The Sun (Malaysia)

Allardyce has Lallana to thank

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SAM ALLARDYCE was dogged by criticism for sticking with the players who performed so abjectly for his predecesso­r against Iceland at Euro 2016. That chagrin reached its highest levels since that fateful evening in Nice at halftime as England laboured towards stalemate in Trnava.

For all of the resilience and determinat­ion it took to forge a winner, Adam Lallana’s (caricature) last-ditch success merely glossed an otherwise meek display which carried the stench of Roy Hodgson’s tenure in charge of the national side.

Wayne Rooney, the captain who says he will retire in 2018, dropped deep to provide an extra man in midfield whenever needed but that left Harry Kane painfully isolated up front.

The Tottenham striker often leans on the talents of Dele Alli for his club in the Premier League, an ally he craved until the 20-yearold’s introducti­on in the second-half, but he was forced to toil on his own for long periods.

Allardyce entrusted Raheem Sterling and Lallana with the responsibi­lity to provide a spark on the wings.

Sterling, attacked so vehemently for his poor displays in France, is a bornagain figure for Manchester City while Lallana, too, has been a source of enthusiasm at Anfield.

Even with their hosts down to 10 men in the latter stages, owing to Martin Skrtel’s dismissal, England lacked the cutting edge which the situation badly called out for.

It was sheer determinat­ion, rather than skill alone, which gave England the points.

Allardyce’s debut performanc­e as Hodgson’s successor would ultimately lie in his choice of substituti­ons.

The 61-year-old resisted the temptation to use Jamie Vardy’s pace and instead opted for Alli to play in the No. 10 role behind Kane. It was an inspired decision as the former MK Dons man terrorised the depleted Slovakian defensive ranks upon his arrival.

Despite a host of cutting passes and adventurou­s runs, there was little he could do alone to improve England’s showing.

Theo Walcott, on the other hand, was called upon to replace the ineffectiv­e Sterling but the Arsenal man also cut a frustrated figure for large periods. Spurning a succession of decent opportunit­ies, the Arsenal winger is yet to set his England career alight and this never seemed like the setting for him to finally do so.

Allardyce’s pre-match optimism was quickly dwindling as his touchline capers veered from tranquil offerings of advice to frantic screams of indignatio­n. Luckily for him - and the wider England supporting public - Lallana was on hand to provide some cheer and leave the inquisitio­n for another day. – The Independen­t

down the rightflank with intent but was often found exposed once possession was lost deep into the hosts’ half. JOHN STONES – 6 THE Manchester City defender was rarely tested but did look fragile on occasion as Slovak attackers charged at the England back-line in the first-half. GARY CAHILL – 6 AN inconspicu­ous display from the Chelsea defender without many mishaps but also lacking in moments for the highlights reel DANNY ROSE – 6 GAVE the ball away cheaply in the first-half which very nearly surrendere­d an early goal on Sam Allardyce’s big day. ERIC DIER – 7 Provided a well-needed anchor in midfield and cut up play when required but was unable to provide the springboar­d for forays into the Slovakia half. JORDAN HENDERSON – 6 WAS subbed in the second-half, for Dele Alli, after an assured, if unremarkab­le, display in the first period. RAHEEM STERLING – 6 KEEN to impress, the Manchester City winger was

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