2324Xclusive Media: Netherlands 0-1 England: Talking points from Three Lions' win in Amsterdam.


The Manchester United man's second-half strike was the difference in the Dutch capital.

From Gareth Southgate's experimental line-up to the battle for the goalkeeping jersey, we pick out the talking points from England's victory...

Previously a scorer of big goals rather than a big goal scorer, Jesse Lingard has been finding the net with increased frequency this season and impressively kept his composure to hit the match winner for England on Friday night - his first international goal.

When Danny Rose's cross broke to him on the edge of the box, there was still a lot to do, with plenty of bodies between Lingard and the goal. But the Manchester United forward - who has 13 goals for his club this season - steered a smart, low shot past Jeroen Zoet.

England needed that bit of class in the final third. While Southgate's side could take heart from November's goalless draws against Germany and Brazil, with narrow wins over Slovenia (1-0, via a last-minute Harry Kane goal) and Lithuania (1-0, via a Kane penalty) preceding those fixtures, it is fair to argue England's attacking play has been far from thrilling.

With Kane again absent through injury, as he was in November, England dominated for long periods of the first half against a poor Dutch side without creating genuine clear-cut openings. The second half was going a similar way until Lingard's intervention.

The England manager caused a stir before kick-off with his team selection, naming a line-up which left many wondering just how the visitors would line up in Amsterdam. There were no fewer than five potential full-backs in the starting XI, including two out-and-out right backs.

Kyle Walker was the curveball. The flying full-back, who has had an impressive season for Premier League runaway leaders Manchester City, was placed on the right side of a three-man defence, alongside John Stones and Joe Gomez, who has often played right-back for Liverpool this season.

Kieran Trippier took up Walker's regular right wing-back slot, with Danny Rose on the other side, while Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain - who was used in those deep, wide positions by Arsene Wenger earlier this season before swapping Arsenal for Liverpool - partnered his Anfield club-mate Jordan Henderson in central midfield.

Ahead of them, Lingard played off frontmen Marcus Rashford and Raheem Sterling to complete a 3-5-2 set-up - a variation on Southgate's previously preferred 3-4-3.

While an injury inside 10 minutes to Gomez disrupted Southgate's plans, England were well organised and not inhibited by the role changes. Walker - albeit rarely tested by a blunt Netherlands attack - dealt with his defensive duties without fuss, offered occasional bursts forwards and regularly looked to hit crossfield passes to set Rose away.

Henderson and Oxlade-Chamberlain kept England ticking in the centre of the park, while their pace out wide and in attack stretched a sluggish Dutch defence - although the visitors often missed the end product. Food for thought

Who will Southgate turn to if star striker Kane is unavailable in Russia? On Friday night, he gave Rashford the nod ahead of Jamie Vardy as England's No 9 and the Manchester United man should have been rewarded for an industrious performance with a penalty.

Share on Google Plus

About 2324xclusive Store

2324Xclusive Store Is a subsidiary Of 2324Xclusive Media Is An Online classify commerces And market place Were You Can Get Various Items ( Skincare Products, Home Appliances And Accessories)

0 comments:

Post a Comment