England at Euro 2024: Harry Kane and Phil Foden among concerns for Gareth Southgate ahead of Denmark test | Football News

England at Euro 2024: Harry Kane and Phil Foden among concerns for Gareth Southgate ahead of Denmark test | Football News


Declan Rice told me he felt England’s opening win over Serbia was the archetypal “game of two halves”. He was right.

England’s total dominance in the first half contrasted with their disjointed and lacklustre second half. And so, understandably, there are a host of positives and negatives that Gareth Southgate will be reflecting on in the coming days.

The key issue now for the England manager is addressing the negatives in time for the second Group C game against Denmark on Thursday.

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Jude Bellingham celebrates after heading England in front against Serbia in their Group C opener

The positives: Brilliant Bellingham and a clean sheet

Firstly, England won their opening game of the Euros, as they have done in each of the three other major tournaments in which Southgate has been in charge.

That should not be overlooked, or taken for granted. In fact, Southgate’s record bucks the trend of history: the win in Gelsenkirchen was only the second time in nine attempts England have won their first match at a Euros.

That gives the team a massive boost, it gives momentum and now – with the expanded tournament – it makes it almost impossible for England to fail to qualify for the knockout stages. One more point from two more games would almost certainly do it.

Jude Bellingham
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Bellingham’s 13th-minute goal was the difference for Gareth Southgate’s side

Secondly, Jude Bellingham. Jude Bellingham did what Jude Bellingham does – grabbed the game by the scruff of the neck and demanded he be the lead actor in the spectacle.

Much has been said of his influence, and his importance, already. We shall devote no more column inches here to England’s best and most important player – except to say that Southgate will hope he continues in the vein in which he started.

Thirdly, England kept a clean sheet. Something they’d only done twice in their previous seven internationals. And in the absence of Harry Maguire, and with Luke Shaw still injured, there were real concerns about the defence.

There still are, for me, but England’s back-line did manage to ultimately repel the formidable front two of Aleksandar Mitrovic and Dusan Vlahovic. Albeit with some good fortune at times, and with thanks to a couple of excellent saves from Jordan Pickford.

Aleksandar Mitrovic fights for a header with Marc Guehi
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Marc Guehi impressed alongside John Stones in defence for England

The way that Serbia’s front pairing was marshalled by Marc Guehi – playing his first game at a major tournament – was the fourth huge plus.

The Crystal Palace man started the game with 41 straight passes completed, and ended the game with a 96 per cent completion rate. Wow. Euros debuts don’t get much better than that. He looked composed and confident. Exactly what Southgate ordered.

Fifthly, there were no new injury concerns. Kieran Trippier told me after the game that his problem in the game was cramp-related, but he said he was pleased to feel it because he needed the game time.

That leads me to my sixth positive – there were vital minutes for many England players who have come into this tournament desperately undercooked.

Trippier, Harry Kane, John Stones – all got the full 90 minutes. Bukayo Saka got 75. That can only help their sharpness for the matches to come.

But that is where the positives end, and this is where the negatives start kicking in…

The negatives: Struggling Kane and Foden mystery

Rob Dorsett gives greater insight into Harry Kane’s recovery from his back injury and what it could mean for England at the Euros

Firstly, captain Kane looks miles away from full fitness, hard as he might be trying in games, and on the training pitch. At the moment, it feels like more competitive minutes might not be enough to get England’s talisman fully firing.

Forty-nine goals in 52 games this season is an extraordinary record. But the final three matches of the domestic season – which he missed because of a back injury – seem just as significant as the previous 52.

At the Arena AufSchalke, Kane touched the ball just once, before we got into injury time at the end of the first half. It is true that, but for a brilliant save by Predrag Rajkovic in the second half, he would have opened his Euro account with a towering header. But that effort aside, he has rarely – if ever – been so anonymous.

Likewise Phil Foden – negative number two. The Premier League player of the season, who acts as a conductor to the orchestra of football that is Manchester City, can’t seem to get a tune out of his England team-mates.

Sure, he isn’t playing in his favourite position of number 10. He won’t, so long as Bellingham remains in this form. But even when he has played there for England recently, as he did in the warm-up games, he has struggled.

More often, he is stuck out on the left wing, with Southgate encouraging him to drift in, find space, and influence the game. He wasn’t able to do that at all against Serbia. And how you solve a problem like Phil Foden is becoming a real pain in the England manager’s neck.

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Thirdly, for a squad that I feel is the envy of every other nation at this tournament for attacking talent, there was a worrying lack of creativity against Serbia. England had only five shots on goal in the whole 90 minutes. Serbia managed six.

Collectively, their 11 efforts were the lowest on record in a Euros match since the format began in 1980; the worst of 322 other matches.

But I would argue that problem was caused by England’s fourth negative. England couldn’t allow their creative players to thrive, because they didn’t have control of midfield, in the second half.

Gary Neville questions the balance in the England midfield following the 1-0 win over Serbia and whether Trent Alexander-Arnold could be the man to play alongside Declan Rice

How Trent Alexander-Arnold is used in the team is key. Southgate says he has spent the last 12 months teaching him the art of the central defensive midfielder – a position unnatural to him when he plays for Liverpool.

His array of passing was there for all to see early in the game, but as England faded, Alexander-Arnold was more exposed.

He does not innately understand positionally where he needs to be when England are out of possession. Should he really be learning his trade in a European Championship?

Only when Conor Gallagher came on did England’s midfield look more secure, and their pressing game began to bear fruit. Before then, it was all too common to see Bellingham’s arms raised in frustration, as he pressed the ball, only to find none of his team-mates doing the same.

Gallagher to start? The changes Southgate might consider

Southgate doesn’t have much time to address these issues before Thursday’s meeting with Denmark in Frankfurt. In fact, just two full training sessions – that is how quickly these Euros games come along.

I’ve hinted at some of the changes he might be thinking about already: Gallagher into the middle of midfield in place of Alexander-Arnold. Kane to be replaced earlier in the second half, to give Ollie Watkins or Ivan Toney a first run at a major tournament.

In truth, while Kane will almost certainly start the match, I doubt on current fitness he can complete two lots of 90 minutes in the space of four days.

Paul Merson admits he was ‘bored’ by large parts of England’s performance in their Euro 2024 opener against Serbia

The other interesting conundrum for Southgate is his wide attacking options, and whether he might dare to drop Foden. It would be a brave and controversial call. But with the goal-scoring prowess, and goal-creating inventiveness of both Cole Palmer and Ebere Eze chomping at the bit, it may be the most pragmatic decision right now.

The good news about Luke Shaw’s progress on the training pitch and in the treatment room might also force Southgate’s hand in making another tweak.

There is absolutely no criticism of Kieran Trippier if we suggest that the England boss would prefer to see Shaw line up at left-back.

Trippier has been outstanding for his country for so long, his versatility admirable. But England are too often, too narrow. That is why Southgate has tended to play the left-footed Foden on the left wing rather than on the right wing, where he has consistently played for City this season.

Michael Dawson discusses how England fans need to remain positive despite an underwhelming performance in their opening Euro 2024 match against Serbia

England lack natural width – with each of Foden, Saka, Palmer and Eze preferring to cut inside, off the flank. Shaw is a left-footed left-back, which not only helps when he is attacked on the outside by an opposing winger, but it also helps England progress the ball up the left flank.

He may well, in part, be a solution to Foden’s problems too, if he can offer more natural support while playing higher up the pitch.

There is no panic for Southgate or England. They – like all of the other big guns in this tournament – have made a winning start. But the Three Lions are far from their roaring best right now.

In truth, the show they are putting on is a bit flat. It has been panned by many of the critics. They need some clever guidance from their circus master if they are to be considered realistic trophy contenders.

Euro 2024: Scotland need to ‘get back to basics’, says Grant Hanley | Football News

Euro 2024: Scotland need to ‘get back to basics’, says Grant Hanley | Football News


Grant Hanley believes Scotland need to “get back to basics” if they are to have a chance of progressing past the group stages of Euro 2024.

It was a dismal start for Steve Clarke’s side as they were humbled 5-1 by hosts Germany in the opening match on Friday night, leaving them with just one win in their last 10 games.

They need to take something against Switzerland on Wednesday to remain with a chance of reaching the knockout stage of a major competition for the first time.

Ahead of the trip to Cologne to face the Swiss, Hanley, who came on as a substitute at the start of the second half against Germany following Ryan Porteous’ red card, was keen to consign that night to history and focus on returning to the types of performances that have taken Scotland to back-to-back European Championships.

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Ryan Porteous was sent off shortly before half-time for his follow-through on Ilkay Gundogan

“It happens in football,” he said.

“You have periods where performances and results go well, particularly if we add a defensive point of view where you are not conceding goals, and the answer for us is to get back to basics and really concentrate on where and why we had success before.

“It is difficult to put your finger on.

“From the players’ point of view, our main work comes on the training pitch to do what we can to improve.

“We have had a couple of days to put it to bed. The manager had a couple of meetings last night to go over it and put that behind us, draw a line under it and look forward to the next game.

“We are talking about playing at the top level, we are talking about playing against a top side.

“These games are huge, it is a big occasion and everyone wants to play on those types of nights.

“Obviously there is maybe added nerves, but I don’t think that is something we can use as an excuse as we didn’t perform like we wanted to.

“Again, we have drawn a line under that and our main focus is what we have got going forward.”

Scotland head coach Steve Clarke explains who he will now approach their next game at the Euros against Switzerland and who he will be supporting when England take on Serbia.

Clarke suggested he had perhaps clouded the players’ judgment by giving them too much information, but Hanley was not convinced.

“I don’t think so. From a players’ point of view we have to look at ourselves first and look at how we approached the game, how we performed and the reasons for that,” the former Blackburn and Newcastle defender added.

“We will look at the reasons why we maybe never turned up as we would have hoped to have done or performed the way we can perform to have a positive performance and a positive result.

“This is a group that has been together for quite a while now and we have had our ups and downs together.

“So I think we have to take confidence from the group, that we have shown before that we have bounced back from negative results. So that will be our focus again.

“Obviously we want to put Friday night behind us and give ourselves a better chance to get a result.”

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Could Billy Gilmour start against Switzerland?

Hanley and the rest of the Scotland camp watched an impressive Switzerland beat Hungary 3-1 in their first game.

He said: “The lads watched the game and Switzerland has some really good quality in the side.

“I am hoping that we turn up and are prepared for the game and put on a performance like we have been doing for a few years.

“We have a massive opportunity to be successful again.

“With hard work we will make sure we prepare and give our all again.”

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Scotland reporter notebook: Steve Clarke’s side have a mountain to climb to make history at Euro 2024 | Football News

Scotland reporter notebook: Steve Clarke’s side have a mountain to climb to make history at Euro 2024 | Football News


As Scotland look to recover from their nightmare start to Euro 2024, Sky Sports News reporter Luke Shanley assesses their chances of making it past the group stages for the first time…

Ouch! That was sore. The focus of world football was on Munich on Friday, Scotland were centre stage and boy did we get stage fright.

From start to finish, we were not at the races. We didn’t get near Germany in all aspects of the game. No player got pass marks and it was an awful night for Scotland.

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Scotland were left humbled as they conceded five goals for the first time in a competitive match in more than 20 years

We were playing the hosts, we were playing a Germany side that is littered with talent and we did go down to 10 men, but the reality is 10 men or 11 men, we got a hammering.

Let’s not forget though, Scotland can still get out of this group, but it will be difficult.

Early in Steve Clarke’s tenure, Scotland did lose back-to-back games 4-0 against Belgium and Russia but that was the low point and start of the resurgence that has witnessed Scotland reaching back-to-back European Championships.

Kris Boyd discusses who he would start in Scotland’s second Euro 2024 fixture against Switzerland.

Callum McGregor said Switzerland and Hungary will “smell blood” given Scotland’s performance against Germany and he might be right, but it is about how Scotland put right the many wrongs from Friday. Clarke addressed the media on Sunday, he didn’t have to but wanted to.

He wanted to put the negativity of Germany to bed so we can all move on and focus on the huge game against Switzerland.

In reality, it was always going to be the case that Scotland would probably lose to Germany and focus would shift to the Switzerland and Hungary games. The nature of the performance and result in Munich means that you can’t simply write off what happened against Germany.

Ryan Porteous was sent off for this tackle on Ilkay Gundogan
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Ryan Porteous was sent off shortly before half-time for his follow-through on Ilkay Gundogan

Defensively Scotland must improve. Looking back to the start of the qualification campaign and Scotland won their first five games keeping four clean sheets, conceding just once to an Erling Haaland penalty in Oslo. That included the 2-0 win over Spain at Hampden Park which was an excellent example of getting the game plan right.

Scotland need to somehow rediscover that form and defensive resilience. Scotland have conceded 26 goals since then keeping just one clean sheet, that was against Gibraltar earlier this month in Faro.

Scotland were up against tough opponents in some of the friendlies, they conceded three to England, four to France and another four against Netherlands. Changes were made during those games too but when it really mattered against Germany, they were 2-0 down in the opening 20 minutes. Clarke needs to change things at the back anyway due to Ryan Porteous’ red card.

Scotland head coach Steve Clarke explains who he will now approach their next game at the Euros against Switzerland and who he will be supporting when England take on Serbia.

The Scotland boss said he had to give Porteous a cuddle to show his support as he did to others in the squad but also had to “kick some backsides” too.

Will Clarke change formation and go to a back four? That is an option at his disposal, but he was giving nothing away in an otherwise open media conference in which he showed his dry wit. Many feel Billy Gilmour will come back in after only featuring as a substitute on Friday. All the players will have a point to prove.

Just look at the last Euros when Scotland lost their opening game to Czech Republic at Hampden Park and had to go to Wembley and get a least a point despite being written off. They got the point and could have earned all three on another night as they clung on to hopes of getting out of the group.

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Will Billy Gilmour be handed a Scotland start against Switzerland?

It wasn’t to be in the end, but it will require something like that to keep alive hopes of the four points Clarke talks about needing to progress. Remember at Wembley, Clarke was bold. Two up front, Gilmour made his first competitive start and Keiran Tierney was back from injury. The perfect example of a phrase he used on Thursday, “respect everyone, fear no one”. They need to prove it now and not just say it.

The last time Scotland won a game at a major championship was Euro 96 at Villa Park against Switzerland. Ally McCoist’s cracker allied with England’s comfortable lead at Wembley against Netherlands had us believing we could qualify out of the group that night, but we would be eliminated on goals scored after Patrick Kluivert squeezed in his effort through David Seaman’s legs. Talk about bittersweet.

This time it has to be no regrets; it has to be a positive result.

The Scotland players had some downtime on Sunday and went up the Zugspitze, the highest mountain in Germany. Reaching the peak is one thing, they now have to climb a big footballing mountain, but they still have the chance to make history and prove the doubters wrong.

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Gary Neville says balance of England midfield is major concern facing Gareth Southgate at Euro 2024 | Football News

Gary Neville says balance of England midfield is major concern facing Gareth Southgate at Euro 2024 | Football News


Gary Neville says the balance of the England midfield is the “major concern” facing Gareth Southgate at Euro 2024.

England sit top of Group C after edging past Serbia 1-0 in their tournament opener thanks to Jude Bellingham’s early header.

England controlled the first half but lost their way in the second, raising more questions over how Southgate can get the best out of his squad.

Rob Dorsett looks at the positives and negatives from England’s opening Euro 2024 win over Serbia.

“The midfield is the major concern and the fluidity of the game that comes through there is one thing we need to try and work on in the group stage because when we play against a good team, we’ll have to have it right,” said Sky Sports’ Neville.

“There are some small alarm bells around balance and having a good group of players that are very talented but are we as good a team?

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Jude Bellingham celebrates his goal with team-mate Trent Alexander-Arnold

“Last night, you start to think about the impact and influence of Jordan Henderson and Kalvin Phillips. The best players don’t make the best team sometimes.

“We’re aware Kieran Trippier is right-footed at left-back and is playing there because of all the injuries in that position which creates a further imbalance. But in midfield, somehow we have to try and get that right. Gareth [Southgate] will be more than aware of that.

“Having that partner alongside Declan Rice is important because I don’t think he is at his very best when he’s sat back covering for other players. Mikel Arteta found that out at Arsenal and worked out he was better being able to move forward. Jorginho or [Thomas] Partey came in at the end of the season.

“There’s no doubt we’re a little undercooked, players having not played for a few weeks and maybe that’s the first time that team has played together, I’ll think they’ll get better.”

Trent Alexander-Arnold made up a three-man midfield alongside Declan Rice and Bellingham. He showed flashes of his passing range and helped out defensively, but made one mistake deep in the England half which handed a chance to Serbia striker Aleksandar Mitrovic.

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“We know [Alexander-Arnold] can do it when he moves into midfield from right-back and then can deliver those crosses and passes. There were times when he found himself with his back to play and that is a different story,” said Neville.

“I don’t really want to focus on him being a problem in there. It was the balance of the entire midfield and I include Declan Rice in that as well – and what England need to have in there to be able to move forward in this tournament.

“All eyes will be on Trent Alexander-Arnold. His best position is right-back and having the ability to move forward on that side or coming inside and playing that quarter-back role. It doesn’t look like we’re going to do that, it looks like we’re going to stick with Kyle Walker which is absolutely the right decision.

“Gareth will know he’s got an issue with these talented players and how he gets them all into the team – and most importantly with the right balance.”

Jude Bellingham

Neville believes the answer could be for Southgate to stick with his current side.

“An imbalance may have been created last night not because of the wrong personnel. It may be they just haven’t played enough together. It may be when that team plays together for three games in the group,” he said.

“Sometimes we think Phil Foden didn’t work on the left, Trent didn’t work in midfield, let’s get them out and put two others in. It may be the way Gareth goes is for them to get good together and play them together because that’s what he believes in and have three games under their belts. Throwing the baby out with the bathwater may not be the thing to do here.

“Gareth has great experience of how to manage tournament football. It might be the opposite of what we all think which is getting someone else alongside Declan Rice, it may be that they need to play together a bit more.”

Euro 2024 – Serbia 0-1 England player ratings: Marc Guehi and Declan Rice impress in defence as Three Lions win opener | Football News

Euro 2024 – Serbia 0-1 England player ratings: Marc Guehi and Declan Rice impress in defence as Three Lions win opener | Football News


It wasn’t pretty – but England got off to a winning start to Euro 2024 thanks to a 1-0 win over Serbia.

When Jude Bellingham’s 13th-minute opener went in, the floodgates were primed to open – but Gareth Southgate’s side found it tricky.

A quieter-than-usual Harry Kane struck the bar late in the game while Jordan Pickford denied Dusan Vlahovic with a stunning finger-tip save late on, but the Three Lions settled for a one-goal victory to move to the top of Group C.

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Jude Bellingham celebrates after heading England in front against Serbia

Make your own player ratings and take a look at Sky Sports football journalist Sam Blitz’s player ratings below…

England

Jordan Pickford – 7

Jordan Pickford punches clear to end a Serbia attack
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Jordan Pickford punches clear to end a Serbia attack

Before his stunning save to deny Dusan Vlahovic in the final ten minutes, the only real involvement from England’s No 1 was one punch.

But the manner in which he tipped the late effort over shows the sign of a good goalkeeper – concentration when critical.

The clear plan was to go long towards Kane and Pickford kicked into the right areas. A tenth clean sheet at a major tournament is nothing to be sniffed at as well.

Kyle Walker – 8

Outstanding at both ends. The Man City captain was important in sweeping up any early counter-attacks as England suffocated Serbia early on. Then provided the key pass at the other end to release Bukayo Saka for Bellingham’s goal.

The right-back almost scored a second, which would have calmed England’s second-half nerves, but the pace he showed to create the chance proved why he is one of the first names on the teamsheet.

John Stones -7

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Any accusations that he was not ready enough for this game were dismissed when he barged Dusan Vlahovic after 20 seconds to stop an early Serbian chance.

The Man City defender did show signs of tiredness, but that is to be expected given his lack of minutes. An awkward clearance at the end of the first half showed that, while Filip Mladenovic started giving him issues down the right in the second period.

But he then produced a key header with minutes left as Serbia put on the pressure late on. After some availability doubts, Stones is back.

Marc Guehi – 8

Aleksandar Mitrovic fights for a header with Marc Guehi
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Guehi stood tall in big moments as he takes his chances in this England team

Phenomenal.

The Crystal Palace defender showed calmness in possession – his first misplaced pass came after the hour mark.

The way he stepped forward to win the ball back in dangerous areas shows he has the presence that Harry Maguire left behind. If he carries on like this, it’s a game-changing summer ahead.

Kieran Trippier – 7

Mr Reliable. Trippier was forced to provide width down the left due to Phil Foden cutting inside, but was still at the right place in the England penalty area when required.

Given the left-back has struggled for minutes in recent weeks, this was a solid display should Luke Shaw need more time to recover.

Declan Rice – 9

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A real faultless display, the reliable balance to all that creativity ahead of him.

The Arsenal midfielder produced double digits in ball recoveries and quite a few of them came in important moments on the edge of his own box.

Rice is growing into a big-game player for country now, not just club. And you can see why Gareth Southgate has put him in his leadership group.

Trent Alexander-Arnold – 8

Trent Alexander-Arnold holds off Nemanja Gudelj
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Trent Alexander-Arnold had an impressive outing in central midfield

A livewire. Had plenty of shots from midfield and took up good areas – while his smart interception created the Walker chance in the first half.

He was taken off as England needed more energy in midfield, but the Liverpool player showed he can do the running side of the game as well.

He made that mistake for Aleksandr Mitrovic’s first-half chance but it was a small dot on a very encouraging display.

Jude Bellingham – 9

Lee Hendrie describes Jude’s Bellingham’s performance in England’s victory over Serbia as ‘remarkable’.

England’s flame. After the first half, you were looking at one of the all-time Three Lions displays at a major tournament.

For the second major tournament in a row, a Bellingham late run and header into the box has got England up and running. While he will take the headlines, this all-round display was impressive.

He recorded the most duels won in the England team and Serbia could only foul him to stop him. His attitude to give some aggression back to his opponents makes him even more box office.

Bukayo Saka – 8

The way he kept taking on his opposite number, you wouldn’t think this was his first start in five weeks. He hassled Filip Kostic in one-on-ones so much in the first half that the Serbian wing-back was forced off due to injury, probably caused by exhaustion.

The Arsenal winger is not just England’s out ball on the break down the right, but the change in direction this team needs to break down tight defences. His assist for Bellingham’s opener proves that.

Harry Kane – 7

Harry Kane evades a challenge from Nikola Milenkovic
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Harry Kane had a quiet evening

Another intriguing performance. England’s captain touched the ball just once in the first half an hour and twice in the whole opening period. His third touch was even intercepted by the referee.

But Kane was given a real test by Serbia’s centre-backs, especially in the air. He rose to the challenge in the second period and brought the Three Lions up the pitch brilliantly – then could have got a second only for a stunning save onto the bar.

If he has to be selfless so others, especially Bellingham, can thrive, then so be it.

Phil Foden – 7

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The Premier League Player of the Year was in the game but wasn’t really influencing it. Foden didn’t take any Serbia defenders on but did get involved defensively.

How the Man City forward influences this team will still remain a mystery for Southgate.

Substitutes

Conor Gallagher – 6

Brought on as England’s energy levels dropped and the Three Lions did improve a little after his introduction. But too many lost balls and heavy touches meant Southgate’s side couldn’t settle. The Chelsea midfielder could still be useful against higher-quality opposition.

Jarrod Bowen – 7

Jarrod Bowen holds up the ball under pressure from Strahinja Pavlovic
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Jarrod Bowen had an impressive cameo

Many cried “Bowen?!” when he was preferred to Cole Palmer and Anthony Gordon as a wide replacement. But then the West Ham winger beat his opposite number and set up Kane brilliantly to strike the bar. Southgate appears to trust him, that’s why he travelled.

Kobbie Mainoo (n/a)

Not on long enough for a rating, but being trusted for the final few minutes as Bellingham’s replacement is another impressive landmark for the teenager.

Jude Bellingham: Negatives to rub out but more to come from England at Euro 2024 | Football News

Jude Bellingham: Negatives to rub out but more to come from England at Euro 2024 | Football News


Jude Bellingham knows England have some “negatives to rub out” but believes there is more to come as he focused on the positives after Gareth Southgate’s side dug deep to win Sunday’s Euro 2024 opener against Serbia.

Among the favourites to triumph in Germany having finished runners-up three years ago, they flew out the blocks in Gelsenkirchen as they began this summer’s quest for glory.

Bellingham’s powerful early header put dominant England in control, but Serbia stepped up after the break and Southgate’s side were made to sweat as they saw out a 1-0 win.

The result puts them top of Group C and Sunday’s man of the match batted back the suggestion that the first half showed why they can win the Euros and second period why they may fall just short.

“No, not quite – I don’t agree with that,” Bellingham said. “I think the first half shows why we can score goals against any team, and the second half shows why we can keep a clean sheet against any team.

“I think obviously, commonly with the team, there’s a negative theme around all our games. You know, sometimes rightly so. But I think in this case you take the positives from the fact that, OK, maybe we had to hold on at times and suffer a little bit, but we kept a clean sheet.

Lee Hendrie analyses England’s performance as Gareth Southgate’s side beat Serbia 1-0 in their Euro 2024 opener

“When you keep clean sheet all you have to do is score one goal to win the game. It’s three points, I think this team is still so new, gelling together with every game.

“So, yeah, I think inside the changing room we’ll be happy with that. Of course, there will be negatives that we want to kind of rub out but overall I’m pleased with that performance.”

It’s not a role he’s done much before but he showed great discipline and moments of his fabulous passing range. We’re learning with him in this role and he showed some of the attributes we want. Whoever we play in there, we’ll be playing a young or inexperienced player in there. It was great to see him come through this test.

England boss Gareth Southgate on Trent Alexander-Arnold

‘I feel I can impact and decide games’

Jude Bellingham’s goal celebration with Trent Alexander-Arnold against Serbia explained!

Bellingham starred as England won a fourth straight tournament opener, showing strength, skill and confidence against physical opponents.

Put to the 20-year-old that he seems unfazed as he looks to help the Euro 2020 runners-up go one better, he said: “I just enjoy playing football.

“When it comes to each and every game, I take it as a single game, as opposed to looking too far into the future. I realise that in every game I feel like I can make an impact, I feel like I can decide games.

England fans across the country celebrate Jude Bellingham’s goal in their Euro 2024 opener against Serbia

“But that happens on any given game instead of looking too far into the future.

“The truth is that I really enjoy playing football, so when I go out there I play with the fearlessness because I love doing it so much.

“It’s a release for me and it’s my favourite thing to do in the world, so when I play, it’s not much of a job. It feels like a pleasure.”

Southgate: Bellingham ‘writes his own script’ as he lifts England to opening win

Lee Hendrie describes Jude’s Bellingham’s performance in England’s victory over Serbia as ‘remarkable’

Southgate said star midfielder Bellingham “writes his own script” after helping England make a winning start to the tournament.

“Look, this team is still coming together,” manager Southgate said. “Everybody is expecting us to waltz through but there is a lot of hard work ahead.

Jude Bellingham starred in England's 1-0 win over Serbia at Euro 2024
Image:
Jude Bellingham starred in England’s 1-0 win over Serbia at Euro 2024

“We’re short of certain things, we’re finding best possible solutions.

“We’ve had a very complicated run-in to all of this, but the spirit of the group was there for everybody to see tonight and we’ll definitely grow from that.”

Jude is an unbelievable player. He deserves all the praise, the confidence he plays with and the way he affects games. It’s important for players that play in his position to get goals and assists. He finished it off nicely.

England captain Harry Kane on Bellingham

Bellingham epitomised the spirit and skill England will need to go deep in the tournament, with Southgate full of praise for the matchwinner.

“He writes his own script,” he told the BBC. “The timing of his runs. It was a super bit of play in the build-up of his play. I think all of our forward players looked really good.

Jude Bellingham celebrates after heading England in front against Serbia
Image:
Jude Bellingham celebrates after heading England in front against Serbia

“I am confident we will score goals. Playing against a back five, it is not easy to create chances and we did.

“I liked the fact we had to suffer without the ball because that is an area we have worked on a lot this week. We were obviously much better than last week at doing that.”

Bellingham and Southgate positive after midfield experiment

Bellingham played in a midfield three on Sunday with Declan Rice and Alexander-Arnold, who has been converted from right-back, against Serbia.

Whether that balance is right will be debated ahead of Thursday’s match against Denmark, but Bellingham saw promise from the Liverpool man and quality in the Arsenal midfielder.

“I loved it,” Bellingham said. “I think we had a great balance with the ball, without the ball, particularly in possession I thought Trent was brilliant.

“He conducts games so well. He’s very calm on the ball. His technique and qualities unmatched, I think, in terms of what he can do with the ball.

“He’s always positive and that really helps someone like me who wants to get on the ball all over the pitch and try and attack their backline.

“So, I look forward to having more minutes with him, enjoying how we can develop and how we can get used to each other’s game, and seeing how far we can take the potential.

“And of course, as always, Dec was fantastic. I think he’s one of the best in the world in that position. He’s a joy.”

Southgate was also pleased with how his Alexander-Arnold experiment went, praising the Liverpool star’s performance.

“I was really pleased,” he said. “Of course, Jude has such a prominent role, but he goes forward a lot and Trent had to cover a lot of spaces. That is not a role he’s done very often at all.

“I thought he showed great discipline. He showed some moments of that fabulous passing range that he has, the shot on goal as well.

“We’re obviously learning with him in this role, but I thought he showed some of the attributes that he can bring.

“Whatever we do in there, we’re going to be playing a young player or an inexperienced player, so it was great to see him come through that test.”

GRAPHIC

‘England need to find a way to change things’

Paul Merson admits he was ‘bored’ by large parts of England’s performance in their Euro 2024 opener against Serbia

Sky Sports’ Paul Merson:

“What we saw has been the norm for the last few years now.

“England started so well. For the first 15 minutes or so they were outstanding. They were patient, passed the ball well and there was plenty of movement. There was a lot of good play.

“They then got the goal and then got bored. They got bored of keeping the ball. We started losing possession and giving the ball away cheaply and it allowed Serbia to get on top towards the end of the first half.

Harry Kane evades a challenge from Nikola Milenkovic
Image:
Harry Kane evades a challenge from Nikola Milenkovic

“Luckily, half-time came for England but they never really got going again after the break. Towards the end of the game, I thought the players were hiding. There’s was no-one who really wanted the ball like a Bellingham did while he was on the pitch.

“We never seem to know how to change things in a game. We start games well and then everything slows down and we don’t play so well, but we can never get that from not good to good again. It stays at that level for the rest of the game.

“We’ve got to learn and find a way to change things. However, this is a good result. There’s still a lot to be worked on, but it’s three points and with the other game a draw, we are in control of the group.

“What it probably has done is brought the fans down a peg or two, including me. This won’t be as easy as I thought it was going to be for England.”

Analysis: Familiar concerns emerge for England

Phil Foden had a tricky evening
Image:
Phil Foden had a tricky evening against Serbia

Sky Sports’ Peter Smith:

“England fans have seen this match before. A fast start followed by the team relinquishing control and Southgate sitting on his subs has become a familiar pattern. Against Serbia – and on plenty of previous occasions – England have found a way to get over the line. But it’s hardly a recipe for tournament glory.

“England went from convincing to concerning in this opening game. The authority and dominance of the opening half hour turned to panic by the end, as Serbia stepped it up.

“For all the talk about England’s attacking assets in this squad, they were once again dropping deep and hanging on for the final whistle. It was hardly the hallmark of European champions in waiting.

“But three points are on the board. A place in the knockouts is almost assured. And there is time to find a way to play with their early swagger for 90 minutes. But that approach has to come from the top. Southgate needs to set that tone.”

The key dates for England

Harry Kane
Image:
Kane had a frustrating evening against Serbia

All times BST

Thursday June 20 – Denmark vs England, Frankfurt, kick-off 5pm

Tuesday June 25 – England vs Slovenia, kick-off 8pm

Jude Bellingham carries England to Euro 2024 victory over Serbia as he shows Europe that he is a cut above the rest | Football News

Jude Bellingham carries England to Euro 2024 victory over Serbia as he shows Europe that he is a cut above the rest | Football News


Jude Bellingham’s goal was the difference between the two teams and that was appropriate. He was playing a different sport to everyone else on the pitch for much of England’s win over Serbia.

Back on German soil, the country where he was named Bundesliga player of the year in his final season with Borussia Dortmund, the current La Liga player of the year and Champions League winner with Real Madrid just looked a cut above the rest.

On the night that he became the youngest European player ever to appear in three major tournaments, he was the undoubted player of the match. His demeanour from the outset suggests he is ready to win this. But he will need this team to go with him.

Lee Hendrie describes Jude Bellingham’s England performance as ‘remarkable’

Serbia had not even completed a pass when he poked the ball through for Phil Foden in the fifth minute only for the Manchester City player to fail to control it. Twelve minutes in, he started and finished the move that brought the only goal of the game.

The sight of Bellingham collecting the ball off the defence at one end of the pitch before making that late run into the box to score at the other brought to mind a conversation this past winter with the last box-to-box midfielder to win the Ballon d’Or.

Lothar Matthaus, when asked if any player in today’s game reminded him of himself, replied: “Nobody. No one.” Typical Matthaus bluster. But after pausing for the laughter, he delivered the truthful answer. “He is playing now at Real Madrid. Bellingham.”

Matthaus won everything at international level in his illustrious career so that remains a huge compliment but Bellingham has since won the European Cup that eluded the great German midfielder and may well join him in the Ballon d’Or club before long.

The combination of power and grace in that No 10 shirt had echoes of the game’s most complete players in his position. A drop of the shoulder here, a driving run there. Time and again, he received the ball in tight areas and opened up space for himself with ease.

England fans across the country celebrate Jude Bellingham’s goal against Serbia

Harry Kane is the England captain, his country’s record goalscorer, but this is Bellingham’s team now. While Kane stayed high, having the fewest touches of the ball of any England player in the opening 45 minutes, Bellingham had the most. He was dominant.

On the ball, he oozed class. His gorgeous cross-field volley drew gasps followed by admiring calls of ‘Jude’ from the England supporters among the crowd. He completed the most passes in the final third and ranked second for dribbles.

Serbia could not stop him by fair means or foul. He was fouled twice as often as anyone else in the first half and those were just the ones that the referee stopped play for. At one point, he rose from the deck in one movement to glide away all the same.

Off the ball, he was just as impressive, leading the press. Nobody else won more than four duels in that first 45 minutes. Bellingham won eight. There was a feistiness too, epitomised by his trademark rousing of the crowd before squaring up to an opponent.

How far can Bellingham take this team?

Bellingham aside, concerns emerged after the interval. Familiar failings could well undermine England’s chances of success in Germany. Nobody else looked to be at his level and, worryingly, that seemed to extend to decision-making as well as quality.

A lack of energy in midfield, hinted at in that disappointing defeat to Iceland, became a problem again. There was a moment in the second half when Bellingham pressed, his strides eating up the grass, only for Kane not to join him. He was exasperated.

The problem was exacerbated by a wastefulness in possession, an apparent lack of awareness of what the situation demanded – just keep the football. Alexander-Arnold surrendered it attempting a bold pass as others urged him to hold onto it.

Perhaps the shakiness seen in the second half should not have come as a surprise. This win in Gelsenkirchen is the first time that England have ever won the opening game of a European Championship campaign outside of Wembley Stadium.

As Serbia seemed to wrestle control of the game, there were shades of those chastening experiences later in tournaments. Those times that Southgate’s England have come up short, having been unable to press home an early advantage.

They led Croatia in a World Cup semi-final midway through the second half and lost. They led Italy in a European Championship final midway through the second half and lost. But it now feels worth mentioning that Bellingham was not on that particular job.

Image:
Jude Bellingham starred in England’s 1-0 win over Serbia at Euro 2024

If there is an issue around mentality, in this squad or even in the national psyche, he is unaffected by it. At club level, the accepted wisdom is that Real Madrid possess an innate belief others lack. Bellingham carries that same swagger in an England shirt.

How far can it carry the rest? England as a team will need to improve. If they can do so, they know they have a player in Bellingham who looks ready to grab hold of this tournament and make it his own. “He writes his own scripts,” said Southgate afterwards.

This was only the first chapter, but it was special.

Manchester United reignite interest in Netherlands star Xavi Simons – Paper Talk | Football News

Manchester United reignite interest in Netherlands star Xavi Simons – Paper Talk | Football News



The top stories and transfer rumours from Monday’s newspapers…

THE SUN

Manchester United have reignited their interest in Xavi Simons – after initially agreeing a £50m transfer fee for him last summer.

Manchester United are reportedly also planning a bid for Matthijs De Ligt.

England stars will earn a staggering bonus of £14m if they win Euro 2024.

A look back at Netherlands star Xavi Simons’ stellar season for RB Leipzig as the playmaker looks set to light up Euro 2024

DAILY MAIL

Erik ten Hag joked that Manchester United ‘disturbed’ his holiday to tell him that he would be keeping his job this summer.

Kylian Mbappe called on the young people of France to unite and vote for inclusion and against division to stop the rise of the Far Right in upcoming elections.

Chelsea are reportedly prepared to offer two first-team squad members to Crystal Palace in a swap deal to secure the signing of Michael Olise.

Watch the best of Michael Olise, the gifted Crystal Palace winger who is attracting interest from some of Europe’s biggest clubs this summer

DAILY MIRROR

Luis Diaz suffered a gruelling tackle in Colombia’s 3-0 friendly win against Bolivia on Saturday evening that spawned a mass brawl and two red cards.

AC Milan sent a scout to Dortmund on Saturday night to watch transfer target Armando Broja in the flesh for Albania.

THE ATHLETIC

Kylian Mbappe won’t be taking part in the Olympic Games in Paris but will be watching as a fan and hopes France “bring home the gold medal”.

Erik ten Hag says Manchester United concluded “they already had the best manager” after the club’s end-of-season review culminated in a decision to keep the Dutch coach.

Brazil have confirmed their final squad for Copa America with Lucas Paqueta, as expected, included.

Real Madrid academy forward Iker Bravo has announced he is departing the club.

Here are the answers to five of your most popular questions after Manchester United confirmed Erik ten Hag is remaining as manager

DAILY TELEGRAPH

Emma Raducanu insisted she is looking after her tennis future – and not being a diva – after turning down the chance to represent Great Britain at the Olympics.

DAILY RECORD

Rangers have struck a £1.7m deal for striker Hamza Igamane and hope to back it up with the capture of Connor Barron this week.

Yusuf Kabadayi is reportedly set to hold crunch talks with Bayern Munich over an exit with Rangers keen on a move.

Sheffield Wednesday have made a move for Queen Park’s Max Willoughby.

SCOTTISH SUN

Atletico Madrid have already failed with a loan-to-buy bid for Matt O’Riley and now Celtic are looking for ‘even more’ than the reported £17m rebuffed back in January, according to claims in Spain.

Serbia vs England team news: Trent Alexander-Arnold and Marc Guehi start Euro 2024 opener | Football News

Serbia vs England team news: Trent Alexander-Arnold and Marc Guehi start Euro 2024 opener | Football News


Trent Alexander-Arnold will start in midfield for England’s Euro 2024 opener against Serbia, with Marc Guehi partnering John Stones in defence.

England boss Gareth Southgate has named an experienced line-up for his side’s Group C game in Gelsenkirchen, with first-choice left-back Luke Shaw, who has only just returned to full fitness, the only noticeable absentee from an arguably full-strength XI.

Kieran Trippier replaces Shaw in that position while Stones has recovered from a small knock and illness to form a four-man defence along with Guehi and right-back Kyle Walker in front of goalkeeper Jordan Pickford.

Image:
England’s team to play Serbia in their opening Euro 2024 fixture

After much of the build-up had been dominated by England’s midfield dilemma, Southgate has put his faith in Alexander-Arnold to partner Declan Rice.

Ahead of them on the right-hand side, England have been boosted by the return to full fitness of Bukayo Saka, who regains his starting place having been restricted to a 25-minute cameo in the friendly loss to Iceland last Friday.

As expected, Saka joins Phil Foden and Jude Bellingham in an exciting attacking trio behind England captain Harry Kane.

England kick off their Group C campaign at 8pm on Sunday against Serbia before taking on Denmark and Slovenia.

Want to pick your England starting XI for their Euro 2024 curtain-raiser? Use our team selector below…

England’s group stage fixtures

Sunday June 16 – Serbia vs England, Gelsenkirchen, kick-off 8pm

Thursday June 20 – Denmark vs England, Frankfurt, kick-off 5pm

Tuesday June 25 – England vs Slovenia, kick-off 8pm

England’s Euro 2024 squad in full

Goalkeepers: Jordan Pickford (Everton), Dean Henderson (Crystal Palace), Aaron Ramsdale (Arsenal).

Defenders: Lewis Dunk (Brighton), Joe Gomez (Liverpool), Marc Guehi (Crystal Palace), Ezri Konsa (Aston Villa), Luke Shaw (Man Utd), John Stones (Manchester City), Kieran Trippier (Newcastle), Kyle Walker (Manchester City).

Midfielders: Trent Alexander-Arnold (Liverpool), Conor Gallagher (Chelsea), Kobbie Mainoo (Manchester United), Declan Rice (Arsenal), Adam Wharton (Crystal Palace).

Forwards: Jude Bellingham (Real Madrid), Jarrod Bowen (West Ham), Eberechi Eze (Crystal Palace), Phil Foden (Manchester City), Anthony Gordon (Newcastle), Harry Kane (Bayern Munich), Cole Palmer (Chelsea), Bukayo Saka (Arsenal), Ivan Toney (Brentford), Ollie Watkins (Aston Villa).

Euro 2024 – Poland 1-2 Netherlands: Former Manchester United striker Wout Weghorst scores winner with Cody Gakpo also on target | Football News

Euro 2024 – Poland 1-2 Netherlands: Former Manchester United striker Wout Weghorst scores winner with Cody Gakpo also on target | Football News


Netherlands survived an early scare to defeat Poland 2-1 in Hamburg in the opening game of Group D at Euro 2024 as former Manchester United striker Wout Weghorst came off the bench to score a late winner.

Robert Lewandowski was absent for the Poles due to a hamstring injury, but his replacement Adam Buksa filled the void to glance Michal Probierz’s side in front (16) from Piotr Zielinski’s corner.

Netherlands, who had already missed good chances through Tijjani Reijnders and Xavi Simons, ought to have levelled when Memphis Depay lifted his shot over the bar six minutes later – but they restored parity when Cody Gakpo’s deflected shot wrong-footed Wojciech Szczesny (29).

It was the first of five attempts Gakpo had in the first-half during a wasteful performance – the joint-most on record (since 1980) for a Dutch player in the first half of a match at the Euros.

Image:
Cody Gakpo celebrates after equalising for the Netherlands

Poland needed the interval, but they showed more attacking intent upon the restart as Jakub Kiwior’s shot took a nick off Nathan Ake and forced Bart Verbruggen to make the save, before Piotr Zielinski’s attempt from 20 yards brought another smart stop from the Dutch goalkeeper.

This was a spirited Polish team but after Denzel Dumfries swept another attempt wide of the far post, it was substitute Weghorst – still a Burnley player – who scored the winner within five minutes of coming off the bench, latching onto a clever through ball from Nathan Ake to guide home his seventh goal in his last 11 appearances for the Oranje.

Poland refused to give up as substitute Karol Swiderski nearly levelled when he met Jakub Piotrowski’s cross to fire low towards the near post and have Verbruggen at full stretch before Piotrowski’s follow-up was blazed into the side-netting.

The result means the Netherlands top the group ahead of France facing Austria in the other match from the opening gameweek in Düsseldorf on Monday.

Stats: Story of the match

So far in Group D…