The Sentinel

SOUTHGATE: ENGLAND ‘HAVE TO PUT IT RIGHT FOR NEXT MONTH’

- Peach at Wembley

GARETH Southgate will pore over an ‘unusually disjointed performanc­e’ against Hungary to ensure England put it right and wrap up World Cup qualificat­ion next month.

A home match against Albania and trip to minnows San Marino are all that remains for the Group I leaders on the road to Qatar, with the unbeaten Three Lions holding a three-point cushion over nearest rivals Poland.

The fact some bookmakers have them priced at 1/1000 to top the pool underlines the feeling that it would take something remarkable to derail their qualificat­ion, but Tuesday’s meek performanc­e was surprising.

A month on from winning 4-0 in Budapest, England were made to sweat at Wembley as John Stones cancelled out Roland Sallai’s penalty in a 1-1 draw marred by away fan violence and an arrest for racism.

Euro 2020 stars Harry Kane and Raheem Sterling were among the below-par performers on Tuesday, but Southgate is not sure if it is down to any hangover from the summer, having also failed to hit the same heights at club level.

“I mean, it’s easy to speculate but I think every individual is different,” the England boss said.

“I thought it was just one of those nights where we started poorly, we weren’t in contact with them on our pressure, which gave them a little bit of comfort in the game.

“We gave needless passes away that led to counteratt­acks that gives you the feeling that you’re stretched, even though they didn’t create really clear chances.

“I just thought it was an unusually disjointed performanc­e that we’ve got to go away and look at closely and make sure we put it right for next month.”

Such were England’s struggles that Southgate made the eye-catching decision to replace captain Kane and Sterling in search of a late winner.

“I just think we didn’t play as well as a team with the ball as we should and as we can,” he said when asked about taking off Tottenham striker Kane, who has yet to score a Premier League goal this season.

“In the end we felt the need to try and refresh that, to give a different problem, to get some fresh legs into the game.

“I think with any of our forward players there’s always going to be a story if we take any of them off because understand­ably they’re big players.

“But we’ve got to have a team where we’re able to do that otherwise we’ll never progress.

“We felt that was the right thing at the time but I don’t think singling out any of the players really serves any purpose because we were all responsibl­e for the performanc­e, really.”

Southgate also changed the system as ‘we wanted to try and get a spark’, but the move to wing-backs only succeeded in stifling Hungary’s counter-attacks rather than boosting the attack.

In all, it was an unsatisfac­tory display on a night when the attackmind­ed 4-3-3 starting lineup had looked exciting on paper.

“I think we’ve been playing 4-3-3 a lot but perhaps with different profile of number eights, so we wanted to look at something a little bit different,” Southgate added.

“We didn’t have Kalvin Phillips anyway, who has been such an essential part of that midfield, and we knew that we would have to break a packed defence down.

“So, in actual fact, I’m not certain that it was the profile of the players that was the issue in terms of not being able to break them down.

“But we just didn’t play with the same fluidity and individual level of performanc­e that I think we’ve come to appreciate and come to expect, really. I think we have to be honest about that as a group.”

 ?? ?? FRUSTRATIN­G: Gareth Southgate shakes hands with Harry Kane after substituti­ng his captain as England tried to find a way past Hungary at Wembley.
FRUSTRATIN­G: Gareth Southgate shakes hands with Harry Kane after substituti­ng his captain as England tried to find a way past Hungary at Wembley.

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