The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Mean defence, potent attack? The key areas...

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England have the chance to end a 12-year wait for a knockout phase victory and reach the World Cup quarter-finals at Colombia’s expense tomorrow.

Ahead of the last-16 encounter, Courier Sport analyses some of the key areas for the crunch clash in Moscow.

SET-PIECE THREATS

England have flourished from set-pieces in Russia. Both of Harry Kane’s goals against Tunisia came from corners, leading Panama to panic from dead-ball situations in Nizhny Novgorod.

So concerned were the World Cup debutants that John Stones was allowed to run free and head home an opener as team-mates wrestled bigger threats.

A smart set-piece routine, the brainchild of strikers’ coach Allan Russell, allowed Stones to grab his second against Panama, before grappling at another corner led to a spot-kick smashed home by Harry Kane.

Colombia will also pose a threat themselves from dead-ball situations. Southgate may well be unnerved by giant defender Yerry Mina, who nodded his side ahead in the crucial win against Poland before heading the winner from another corner against Senegal.

CASE FOR THE DEFENCE

In Mina and Tottenham’s Davinson Sanchez, the South Americans arguably boast the best young centre-back pairing in the world.

The giant defenders boast no little talent and have been solid at the heart of a four-man back line, flanked by Santiago Arias and Johan Mojica. Colombia have yet to concede with 11 players on the pitch, having suffered a 2-1 opening-day loss to Japan after Carlos Sanchez’s red.

England will again deploy a three-man back line complement­ed by marauding full-backs – a formation Southgate has been honing since last October.

Kyle Walker was brought into it after a successful experiment there against Holland in March, while Manchester City team-mate John Stones is at the heart of it. Harry Maguire looks to have secured himself as the third member of the backline thanks to his confidence on the ball and ability in the air.

ATTACKING THREATS

Colombia head coach Jose Pekerman uses the same 4-2-3-1 system that saw them flourish in Brazil, where they reached their first quarter-finals.

Their holding midfielder­s have interchang­ed so far in Russia, while their attacking midfield triumvirat­e offer pace and skill behind Radamel Falcao’s guile.

Juan Quintero, looking resurgent after a tricky few years, is picking the locks behind Falcao.

Injury concerns over star turn and 2014 Golden Ball winner James Rodriguez would damage Colombia, but Premier League viewers will be aware of the threat Brighton’s Juan Izquierdo could pose if brought in.

As for England, they boast the leading goalscorer in Russia.

Kane will look to add to his five goals after being given a breather against Belgium.

Raheem Sterling, so brilliant for Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City, is looking for a first internatio­nal goal since October 2015.

Fit-again Dele Alli is likely to come back into midfield alongside in-form Jesse Lingard and composed Jordan Henderson.

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