Daily Mail

BELGIUM BEATEN BY GRIT & LUCK

A soft penalty and Mount’s loopy goal seal England win

- MARTIN SAMUEL Chief Sports Writer at Wembley Stadium

Mason Mount’s shot clipped toby alderweire­ld’s boot and looped over simon Mignolet, powerless as he watched it arc into the goal.

You’d take it, though, yes, if this was a World Cup knockout game? You’d take a spawny win over the no 1 team in the world, a team who hadn’t lost for 13 games, stretching back two years.

You might even take the very soft penalty that got you level, Jordan Henderson collapsing to the turf over what looked a very mild tug on his shoulder. and certainly you would take the second-half performanc­e which showed great resilience and organisati­on against an opponent with the potential to inflict serious damage.

In the first half, Belgium looked capable of taking the game away from England. In the second, they ran up against a brick wall.

Kyle Walker was outstandin­g, the recently maligned Harry Maguire equally solid. England guarded the back line well, too, largely through

Declan Rice. and, yes, this was a Belgium team without Eden Hazard. against that, England had no Raheem sterling and were already 2-1 ahead when Harry Kane was introduced.

In the circumstan­ces, it was a display that spoke more to the character of the team. Gareth southgate will know England’s performanc­e level can be better than this. Equally he will know the same cannot be said of the result.

Beating Belgium in a competitiv­e game is as much a statement as the victory over spain in this competitio­n almost two years ago.

and that’s how it goes sometimes. You get the breaks. Belgium will feel they shouldn’t have lost, but they got bogged down after half-time and England took advantage. they’re quite opportunis­tic under southgate (right). It’s one of their strengths. they win games that previous generation­s might have lost.

there were times when Belgium seemed appreciabl­y superior, when Kevin De Bruyne’s passing range was so impressive and we felt the old questions rising in our throats. Where is our one like that? Why don’t we produce players like him?

then England found a way to win, regardless. a bit of luck, granted, but no little toil, too. and it’s pointless playing better than this and losing — which has often been the English way. But not yesterday. southgate’s England found a way to underwhelm, yet still emerge victorious.

and make no mistake, there’s an art in that. When Germany used to do it, we were in awe.

For while the winning goal was blessed with good fortune, the build- up contained much to admire. there was a fine crossfield diagonal from trent alexandera­rnold which was kept in by Kieran trippier.

He was looking to pick out Mount in a shooting position, did so with an intelligen­t header and once the Chelsea man had the ball at his feet, he was always going to cut inside and have a pop. When he did, it spiralled off alderweire­ld’s boot, stranding Mignolet and looping into the net. after that, England resisted Belgium’s pressure impressive­ly although withdrawin­g De Bruyne after 66 minutes — nearly putting in Yannick Carrasco for an equaliser was his final contributi­on — helped.

It says something that with the minutes ticking away that it was Marcus Rashford MBE, not Romelu Lukaku ex-Mu, who had the best chance to score, a shot from range that travelled narrowly over. Kane could have done more with a header, too.

of course, there was a significan­t period of the first half when it looked as if the game might get away from England. the Belgians were more fluid, better organised, and inventive, much as they had been at the World Cup in 2018.

Both meetings in Russia came with caveats, the first a dead rubber after the countries had progressed from the group, the second a battle for an unloved third place. For all the limitation­s of the nations League as an event, in a strange way this had more

about it. There is a trophy to be won. And both sets of players are short of trophies at internatio­nal level.

So Belgium’s early dominance was a worry. In the third minute, youri Tielemans hit a sublime crossfield pass into the path of de Bruyne, which rice had to be at his most alert to cut out. Soon after, Carrasco found Timothy Castagne on the overlap, his cross picking out Lukaku, who should have done more with his header.

The pressure was building, however, and in the 15th minute England snapped. Eric dier dived in on Lukaku, a slide tackle in the penalty area. do that and you’ve got to come out with the ball, or at least noticeably get a fair portion of it.

dier did neither. He did send Lukaku tumbling, though, and referee Tobias Stieler of Germany appeared to get advice to point to the spot, despite initial reluctance.

Lukaku stepped up with one of those pitty-pat tiny footsteps runs and sent Jordan Pickford the wrong way.

For the next 20 minutes or so, England fought to stay in the game. de Bruyne had a shot saved by Pickford, Thomas Meunier hit one wide. Soon after, rice was booked for a foul on Axel witsel. It was beginning to slip away from England.

So it came as no small relief when Stieler gave his second penalty of the night and breathed life into an increasing­ly one- sided encounter. Meunier tugged Henderson’s shoulder and he went to ground with an audible cry. It is often said that foreign players are accused of tricking referees while a blind eye is turned to domestic transgress­ions, so in the interests of balance let’s be plain: it looked soft. There was a foul in there but whether it was enough to cause Henderson’s dramatic reaction is another matter. Indeed, after the game Meunier could be seen miming the incident, including the theatrical tumble, in front of Henderson in a way that is best described as joking but meaning it. They both left smiling, although Meunier’s laughter was probably hollow. At the time, England were not getting back in that game. The penalty was their first and only shot of the half. rashford stepped up and levelled the scores. Given his prowess from the spot for England, it can be presumed he would have quite the record for Manchester United, too, were it not for a certain Bruno Fernandes. with two minutes remaining before half- time, Carrasco broke on the right and Trippier did well to put him off as his shot flew wide. It was Belgium’s seventh chance in 45 minutes. England can’t always rely on grit and good fortune like that but, once in a while, it’s nice to be the Germans.

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 ?? NMC POOL ?? Up and over: Mason Mount (third from left) watches his deflected shot spin beyond Simon Mignolet in the Belgium goal
NMC POOL Up and over: Mason Mount (third from left) watches his deflected shot spin beyond Simon Mignolet in the Belgium goal
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 ?? NMC POOL ?? Interlocki­ng Spurs: Kane and Alderweire­ld do battle
NMC POOL Interlocki­ng Spurs: Kane and Alderweire­ld do battle
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