Bangkok Post

Kane’s chance to ‘score his way to immortalit­y’

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>>LONDON: Harry Kane’s winner against Denmark to send England into their first major tournament final for 55 years was his 275th goal for club and country.

Yet, at 27, the England captain is still yet to win a trophy.

That could all change today should Kane become the first Englishman since Bobby Moore in 1966 to lift a major piece of internatio­nal silverware.

Personal accolades also await if the Tottenham striker can maintain his return to scoring form in the knockout stage of Euro 2020.

Kane’s fourth goal in the last three games on Wednesday took him level with Gary Lineker as England’s all-time top goalscorer at major tournament­s with 10.

One more goal would also be enough to take him alongside Cristiano Ronaldo and Patrik Schick as joint-top scorer in the tournament. Two more and he would win the Golden Boot outright for the second consecutiv­e tournament after scoring six times at the 2018 World Cup.

“Golden Boots are a bonus and if I end up getting that it means I’ve scored one or two goals in the final, which gives our team a great chance of winning the whole thing,” said Kane.

Any chance of more goalscorin­g landmarks seemed a long way off as Kane trudged through the group stage without scoring and barely even threatenin­g to do so against Croatia, Scotland and the Czech Republic.

Kane looked so out of sorts Gareth Southgate even substitute­d his skipper with 15 minutes to go of the 0-0 draw against Scotland.

A gruelling 49-game club season in which he tried in vain to drag Spurs back into the Champions League seemed to have taken its toll.

Kane made it clear before the tournament began he may have to leave his boyhood club to fulfil his ambitions of winning major trophies, with Manchester City interested in making him Sergio Aguero’s successor.

He may look enviously upon the trophy hauls collected by internatio­nal teammates Raheem Sterling, Kyle Walker, John Stones and Phil Foden under Pep Guardiola at City.

Obsessive goalscorer

But today gives Kane a shot at a legendary status that would rank higher than anything he may go onto achieve in the club game.

“One more game and a couple more goals and he’ll have scored his way to immortalit­y,” Alan Shearer wrote in The Athletic.

One moment in the dying embers of the Three Lions’ last-16 victory over Germany changed the course of Kane’s tournament and possibly his career.

Already leading 1-0 thanks to Sterling’s opener, Kane stooped to head home Jack Grealish’s cross to spark wild scenes of celebratio­n at Wembley as England ended the first of a series of 55-year hexes by beating Germany in the knockout tie of a major tournament.

Even British Prime Minister Boris Johnson exclaimed “Harry Kane finally scored” as he watched on in the Downing Street gardens.

Kane then took just four minutes to open the scoring against Ukraine in the quarter-final, adding a second in the second half of a 4-0 thrashing.

Fortune was on his side in the last four as Kasper Schmeichel saved his penalty only for the ball to rebound kindly back into his path to smash home.

 ??  ?? KEY MAN: England’s Harry Kane, right, scores against Denmark in the semi-final.
KEY MAN: England’s Harry Kane, right, scores against Denmark in the semi-final.

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