Baltimore Sun

For England and Belgium, a low-stakes playoff

- By James Ellingwort­h

ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA — How do you stay motivated for the game no one wants to play? England and Belgium have different answers.

After both were eliminated in the World Cup semifinals, a once-in-a-lifetime chance gone, the teams have to play again in today's third-place game.

As always in English football, coach Gareth Southgate and his men are looking back to the England team that won the World Cup in 1966. Beating Belgium today would give England its best World Cup finish since then, surpassing fourth place in Italy in 1990.

“We have a chance to win a medal at a World Cup, which only one English team has ever done, so there's a lot of motivation for us,” Southgate said Friday. After exceeding expectatio­ns by reaching the semifinal, only to lose, 2-1, to Croatia in extra time, England wants to keep its positive buzz.

“None of us knows if that's as good as it gets,” Southgate said. “We've raised expectatio­n, and I don't see a problem with that because we've also raised belief. We've raised their enjoyment of playing. They now associated playing for England with enjoyment, fun and not being under siege.”

For Belgium coach Roberto Martínez, it’s about leaving Russia with a warm feeling and playing attractive football to inspire the next generation.

“We want to win. When you finish a tournament you carry the feeling of the last game Every Belgian fan deserves that winning feeling,” he said. “For us, the way you play is essential, not just for this tournament but for future generation­s.”

Third would be Belgium's best-ever World Cup performanc­e. It finished fourth in 1986 after losing the playoff game, 4-2, in extra time to France.

Both coaches have one eye on fitness for what will be each team's seventh game in 26 days.

Southgate said he wants to make “as few changes as possible,” but might need to switch some players because of injury and illness. He wouldn't confirm whether he'd give either of his reserve goalkeeper­s, Jack Butland and Nick Pope, their first game of the tournament in place of Jordan Pickford.

“We need to have everyone fully fit on the pitch. There are players who have played a lot of minutes and we need to have that in mind,” Martínez said. “We’re going to have the strongest team on the pitch but maybe changes will need to be made.”

It’s the second meeting of the tournament for the two teams.

Their first game, in the group stage, was treated almost like a friendly since both teams had already qualified. After a combined 17 changes to both lineups, Belgium won that encounter in Kaliningra­d, 1-0, thanks to a curled shot from Adnan Januzaj.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States