How Vardy, Sturridge rescued England against Wales
Jamie Vardy and Daniel Sturridge rose from the bench
to score as England came from behind to defeat neighbours Wales 2-1 in
Thursday’s all-British Euro 2016 clash in Lens.
Just as he had
in Wales’s opening 2-1 win over Slovakia, Gareth Bale put Chris Coleman’s side
ahead with a long-range free-kick that England goalkeeper Joe Hart could only
fumble into the net.
But Vardy and Sturridge came on at half-time and after the
former had equalised in the 56th minute, the latter smuggled in a stoppage-time
winner that fired Roy Hodgson’s men to the top of the group.
Wales are a point
back in second place, above Slovakia on head-to-head record, and need to beat
Russia in Toulouse on Monday to guarantee one of the two automatic qualifying
berths.
A draw against Slovakia in Saint-Etienne will suffice for England and
they will approach the game with renewed optimism after belatedly kicking their
tournament into gear.
It was the 102nd meeting between the teams, but the first
at a major championship, and the boxy, British-style Stade Bollaert-Delelis
provided an ideal setting on a day when fears of fan violence failed to
materialise.
Wales recalled first-choice goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey after he
missed the win over Slovakia owing to a back spasm, as well as Joe Ledley and
Hal Robson-Kanu, who came off the bench in Bordeaux to score the winner.
While
it meant that Wales were at full strength, they were content to let England,
who were unchanged, force the issue and it was Hodgson’s men who bossed the
first half on a sunny afternoon in northern France.
They should have taken the
lead in the seventh minute when Harry Kane freed Adam Lallana to cross for
Raheem Sterling, but from seven yards out the Manchester City man could only
slide the ball over the bar.
Gary Cahill and Chris Smalling threatened with
headers, while the most contentious incident of the first period saw Kane
denied a penalty when his close-range header struck Ben Davies’s outstretched
left hand.
– Hart blunder – Bale, Welsh antagoniser-in-chief in the build-up to
the game, had been a peripheral figure, save for a shot that was blocked by
Cahill, but three minutes before half-time he strode onto centre-stage.
Wayne
Rooney’s foul on Robson-Kanu gave Wales a free-kick 35 yards out in a central
position. Though Bale’s shot had vicious pace and dip, Hart should have done
better than palm it inside his left-hand post.
It made the Real Madrid forward
the first Wales player to score against England since Mark Hughes, on his
debut, in May 1984.
When the half-time whistle came, it drew a cascade of boos
from the England end. Hodgson was quick to react, sending on Vardy and Sturridge
for Kane and Sterling at the break, and after Rooney had seen a low curler
palmed behind by Hennessey, his side equalised.
Sturridge’s flighted cross from
the left was knocked down at the back post and Vardy swivelled to tuck away his
fourth international goal. He was standing around four yards offside, but
replays showed that the previous touch had come from Wales captain Ashley
Williams.
The on-pitch scene soon resembled the Alamo as Hodgson threw on
teenage Manchester United striker Marcus Rashford for Lallana, leaving England
with four of their five named forwards on the pitch. Despite the charge it
seemed Wales would hold out, only for Sturridge to collect Dele Alli’s clever
flick and steer a shot past Hennessey in the first minute of stoppage time, silencing
the Welsh hordes
Post Comment
No comments