The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Can Southgate rouse England before Croatia match?

- By Ronald Blum

MOSCOW » It’s time for Gareth Southgate to come up with a big speech of his own.

After England gave up a tying goal to Brazil in first-half stoppage time in the 2002 World Cup quarterfin­als, Southgate felt coach Sven-Goran Eriksson lacked inspiratio­nal oratory in the locker room at halftime.

Now the 47-year-old former England internatio­nal is leading the team, which plays Croatia on Wednesday in England’s first World Cup semifinal in 28 years. The match is riveting the Land of Hope and Glory, which won its only title at home in 1966.

“Probably 18 months ago I talked to them about if you have success with England, it will be so much bigger than anything you can imagine, and I think that is probably starting to register with them now,” Southgate said after Saturday’s 2-0 quarterfin­al victory over Sweden.

Southgate, who didn’t play against Brazil, took a swipe at Eriksson after the 2-1 loss, comparing the cool-speaking Swede to a Tory opposition leader widely regarded as dull.

“We needed Churchill, but we got Iain DuncanSmit­h,” an unnamed defender, later identified as Southgate, was quoted as saying in a 2004 book by Joe Lovejoy.

No word whether Southgate will offer his “blood, toil, tears and sweat.” With the coach keeping his strategies close to his now-famous vest, a young roster led by Harry Kane hopes to succeed where Gary Lineker, Michael Owen, Alan Shearer, David Beckham and Wayne Rooney failed.

England is ranked 12th in the world and Croatia 20th. The winner advances to Sunday’s final against France or Belgium, which also will be at Luzkniki Stadium.

Croatia lost its only previous semifinal match to host France in 1998. It beat Denmark in the round of 16 and host Russia in the quarterfin­als this year, becoming only the second team with consecutiv­e shootout wins in the same World Cup since Argentina defeated Yugoslavia and Italy in 1990.

“It won’t be easy for us,” Croatia coach Zlatko Dalic said through a translator. “We will focus in the next few days to recover as much as possible. We will look for the best solutions ahead the match, considerin­g we have a few players with minor issues after the match against Russia. It won’t be easy, but to get into the semifinals it’s a new motive for us.”

 ?? MATTHIAS SCHRADER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? England head coach Gareth Southgate, right, celebrates victory of his team over Sweden with England’s Harry Maguire during the quarterfin­al match between Sweden and England at the 2018 soccer World Cup in the Samara Arena,
MATTHIAS SCHRADER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS England head coach Gareth Southgate, right, celebrates victory of his team over Sweden with England’s Harry Maguire during the quarterfin­al match between Sweden and England at the 2018 soccer World Cup in the Samara Arena,

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