The Scotsman

Starting spots up for grabs says Southgate as England prepare for showdown with Germany

- By SIMON PEACH sport_ts@scotsman.com

Gareth Southgate says starting spots are up for grabs as England begin preparatio­ns for next week's tough-looking Euro 2020 last-16 tie against Germany at Wembley.

England won a European Championsh­ip group for just the third time as 1-0 victories over Croatia and the Czech Republic bookended the drab 0-0 draw with Scotland.

The reward is a round-of-16 meeting at Wembley on Tuesday, which not only removes logistical headaches but allows England to call upon a partisan home crowd for a knockout clash which is set to be far from straightfo­rward.

Asked if he knew his ideal starting line-up in the last-16 against the Group F runnersup, Southgate said: "For the last 12 months whenever I've written a team sheet down anything more than two days before a game it's changed, so at the moment, no.

"I think what's clear is that there are some areas of the team that we've been able to build closer to what we think is full strength as the last sort of four weeks or so has gone on.

"Players have arrived late from European finals or (we've) been unable to get them on the pitch following injury or lacked fitness and I've always felt that we were going to have to grow into this tournament in terms of selection. That's why the squad has been so important."

Southgate called England's group win a "real collective performanc­e" given a challengin­g backdrop that continued this week when Mason Mount and Ben Chilwell were forced into isolation.

Scotland's Billy Gilmour tested positive for coronaviru­s following Friday's match and the Chelsea duo were identified as contacts, much to the confusion and frustratio­n of those around the England camp.

Given that issue, it was no surprise to see an England employee go over to Declan Rice and hand out masks as he spoke to West Ham teammates Tomas Soucek and

Vladimir Coufal after the Czech Republic game on Tuesday.

"I think that we've been incredibly vigilant throughout,

really, so it's been a real anomaly what's happened with the two boys," Southgate said. "But because of what's happened we've had to speak

to the players again just to remind them, but frankly our protocols meant we've not come unstuck in the past.

"How we've come unstuck and others haven't is beyond comprehens­ion for me, really.

"Just because there's some evidence of ours and yet clearly the situation with others has been a higher risk in terms of passing the virus on, so it feels particular­ly harsh for our two players. It's not helpful for us as a team, but devastatin­g for the two boys that they're in a major championsh­ip and they've had to miss out on a big part of it in this way."

Southgate expects Mount and Chilwell to be the only missing parts as he starts a pivotal - and all too rare - stretch of training with the group. "The first thing is it's great to have a couple of days to be able to recover the players because a few of them have had quite a heavy load in the last week or so at the end of a very long season," he said. "Of course you always want training time. It's the thing we don't have as internatio­nal managers and we've had hardly any of it with the full group because of the complicati­ons at the start of our training camp.”

 ??  ?? 0 Gareth Southgate greets Bukayo Saka as he comes off during the win over the Czech Republic
0 Gareth Southgate greets Bukayo Saka as he comes off during the win over the Czech Republic

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