against Tunisia

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