England....



Sunday, July 02, 2006



How England made up the numbers in Germany

PAUL ROBINSON 5
Four clean sheets out of five, but the first of many England players who return from Germany with their reputation diminished. Without having too much to do, he failed to inspire confidence, particularly when high balls came his way, and while this may sound harsh, he never threatened to save a penalty in the shoot-out. Has the look of a stopgap — a Chris Woods or a David James — rather than an enduring England goalkeeper, but he should retain his place for now, with his most promising rivals (Chris Kirkland, Scott Carson, Ben Foster) not yet playing first-team football.

GARY NEVILLE 5
Said before the tournament that this, at 31, was likely to be his last World Cup finals and it is not one he will remember fondly. Hampered by injury before and during the tournament, he played only the first game and the last, never looking 100 per cent fit, as was shown by his inability to offer David Beckham his usual support on the overlap. Niggling injuries have become a problem over the past year or two, but, provided that he can keep those at bay, he will remain indisputably England’s best right back for the next two years. Luke Young or Glen Johnson, anyone? Thought not.

RIO FERDINAND 7
Has never quite recaptured the form he showed in the 2002 World Cup finals, but this was much more like it from a player who, at 27, has still to fulfil his true potential. Defended with aggression and composure, albeit without ever having to face a top-class striker. England’s one defensive wobble, in the second half against Sweden, came when he was not on the field. Concentration is always the big question mark against him, but it was not a problem here. Only complacency, which has troubled him in the past, can break up his partnership with John Terry.

JOHN TERRY 7
Alarmingly poor for a 90-minute spell spanning the second half against Sweden and the first against Ecuador, but otherwise his usual dependable self and probably the leading contender for the captaincy now that Beckham has stood down. A highlight was the goalline clearance against Trinidad & Tobago, but equally impressive was the number of shots he threw his body in the way of. Like Ferdinand, he cannot claim to have endured the most searching examination of his career, but he should grow in stature if he is given the captaincy by Steve McClaren.

ASHLEY COLE 8
There had been doubts over his fitness after almost six months out with injury, but unlike Michael Owen and Wayne Rooney, he returned with a fortnight of the Barclays Premiership season remaining and was in good shape by the time the tournament began, ensuring that England’s left side was a source of strength rather than a weakness. Improved with every game and although he tired a little in extra time against Portugal, he stood firm even when left as one against two. His big decision now is where his future lies. Will it be Arsenal, Chelsea or Real Madrid?

OWEN HARGREAVES 8
Jeered on to the pitch against Paraguay in Frankfurt, but the supporters were singing his name in recognition of his astonishing performance against Portugal. Appeared in four of the five matches, but it was on Saturday that Hargreaves came of age, not only breaking up play but often quicker than Steven Gerrard or Frank Lampard to join the counter-attack. McClaren has always been a fan and tried to sign him for Middlesbrough, so the midfield holding role is likely to be his when the new regime starts in August. Could well be playing in the Premiership by then.

DAVID BECKHAM 5
It is the right decision to stand down as captain — and a brave one, if jumping before you are pushed is a sign of bravery. No longer will he be guaranteed a starting place and nor should he be. After promising form in the warm-up matches, this was another poor tournament for him, despite the match-winning free kick against Ecuador and a couple of notable assists. His contribution from open play was negligible. Has begun to look his age at 31 and will not grow old gracefully unless he can reinvent himself.

STEVEN GERRARD 6
Had some very good moments, particularly the second goal against Trinidad & Tobago, but is honest enough to admit that he was nothing like the marauding figure who has inspired Liverpool to glory in the recent past. England were holding out for just such a hero, but even though he was given a little more freedom this time at Lampard’s expense, he was unable to make a truly lasting impression. And, contrary to everything that you may have heard, his penalty miss was no surprise. He has missed three out of seven for Liverpool.

FRANK LAMPARD 4
Feels that some of the criticism has been excessive. Sorry, Frank, but we expect more from you these days. His contribution might have been seen differently had any of his 24 goal attempts — more than any other player in the tournament to date — gone in, but hard to look beyond the sluggish movement and ponderous passing that recalled his West Ham United days. If McClaren has to work out one thing, it is how to accommodate Gerrard and Lampard in the same midfield, otherwise one must be dropped. On the evidence of this tournament, it would have to be Lampard.

JOE COLE 6
Briefly threatened to be one of the stars of the tournament, particularly with that spectacular goal against Sweden, but lost momentum once the knockout stages began and, as at Chelsea, was usually forced to make way when changes were required. There were some excellent touches, a mark of his confidence on the biggest stage, but not enough penetration. The best tribute to him is that no one talks about England’s left-sided problem any more but that is because the entire midfield is so dysfunctional. He might not be an automatic choice under McClaren.

AARON LENNON 7
At least two of the inclusions in the 23-man squad seem even more inexplicable now than they did at the time, but for this act of impulse, Sven, we thank you. With his pace and dribbling, which make him the antithesis of Beckham on the right, the teenager gave the team a new dimension as a substitute against Trinidad & Tobago and Portugal. Remains a raw talent, perhaps better suited to coming off the bench for now, but he could make a strong case for forcing Beckham out of the starting line-up if he can start the new season well at Tottenham Hotspur.

MICHAEL OWEN 4
Will look back in anger on this tournament. Did not appear to be fit after five months out with a fractured metatarsal and was substituted early in the first two matches. Less than 60 seconds into the third, against Sweden, he ruptured a knee ligament, summing up a horrible fortnight in which he hardly seemed to touch the ball. Has scored only four times in four tournaments since 1998, but England’s most prolific goalscorer of recent times must hope that McClaren can play to his strengths in a way that Eriksson seemed unwilling or unable to do.

WAYNE ROONEY 4
A good job that the country is not in the mood for a lynching and that, unlike Beckham in 1998, he already has a lot of credit in the bank. Like Beckham, he let down his team-mates when they needed him most, with a flash of temper that played into the hands of his opponents. Until then, he was getting sharper with every game, even if the tactics did not play to his strengths. That right foot, after all the worrying about his injured metatarsal, ended up doing more harm than good, but he has time to put things right. And, temperament permitting, he will.

PETER CROUCH 6
“Der Zwei-Meter-Mann”, as the German television commentators called him. Hard to criticise the player who scored the opener against Trinidad & Tobago and performed intelligently as a substitute against Portugal, but the problem is that the team too often take the lazy option of hitting the ball long when he is there. Likely to remain a key squad member until McClaren can unearth a big, powerful striker who can score goals as well as link play, but he needs to add more aggression to his game. It does seem a long time since all that robotic dancing, doesn’t it?

REST OF THE SQUAD
Who is surprised that Wayne Bridge, Stewart Downing, Jermaine Jenas and Theo Walcott ended up playing a sum total of 52 minutes between them?
Jamie Carragher has gone from an ordinary player into an exceptional one at club level and now needs to do likewise with England if he is to be more than an odd-job man.

Michael Carrick, talented but lacking assertiveness, lost out to Hargreaves in the holding role in midfield. Walcott’s inclusion at the expense of Jermain Defoe, the experienced Tottenham Hotspur striker, was absurd, but he, like Downing and Scott Carson, will hope to benefit from the experience. David James and Sol Campbell will surely be contemplating international retirement.

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Beckham goes back to the ranks with a tear in his eye

THE tears continued to flow in the England camp yesterday as David Beckham brought a dignified but sorrowful conclusion to almost six years of captaincy. The end of the Sven-Göran Eriksson regime was always likely to bring about a change and, sensing that his time was up, Beckham made the right call to spare Steve McClaren an awkward handover of the armband, probably to John Terry. Typical of the Beckham story, it was a dramatic resignation as he fought back tears to read a prepared statement. His sorrow was genuine — he has loved the job — but there will be speculation that his career reached an even more defining moment on Saturday.
By the time that England crashed out of the World Cup quarter-finals, again suffering the agony of a penalty shoot-out defeat by Portugal, Beckham had been replaced by Aaron Lennon. After a tournament in which he struggled to impress except from dead-ball situations, Beckham’s longevity will be a recurring theme.
He insisted yesterday that he was determined to carry on playing for his country and “helping both the new captain and Steve McClaren in any way I can” and he desperately wants to reach a century of caps (he is on 95), but the change of management is bound to ensure a period of uncertainty. He is likely to miss McClaren’s first match in charge, a friendly against Greece at Old Trafford on August 16, because of a partly torn Achilles tendon. That injury, and a lesion on one of his knees, may rule him out for at least six weeks. The pain from his damaged heel helps to explain Beckham’s tears as he sat on the sidelines in the Veltins Arena, although even without the injury, England’s performance had demanded that Lennon’s pace be brought off the bench. At 31, Beckham has lost the stamina that allowed him to cover extraordinary distances.
He remains a potent player, finishing top of the assists chart in La Liga last season, which is no mean feat in a league that includes Ronaldinho and Juan Román Riquelme, but he has not been helped by managerial turbulence at Real Madrid. Saturday’s match was his 58th as England captain and he enjoyed many moments when the country was as proud of him as he was of the role.
It was a mighty achievement in itself to win back the nation’s affections after he was vilified in the wake of the 1998 World Cup and, when it comes to individual performances, few will forget the free kick that capped a memorable display against Greece to reach the 2002 World Cup finals and his penalty in that tournament against Argentina.
He became perhaps the most influential captain in the history of the national team, some thought too influential, and his closeness to Eriksson was doing him no favours by the end. Now that he is back among the ranks, he can at least be sure that his selection is on merit alone. That should inspire him. It was a moving resignation, even if it did amount to jumping before he could be pushed. Beckham claimed that he had been thinking about it before McClaren was appointed, although, publicly, he had talked of wanting to continue.
“I came to this decision some time ago, but I had hoped to announce it on the back of a successful World Cup,” he said. “Sadly, that wasn’t to be. This decision has been the most difficult of my career to date. But after discussing it with my family and those closest to me I feel the time is right.”
Peter Taylor made him captain against Italy in November 2000 and Beckham described it as “fulfilling my childhood dream”. His successor is likely to be Terry, the captain of Chelsea, although a strong case can also be made for Steven Gerrard, the Liverpool captain.

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England stars give Rooney backing

England's stars have come out in support of Wayne Rooney after he was sent off in the World Cup quarter-final defeat against Portugal.
The 20-year-old saw red for stamping on Portugal defender Ricardo Carvalho as England went out on penalties. But team-mate Steven Gerrard said: "Wayne Rooney won't get any blame from me because I love him and he's done so much for this team. He's also going to do so much for England in the future as well."
Gerrard was unhappy with the reaction of Rooney's Manchester United team-mate Cristiano Ronaldo. Ronaldo rushed to referee Horacio Elizondo demanding punishment for Rooney.
Gerrard said: "I saw that, and if it was one of my team-mates I'd be absolutely disgusted in him. I've seen Ronaldo going over giving the card and I think he's bang out of order. If I was playing against my team-mates from Liverpool and they were involved in a situation like that, I'd never try and get them sent off."
Fifa is to investigate Rooney for violent conduct, and Ronaldo has denied he tried to get him dismissed. I only said to the referee that it was a foul, only that. I never asked for the red card," said the winger.
But England defender John Terry added to the chorus of support for Rooney and the condemnation of the Portugal player.
He said: "Wayne should have had the free-kick 15 or 20 seconds before anything like that happened. Any other team, any other player, they go down the ref gives a foul but we are honest. Wayne tried to stay on his feet and tried to win the ball. He's got two people fighting against him. That's the honesty we show. The ref gave a ridiculous yellow card against me. It's disappointing with players in the Premier League as well, some team-mates as well. It's disappointing to see them being the ones come running over."
Peter Crouch revealed Rooney's England colleagues had consoled the distraught young striker in the dressing room later.
He said: "Wayne was devastated. We've gone in the dressing room and his head was down to the floor. Sven-Goran Eriksson took him off for a word and consoled him. A couple of lads put their arm around him. It was the same with all of the lads. We have just got to pick ourselves up. It's a bitter blow. You don't want to go out in the quarter-finals."

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Saturday, July 01, 2006



England went out of the World Cup 3-1 on penalties after their quarter-final with Portugal ended 0-0.
England lost skipper David Beckham to injury just after half-time and Wayne Rooney was sent off after 62 minutes for a push to his clubmate Christiano Ronaldo. They battled on bravely for the rest of normal time and extra-time with 10 men to take the game to a shoot-out. But Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard and Jamie Carragher missed to end their hopes and Sven-Goran Eriksson's reign.
England crashed out of the World Cup in agonising circumstances after their best performance of the tournament. Big Phil scores his hat-trick against Svennis and Portugal are through to a semi-final against Brazil or France.
England 1-3 Portugal
Cristiano Ronaldo walks forward to put Portugal into the semi-finals. He kisses the ball, stutters in the run up and scores, sending Paul Robinson the wrong way.

England 1-2 Portugal
Next man on the block for England is Jamie Carragher. He takes it quickly and scores but is called back to re-take it. His second effort is saved, Ricardo parrying it on to the bar.

England 1-2 Portugal
Helder Postiga nervelessly runs up to score and put Portugal ahead.

England 1-1 Portugal
Steven Gerrard steps up but his effort is saved by Ricardo to his left. Again, not a great strike from England.

England 1-1 Portugal
The next man up is Petit, who will be suspended from any semi-final Portugal may get to. He misses, dragging his effort wide.

England 1-1 Portugal
Owen Hargreaves, who has played so magnificently, scores to level things up. Ricardo got a hand to it but not enough.

England 0-1 Portugal
Former Newcastle man Hugo Viana steps up. Paul Robinson goes the wrong way but it's a miss for Portugal as the effort cannons off the right post.

England 0-1 Portugal
England's first penalty is taken by Frank Lampard. It is saved by Ricardo to his left. It was not the best of penalties.

England 0-1 Portugal
Simao Sabrosa steps up for the first penalty. After a lengthy wait he scores. Paul Robinson, in front of banks of England fans, guessed the right way but couldn't get to it.

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Tuesday, June 27, 2006



England 1-0 Ecuador

David Beckham became the first England player to score at three World Cups as his free-kick earned a quarter-final tie against Portugal on Saturday.
Beckham defied illness to curl home from 30 yards on the hour mark, but England made hard work of Ecuador. The South Americans could have gone in front early on, Carlos Tenorio's shot deflecting off Ashley Cole and on to the bar after John Terry's mistake. Frank Lampard missed two fine chances but England had done enough to win. Sven-Goran Eriksson's side will now play Portugal - after their stormy 1-0 win against Holland - on Saturday 1 July in Gelsenkirchen.
Again Eriksson will point to a job done, but again it was an England display which will produce more questions than answers. They had to rely on a trademark free-kick from Beckham, who was later sick on the pitch after suffering from dehydration and heat exhaustion.
Playing a 4-1-4-1 formation with Wayne Rooney up front alone, England looked comfortable and clumsy in equal measure on a strange afternoon in Stuttgart. Yet they started off by doing the sensible thing in the stifling heat, with Michael Carrick at the hub as they passed the ball around and made Ecuador do the running. However, the first genuine chance fell to the South Americans and after an error by John Terry they came agonisingly close to taking the lead.
Terry completely mis-timed a headed clearance and the ball fell to Carlos Tenorio to run clean through, the striker's fierce shot crashing off the bar thanks to a fine sliding block from Ashley Cole. It was a Jekyll and Hyde performance from England - one minute keeping the ball with ease, the next giving it away and inviting pressure on to them. Rooney cut an isolated figure as England put more effort into not conceding than scoring but they still looked shaky at the back, as Rio Ferdinand nearly put through his own net and Terry was booked for a neck-high tackle on Carlos Tenorio.
The decision to play Carrick in the holding role gave England a better base to build from, but Lampard and Gerrard were not getting forward enough to give the increasingly frustrated Rooney some much-needed support. The 20-year-old could only look on with envy at the other end as Carlos Tenorio and Agustin Delgado hunted as a pair, causing Terry and Ferdinand to lose their usual composure.
Gerrard took it upon himself to improve things after the break as he bombed forward from the left, only to see his centre run across the six-yard line with no England player in sight. When the breakthrough came, it was like travelling back in time to 2001 when Beckham was at the very peak of his powers. He sized up the opportunity from 30 yards, wonderfully whipped the ball over the wall and towards the bottom corner and saw it creep past Cristian Mora at his near post.
Lampard twice had chances straight after to double the lead, first dragging a left-foot shot wide then failing to find Rooney in the box when he should have shot himself. He missed a sitter with 17 minutes left too, blazing over from 14 yards after some sensational skill from Rooney by the left touchline.
Fortunately, it made no difference. England, for the second time under Eriksson, have reached the last eight of the World Cup finals.

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Friday, June 23, 2006



Sweden 2-2 England
England will play Ecuador in the last 16 of the World Cup after securing a draw with Sweden to top Group B.
England went in front when Joe Cole hit a sensational lob from 35 yards, only for Marcus Allback to equalise when he headed home from a right-wing corner. Steven Gerrard headed in Joe Cole's 85th-minute cross, but Henrik Larsson levelled for Sweden in injury time.
The result was marred by a knee injury to striker Michael Owen, who was stretchered off in the first minute. England will now meet Ecuador in the second round on Sunday at 1600 BST in Stuttgart, while Sweden play Germany in Munich 24 hours earlier.
It was an improved display from England, but they will be concerned by the way they struggled after the break having dominated the first half. England knew if they could win or draw they would avoid a knock-out encounter with in-form hosts Germany. But if Sven-Goran Eriksson was looking for a bright start from his side, it could barely have been any worse. With less than a minute on the clock, Owen picked the ball up on the left and as he tried to pass it, his right knee buckled underneath him.
He immediately crawled to the touchline in agony and received treatment before being stretchered off, replaced by Peter Crouch. Owen's team-mates looked shell-shocked at such a cruel twist of fate and the contest took time to get going as a result. When it did get going it was England in the ascendancy, as Joe Cole fired over and Rooney went on a mazy dribble only to see Teddy Lucic block his goalbound shot. When they went ahead, it was thanks to a goal that announced Joe Cole on the world stage as one of the stars of this tournament. The Chelsea midfielder chested down a clearance 35 yards out and hit the most outrageous, dipping volley that Andreas Isaksson could only help into the top corner. In a World Cup already full to the brim of sensational strikes, this one will remain up there with the very best.
England were buzzing, Joe Cole and Rooney in particular, and Frank Lampard and Rooney shot just over as England tried to double their lead. But they were hit by a sucker-punch six minutes after the break, as Allback rose all too easily to glance home a Tobias Linderoth corner. Former Villa striker Allback nearly made it two from another corner as England failed to learn their lesson, this time the ball ricocheting off Jamie Carragher's arm and Paul Robinson brilliantly reacting to tip it onto the bar.
From being in total control, England were all of a sudden in disarray.
Another corner, another free header - this time for Lucic - and Olof Mellberg volleyed against Robinson's crossbar. England still looked shaky at the back and substitute Gerrard had to hack the ball off the line after Kim Kallstrom fired goalwards, as yet again a corner caused chaos.
Just as England looked like they were on the rack, Joe Cole crossed for Gerrard to nod in at the far post. But they were denied a first win over Sweden since 22 May 1968 when they failed to clear another ball pumped into their box and Larsson pounced to poke home.

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Friday, June 16, 2006



Owen prepared to sit on the bench

England striker Michael Owen accepts he could be left out of the starting line-up for the final World Cup group game against Sweden.
The 26-year-old was substituted early in the second half after another below-par performance. He said "I'm not worried. If I'm sat on the bench, I'm sat on the bench. I've been on the bench in my career before. If the manager thinks it is the right thing, he'll do it. That's football."
Owen, who missed the last five months of the Premiership season with a broken foot, came off after 55 minutes of the opening win over Paraguay. Against Trinidad and Tobago he lasted just three minutes longer as England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson opted to bring on Wayne Rooney to partner Peter Crouch up front.
With Crouch getting on the scoresheet against Trinidad and Tobago and Wayne Rooney seemingly fully fit after his broken metatarsal, Owen's place in the side is under threat. He added: "We've got 23 players and if I'm on the bench then so be it."
He added: "I've been training well and scoring goals in training. I've never shirked responsibility and if I'm given chances then I'm sure I'll score goals. I've only had one chance in the last two games, and one rebound that was blocked, and I kicked myself because I didn't score it. But I'm still a decent finisher, I won't lose that. I'm feeling fine and feel like I'm playing well. If it means bringing me off and putting Wayne on, as it was against Trinidad, then that's the manager's decision. I wouldn't say I've played the best two games of my career but I'm quite content. I'm not that type of player like Wayne Rooney who is always involved even when we are playing bad. My job is to get on the end of crosses."
With England already through to the knock-out stages, Eriksson could opt to rest some of his first choice stars, although they still need a point against Sweden to win the group.

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England 2-0 Trinidad and Tobago

Peter Crouch and Steven Gerrard spared England's blushes with late goals against Trinidad & Tobago to book their place in the last 16 of the World Cup.
Crouch, who had missed several chances, met David Beckham's right-wing cross to power a header past Shaka Hislop. Gerrard wrapped it up in stoppage time with a stunning left-foot drive after England made hard work of the contest. Wayne Rooney came on, but it was fellow subs Aaron Lennon and Stewart Downing who helped turn the game England's way.
It had looked like being a major embarrassment for England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson, with his team short on ideas and confidence. They created plenty of chances without ever being in total control of the match and can count themselves fortunate to have got out of jail. Yet it all seemed so different in the opening stages, as England played with an ease that suggested they were playing in a training game rather than a crucial World Cup contest.
After Michael Owen miscued in front of goal, Crouch went close twice, first denied an attempt at a volley five yards out by Brent Sancho's timely intervention and then foiled by Hislop's claw away after Joe Cole's left-wing cross. But as so often with Eriksson's England, early promise soon turned into increasing frustration as passes were misplaced with alarming regularity. They were nearly made to pay for their laboured approach, as Paul Robinson uncharacteristically flapped at a corner only for Stern John to head wide at the far post.
As the clock ticked towards half-time the England fans began to chant for Rooney's introduction with real fervour, not helped by a moment of calamity from Crouch. Spotted by Beckham standing in the penalty area eight yards out, with no-one anywhere near him, Crouch hoplessly caught the volley on his right shin and sent it several yards wide of Hislop's goal. His miss could have proved even more costly. Carlos Edwards beat Robinson to a cross and as John bundled the ball towards goal, John Terry typically managed to get back in time to clear the ball off the line.
It was equally bad for the first 13 minutes of the second half, before the fans finally got their wish and Rooney was introduced, along with Lennon. The double change galvanised the side, but England continued to be sloppy in front of goal. Eriksson's stock 4-4-2 became 3-5-2 and Beckham and Lennon began to dovetail down the right - the captain crossing for the wasteful Crouch to head over, again unmarked.
Lampard then had three chances in two minutes but could not convert any, scooping one over, hitting the next at Hislop and dragging the last one wide. But just when it seemed England's profligacy would cost them, Crouch popped up with the most important goal of his life. Putting the misses firmly behind him, England's giant hitman powerfully headed Beckham's cross into the roof of the net past Hislop.
Having come so close Trinidad visibly wilted, and Gerrard took advantage with a brilliant left-foot screamer that flew in from the edge of the area.

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Saturday, June 10, 2006



England's campaign off to a winning start:
England got their FIFA World Cup campaign off to a winning start in Frankfurt with a hard-fought 1-0 win over Paraguay on Saturday, 11 June 2006. However, they did not have their own way against the South Americans, who gave Sven-Goran Eriksson’s men some nervous moments during the 90 minutes. The only goal of the game came in the fourth minute when David Beckham’s free-kick skimmed off the head of Carlos Gamarra and into the net. Paraguay pushed for an equaliser in the second half, but despite their best efforts, a goal was not forthcoming and must now turn their attentions to their next Group B game against Sweden in Berlin next Thursday.
The match:
4’: England took an early lead, courtesy of an own goal by Carlos Gamarra. David Beckham curled in a free-kick from the left flank and the Paraguay captain inadvertently flicked the ball into the net with his head, beating the despairing dive of goalkeeper Justo Villar (1-0).
8’: Villar’s unhappy start to the tournament was compounded when he raced out to clear an England attack, but in kicking the ball away from Michael Owen he injured himself and Aldo Bobadilla came off the bench to replace him in goal.
10‘: Liverpool midfielder Steven Gerrard, passed fit for the match after struggling with a hip injury in the build-up, tried his luck with a right-footed volley but the effort flashed over.
19‘: Cristian Riveros had a shot on target for Paraguay, but Robinson dived low to his left to smother it well. Gerrard picked up the game’s first yellow card for the challenge he made in trying to close Riveros down.
22‘: Lampard played a neat one-two with Crouch and forced Bobadilla into a save with a fierce drive.
43‘: After a relatively quiet passage of the game, Beckham tried to find his range from open play with a curling shot from 18 metres, but it flashed just past the post and out for a goal kick.
47+‘: Nelson Valdez had Paraguay’s best chance of the first half in stoppage time after picking up a loose ball inside the penalty area and firing in a right-foot shot, although he failed to hit the target.
53‘: The second half began at a much slower pace, with the heat in Frankfurt having taken its toll on the players. Roberto Acuna tried to catch the England defence off-guard with a quick free-kick for , but it rolled through to Robinson without troubling him at all.
58‘: Joe Cole brought Bobadilla into action with a low drive, but the Paraguayan was equal to it with a smart stop.
59‘: An anxious moment came for Robinson when he failed to gather Carlos Bonet’s cross at the first attempt. Paredes tried to hook the ball over the onrushing keeper but could not keep the ball down.
64‘: Valdez turned inside Gerrard and sent in a decent shot with his left foot, but the effort went straight into Robinson’s arms. The Tottenham keeper brought a collective smile to the crowd when his towering clearance bounced back off the giant video screen hanging over the centre circle in Frankfurt.
73‘: With England struggling to find the rhythm they managed in the early part of the game, Lampard injected some dynamism back into their play with a stinging attempt which brought the best out of Bobadilla, who palmed the ball over the bar.
88‘: Lampard once again tested Bobadilla with a powerful shot, but the Paraguay keeper denied him by tipping the ball round the post for a corner.
In conclusion:England got the opening win they were looking for, but the performance in the second half was less than convincing. Paraguay can take heart from their battling display, though they had no reward for their efforts.

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Eriksson ready to begin Cup quest:
Sven-Goran Eriksson says he is sending out the finest England team he has ever had on a mission to win the World Cup. The England coach exuded confidence as he placed total faith in his side ahead of the opener against Paraguay.
He said: "This is the best England team I have ever had - no doubt about it at all. When you have a great team and a good group you can set the tempo. I believe we can win the World Cup and it's important we get a winning start because it's a message to other teams."
Eriksson also explained why he took a tough line with Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson over Wayne Rooney's fitness. Ferguson is believed to be furious that Eriksson is prepared to plunge Rooney into World Cup combat after recovering from a broken foot.
But Eriksson said: "If we play a friendly I am not that worried if people withdraw some players. It is not the end of the world. But this might be the end of the world. This is the World Cup. This is important."
Liverpool's Peter Crouch will deputise for Rooney - and Eriksson has no doubts he is ready for the ultimate football stage. The Swede said: "It will be completely different. You can't compare Crouch with Rooney, but he is ready for this - absolutely."
And he is ready to place his trust in the players who are confident in their status as one of the pre-tournament favourites.
Eriksson said: "Three points is the most important thing. But I want to see the team play good football as well, defend well, attack well, concentrate on set pieces which will be very important.
"Once the game starts it is up to the players to remember all the preparation and talking and practicing we have done. It is up to the players. We have a fit team. We never had a fit team in Japan and never 100% in Portugal. This is a fit team." Eriksson, however, is not interested in an honour akin to the knighthood that came Sir Alf Ramsey's way after England's win in 1966.
He said: "I have never thought about that and it is not a big thing. I hope to leave the job alive!"

Posted by Samvit :: 5:40 AM :: 0 comments

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Thursday, June 08, 2006




Rooney recovering, Gerrard concern
England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson told reporters on Thursday afternoon that Wayne Rooney is "injury-free" and now just needs to get match-fit before he can make his FIFA World Cup™ debut.
Eriksson stated that the final decision on when the 20-year-old can play at Germany 2006 will be “Rooney’s and mine,” although Manchester United said in a statement last night that according to the expert independent medical view, he would not be fit until the round of 16.
Following training, a decisive Eriksson told reporters: “The good news from yesterday evening and today is Rooney has no more injury.
"He is injury-free and it is up to us now to get him match-fit and when we think he is match-fit I am prepared to take him to any specialist we or Manchester United want to take him to. I'm doing this in the best interests of Rooney, the England team and 40 million England fans. I'm prepared to listen to everyone and discuss Rooney, but the last say in this story is Rooney's and mine."
Gerrard concern
Meanwhile, doubts remain over Gerrard's chances of playing in Saturday’s opening match against Paraguay in Frankfurt.
The Liverpool midfielder is battling to overcome a knock on his hip which caused him to suffer back spasms during training earlier in the week. Gerrard took some part in Thursday's session in Germany but rates his own chances of playing against the South Americans as 50-50.
"It is not a back problem,” he said. “I got a knock on my hip which made my back go into spasms. The good thing is it is improving all the time. I have got a good chance of playing on Saturday but I need to keep working on it from now until Saturday.
"What is a good chance? As we speak now, I am probably 50-50 to play - but if it keeps improving as it has done over the last 24 hours, then I'll be there."

Posted by Samvit :: 8:33 AM :: 0 comments

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