The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Three Lions must get to ‘other levels’

- SIMON PEACH

England may have made a recordbrea­king start to the World Cup but Gareth Southgate says his side must reach “other levels” if they are to succeed in Qatar.

The Three Lions made light work of a challengin­g build-up and normally obdurate opponents Iran as they ran amok 6-2 at the Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium in Al Rayyan.

Bukayo Saka’s brace was complement­ed by goals from Jude Bellingham, Raheem Sterling, Marcus Rashford and Jack Grealish, with Mehdi Taremi grabbing two consolatio­n efforts.

It was England’s biggest ever win in an opening match at a major tournament and just the second time they had hit a side for six on such a stage.

That victory puts England in the driving seat in Group B as Wales went on to draw 1-1 with USA, who Southgate believes will give the Three Lions a wake-up call when they meet on Friday night if his side are not careful.

“By the end we looked sloppy but just before the end we were pretty good,” Southgate said.

“I’ve said to them I’ve got to try and balance how I feel because we’ve played so well and we’ve dominated the game, and there were so many good performanc­es.

“And equally we can’t be conceding two goals in the manner that we did, so we will really have to reset.

“I understood that the game went on – I think we had 25 minutes of injury time across the course of the game – so I can understand why the focus might drift.

“Yeah, it is a good start but we’ve got other levels we need to get to.”

Southgate knows what is required to take England deep in tournament­s, having led the national team to the semi-finals four years ago and the final of last year’s European Championsh­ip.

But this is an internatio­nal year unlike any other and there have been more off-field matters to handle than ever, leading players to be peppered with questions about topics they would not usually face.

Even on the morning of the match the Football Associatio­n was still in discussion with Fifa about wearing a rainbow armband in Qatar, where homosexual­ity is outlawed.

“Our job over the course of this week has been to try and concentrat­e on the football and I think the players’ focus all week has been excellent,” Southgate told BBC Radio 5 Live.

“We felt they were ready. You’re never sure how that’s going to transfer and the first half was a bit sticky with the long stoppage for the goalkeeper.

“But we really used the ball well and our attacking threat was there for everybody to see.”

 ?? ?? “GOOD START”: England boss Gareth Southgate during a training session in Qatar.
“GOOD START”: England boss Gareth Southgate during a training session in Qatar.

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