England player ratings: The Starboy! Bukayo Saka lights a spark for Gareth Southgate | Football News

England player ratings: The Starboy! Bukayo Saka lights a spark for Gareth Southgate | Football News


England stayed cool from the penalty spot to secure a place in the semi-finals at Euro 2024 – one man, a Starboy, stood head and shoulders above the rest.

England advanced to the semi-finals as Jordan Pickford’s save from Manuel Akanji’s spot-kick proved decisive following a 1-1 draw where Bukayo Saka found his spark.

Here, Sky Sports rates the England players and you too can rate all of them below…

Jordan Pickford – 8

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Jordan Pickford saves Manuel Akanji’s penalty

Faultless whenever called upon in an England jersey although Xherdan Shaqiri’s cheeky effort that cannoned off the bar almost gave him his England goalkeeper gaffe moment. Revelled in the theatrics of the penalty shootout, denying Manuel Akanji.

Kyle Walker – 6

Had one of his worst nights for England in the win over Slovakia but looked back to his reliable form in an England shirt. Kept it too safe with his play at times.

Ezri Konsa – 7

Ezri Konsa heads the ball clear
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Ezri Konsa heads the ball clear

Only five caps but has already faced the challenge of Jeremy Doku and Vinicius Jnr in friendlies with England playing out of position at left-back, so this challenge didn’t look to faze him. Headed clear a dangerous cross early on and made another great block from Breel Embolo after 24 minutes. Handled the dangerous striker admirably but was harshly undone for the opening goal.

John Stones – 6

Breel Embolo scores from close range to give Switzerland the lead against England
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Breel Embolo scores from close range to give Switzerland the lead against England

His missed clearance was a big factor in this match as Embolo slipped in to score – maybe harsh as otherwise he played with great assurance but this is the reality of knockout football.

Kieran Trippier – 6

Kieran Trippier
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Kieran Trippier battles down the left flank

Skinned by Dan Ndoye in a sprint in the first 10 minutes which looked ominous but he never got isolated again. Streetwise performance yet again from a player clearly playing out of position.

Bukayo Saka – 10

Bukayo Saka celebrates after equalising for England against Switzerland
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Bukayo Saka was England’s Starboy, stepping up when his country called

The Starboy.

Starting as the right-wing back to many raised eyebrows, Saka vindicated Gareth Southgate’s decision to play him down that flank as he tore Michel Aebischer apart one-on-one. His three crosses in the first half, on another day, could have led to three goals. Aebischer was dribbled past five times in the first half, the joint most by a player in a match at Euro 2024.

This was the Saka we see week-in-week-out at Arsenal, epitomised by his super-cool goal and immense penalty in the shootout.

This was redemption. A performance for the ages.

Declan Rice – 8

Declan Rice
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Declan Rice held it all together in midfield

The rock of this England team. Showed up early with a great interception to set up a counter and continued to boss the midfield. As with most of his game, his long-range shooting is improving as Yann Sommer denied an expert effort from 30 yards in extra-time. Immense.

Kobbie Mainoo – 7

Kobbie Mainoo
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Kobbie Mainoo impressed in the first half

The second youngest England player at 19 years and 78 days old to start a major tournament quarter-final match and floated around like a devilishly talented operator, especially in the first half. Made a very important and underrated early clearance, played with the required hustle and bustle in midfield up against some senior opponents and broke the lines with some intelligent gliding runs. Faded after the break.

Jude Bellingham – 8

Jude Bellingham dribbles away from Dan Ndoye
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Jude Bellingham dribbles away from Dan Ndoye

Looked fitter and more powerful than we’ve seen at this tournament – like the Real Madrid version of Bellingham. That was emphasised by a rainbow flick to skip away before an impeccable switch of play in the first half. A couple of balls dropped his way that might’ve had his name on but the Swiss blocked well to deny him.

There was no doubt when he stepped up in the shootout.

Phil Foden – 5

Phil Foden makes a run for England against Switzerland
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Phil Foden makes a run for England against Switzerland

The shackles of playing on the left side of a team playing with no width were released and he looked far more comfortable darting in central areas. Pressed well out of possession. But yet again, failed to truly influence the game in the big moments.

Harry Kane – 5

Harry Kane challenges Granit Xhaka
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Harry Kane challenges Granit Xhaka

Sluggish at times with his hold-up play. Seriously caught on his heels from a deadly Saka cross in the first half and just looked a yard off the pace throughout. Departed in extra-time, absolutely legless.

Subs

Cole Palmer (On for Ezri Konsa) – 7

Cole Palmer converts from the penalty spot
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Cole Palmer converts from the penalty spot

Added energy and extra forward thinking with the ball. Stepped up first in the shootout, setting the tone for perfection.

Eberechi Eze (On for Kobbie Mainoo) – 7

Is having to learn on the job how to play left-wing back. Dragged a good opening wide after gliding into space down the left.

Luke Shaw (On for Kieran Trippier) – 8

The first sighting of him at this tournament. It was a welcome one. Two outstanding clearances in central areas towards the end of the second half, showcasing his ability to play as the third centre-back. Another fine clearance in extra-time.

Ivan Toney (On for Harry Kane) – 7

The no-look penalty was delivered on the international stage.

Trent Alexander-Arnold (On for Phil Foden) – 7

Trent Alexander-Arnold scores the decisive penalty to send England into the Euro 2024 semi-finals
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Trent Alexander-Arnold scores the decisive penalty to send England into the Euro 2024 semi-finals

His best moment in an England shirt. A stunning penalty to win a shootout and to send a country potty.

Manager

Gareth Southgate – 8

Gareth Southgate
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Gareth Southgate takes notes

His 100th match in charge of the England national team – the third manager to reach that milestone. Deserves praise for isolating the Swiss down the England right with the starboy Saka. Was a little reactive rather than proactive with his substitutions but got them right eventually. And to prepare his penalty takers with such confidence and aplomb deserves a huge amount of praise. He is still the one.

England vs Slovenia player ratings: Phil Foden improved but Gareth Southgate’s side still searching for spark | Football News

England vs Slovenia player ratings: Phil Foden improved but Gareth Southgate’s side still searching for spark | Football News


England have topped Group C after a goalless draw against Slovenia – ranked 57th in the world – who also sealed progression as the pool’s third-placed side.

Here, Sky Sports rates the England players’ performances in Cologne…

Jordan Pickford – 6

Only had one save to make. Can be assured of being busier as the tournament progresses, but swept up well enough.

Rob Dorsett delivers his verdict on England’s goalless draw against Slovenia, saying that Southgate’s side showed signs of ‘desperation’ in their final Group C game

Kyle Walker – 6

Plays the role of covering defender, utilising his electric pace, really well – which was needed in the opening exchanges. Got more to give going forwards, and will undoubtedly be tested with greater frequency in the knockout phase.

John Stones – 6

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John Stones urges his England team-mates to maintain composure

The positive: England have only conceded 1.13 xGA all tournament. The pragmatic: still waiting for the ‘step out of defence Stones’ we see playing regularly for Manchester City in the Premier League to show up. Perhaps he’s under instruction to be cautious but there’s more to offer, surely? A calming voice, nonetheless.

Graphic

Marc Guehi – 7

Solid. Questions were asked of his positional intelligence a few times in the first half and he passed with flying colours – front-footed too. Any signs of a flap on his major tournament debut? Not yet, albeit he did pick up a yellow card following a rare mix-up with Stones.

Gareth Southgate said fans are entitled to their opinion, but hearing boos at the end of a game creates an ‘unusual environment’ for the team

Kieran Tripper – 6

Got booked for an early foul and was caught upfield on a few occasions. Much brighter on the ball, teasing a particularly good cross from the left towards Kane first half, and linked productively with Foden in fleeting moments.

Declan Rice – 6

Declan Rice relays a message to his England team-mates
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Declan Rice was joined by his third midfield partner of the tournament – and no combination has particularly inspired

Fluency in midfield remains a problem, and dare we say it, Rice is missing his mate. No one is suggesting Kalvin Phillips was in any condition to feature at this tournament but familiarity, or lack of, is a major problem for England. No connections, no creativity. As Gary Neville summarised during ITV’s half-time analysis, England look “basic”, and ideas are lacking most in the middle third of the pitch. Did improve as the game went on.

Conor Gallagher – 5

Conor Gallagher challenges for the ball with Timi Elsnik
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Conor Gallagher was replaced by Kobbie Mainoo at half time

Sloppy. Lost the ball more times than he retained it, but was, at least, aggressive and combative out of possession. Hooked at half-time does not exactly scream positivity, though.

Jude Bellingham – 6

Untidy in possession, and failed, for the most part, to recover his composure. Anonymous after half time. We’d like Real Madrid’s Jude Bellingham to arrive in Germany, please.

Bukayo Saka – 7

Bukayo Saka reacts after his effort is ruled out for offside
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Bukayo Saka reacts after his effort is ruled out for offside

Typically energetic. Wanted the ball, and was positive with it. Perhaps lacking in end product but remains one of England’s brighter sparks.

Harry Kane – 6

Kane’s first touch inside the box came in the 28th minute but he lost the ball. Six more followed, none managed to make an impact. Plenty of huff and puff but questions will remain over the captain’s fitness following another indifferent display. England have generated the fourth-worst combined xG (2.26) of any team at the tournament.

Southgate believes the changes his side made had a positive effect on the team, with Cole Palmer and Kobbie Mainoo impressing off the bench against Slovenia

Phil Foden – 7

Willing to run behind, with Kane dropping ever deeper to link play. Bit of quick movement and ingenuity nearly produced the opening goal, which Saka rounded off before the offside flag was raised. By far England’s most dynamic attacking threat.

Substitutes

Kobbie Mainoo (for Gallagher) – 7

Kobbie Mainoo has given Gareth Southgate something to think about with a smart second-half display
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Kobbie Mainoo has given Gareth Southgate something to think about with a smart second-half display

Confident. Tried to change the pace of England’s passing to good effect. Ready to run, happy to receive the ball in tight areas, and looked to play forwards. Improved midfield balance too – got to be in with a shout of starting in the last-16 game this weekend.

Cole Palmer (for Saka) – 7

Positive. Direct. Gave England’s flank a different dimension. Shot in stoppage time lacked conviction but at least he was well-placed to take it on. He’s unpredictable in the very best way.

Trent Alexander-Arnold (for Trippier) – n/a

Confirmed: the midfield experiment is over. Alexander-Arnold spent the final six minutes of this game at full-back.

Anthony Gordon (for Foden) – n/a

Anthony Gordon has urged England fans to stick with Gareth Southgate’s side after a couple of disappointing draws in Group C of Euro 2024

Despite coming on at 89 minutes, Gordon created more chances (one) than Saka, Gallagher and Bellingham combined (zero).

England player ratings: Trent Alexander-Arnold and Harry Kane struggle, but Marc Guehi standout again | Football News

England player ratings: Trent Alexander-Arnold and Harry Kane struggle, but Marc Guehi standout again | Football News


Trent Alexander-Arnold and Harry Kane struggled in England’s 1-1 draw with Denmark, but Marc Guehi once again stood out as the Three Lions’ best player.

Kane’s opener was cancelled out by a superb strike from Morten Hjulmand, but the performance from Gareth Southgate’s side once again asked more questions than it answered.

Here, Sky Sports rates the England players from their match in Frankfurt and you too can rate all of the players below…

Jordan Pickford – 7

Had a nervous few minutes around the half an hour, but also made some good saves throughout. Could do little for Hjulmand’s equaliser.

Kyle Walker – 6

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Kyle Walker played a key role in England’s goal

Brilliant play to nip in behind Rasmus Kristensen for England’s opener, but had other nervous moments when England struggled across the board.

John Stones – 6

Did well defensively, but as with many of his team-mates, looked lost in possession at times. Not his best, not his worst.

Marc Guehi – 8

Denmark's Yussuf Poulsen, left, watches England's Marc Guehi during a Group C match between Denmark and England at the Euro 2024 soccer tournament in Frankfurt, Germany, Thursday, June 20, 2024. (AP Photo/Michael Probst)
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Marc Guehi was England’s standout player in Frankfurt

Another impressive showing at centre back. His best moment came late in the game as he recovered from an error to block a Denmark shot. Looks every inch the England international.

Kieran Tripper – 6

Did well at left-back, all things considered but like much of the England team, did not have many clips for the highlights reel.

Declan Rice – 5

Declan Rice vs Denmark
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Declan Rice was unable to influence the game

Had a few bright moments, including a close second-half shot. But was too deep when England were out of possession, and did not have his usual influence over the game.

Trent Alexander-Arnold – 5

Had a few good moments defensively, but struggled in midfield. Too deep out of possession, lacking energy and too many misplaced passes – although certainly not the only one guilty of it. Hard to see how he continues in the same role going forward and replaced in the 54th minute.

Jude Bellingham – 5

Jude Bellingham vs Denmark
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Jude Bellingham could not follow up his fine performance against Serbia

Could not follow up his impressive performance against Serbia and was largely anonymous. First real contribution came close to the hour, but made a sublime pass for an Ollie Watkins effort in the 71st minute.

Bukayo Saka – 7

Great positioning for England first goal and unlike his teammates, tried his hardest when he had the ball to create chances. Along with Foden, looked more assured in the second half once Conor Gallagher came on in midfield. Substituted in the 70th minute.

Harry Kane – 5

England's Harry Kane, rigth, listens to manager Gareth Southgate after being substituted during a Group C match between Denmark and England at the Euro 2024 soccer tournament in Frankfurt, Germany, Thursday, June 20, 2024. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)
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Harry Kane scored in the first half, but was replaced after the break

Did little other than score the opening goal, but it was a good finish. Questions have to be asked as to his positioning and misplaced pass for Denmark’s equaliser, as well as his fitness. Replaced by Watkins in the 70th minute

Phil Foden – 7

Looked like a man with a point to prove. Had four shots and with more licence to roam, was England’s best attacking player. Rifled a shot onto the post in the second half, before being substituted for Bowen.

Substitutes

Conor Gallagher (for Alexander-Arnold) – 7

Brilliant clearance just before the hour ahead of Christian Eriksen and once again shored up England’s midfield.

Jarrod Bowen (for Foden) – 6

Took his knocks from Denmark after coming on, and executed himself well. No real inflential moments.

Eberechi Eze (for Saka) – 5

Almost got caught out soon after his introduction as Eriksen collected a pass, but was helped out by his team-mates. A tournament debut for the Crystal Palace winger.

Ollie Watkins (for Kane) – 7

England's Harry Kane, left, substitutes out for England's Ollie Watkins during a Group C match between Denmark and England at the Euro 2024 soccer tournament in Frankfurt, Germany, Thursday, June 20, 2024. (AP Photo/Michael Probst)
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Ollie Watkins made his international tournament debut, replacing Harry Kane

Within minutes of coming on, had run in behind the Denmark defence to force a save from Kasper Schmeichel. An impressive cameo from the Aston Villa striker.

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.