Euro 2020: Match Update As England Renew Rivalry With Germany

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From Gazza’s tears and penalty pain – Gareth Southgate knows all about succumbing on spot-kicks – to ghost goals, England’s meetings with Germany always deliver drama, often court controversy and, when it comes to knockout football, usually end in defeat.

England have lost four times to Germany in major tournaments since the 1966 World Cup final.

The Germans are, in fact, unbeaten in their last seven games at Wembley and have not lost a competitive game there since the triumphant July day that still looms large in England’s consciousness after decades of hurt.

But ahead of Tuesday’s last-16 tie at Euro 2020 – a game that will be the 33rd meeting between the old rivals – Southgate has told his England players to write their own history.

“This team have put down lots of historical performances in the last couple of years, made their own history, made their own stories and this is how they should view this game,” Southgate said.

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“It’s an opportunity. We’ve only won one knockout match in a European Championship as a country, so they’ve got a great chance to go and be the first team since 1996 to do that.”

The fixture’s formidable past should not weigh heavy on the class of Euro 2020; after all, 12 members of Southgate’s squad were not even born when Germany beat England in a penalty shootout in a Euro ’96 semi-final at Wembley 25 years ago.

But opportunity knocks. England boast the sort of attacking talent that means usual hope and hype feels more legitimate, even if Southgate has prized defensive solidity so far. Germany have been inconsistent and are in transition, as Joachim Low approaches the end of a 15-year reign.

“It’s a major national moment for this country,” said Sky Sports’ Gary Neville in his big-match preview. “The lads will not have another moment like this in their international careers. There isn’t a second chance. Go and take it.”

The England camp may have tempered talk of a grudge match but the stakes are high, the game a test of cautious tactics that have so far divided public opinion.

However England set up, Jamie Carragher is braced for a familiar, nerve-shredding feeling.

“There isn’t much between the two sides… I think it’s going to penalties!”

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Southgate has plenty to ponder in terms of set-up and personnel as he seeks to clear a significant hurdle.

In a 4-2-3-1 formation, Southgate might be inclined to start Declan Rice alongside fit-again Jordan Henderson as No 6s and keep Jack Grealish in a roaming No 10 role, with licence to switch with the wide forwards.

The defensive midfield pairing would also work in a more pragmatic 3-4-3 system, which would match Germany, but eliminate an attacker and likely leave only one vacant wide spot up front, to join Harry Kane and Raheem Sterling.

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Meanwhile, if Mason Mount is given the nod to start against Germany after his isolation under Covid protocols, then Southgate could revert to the 4-3-3 system – where Mount has typically started on the right of a three-man midfield.

Neville wants England to switch to a back three.

“It concerns me playing with a back four, thinking how we’re going to get out to their wing-backs,” he said. “I thought we really struggled against Scotland getting out to them. If they control the game at Wembley it becomes a lot more difficult game.”

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Kyle Walker and Luke Shaw have clocked the most minutes at full-back for England at the tournament but there has been widespread criticism regarding a perceived tactical instruction to limit forays into opposition territory.

Interestingly, in terms of creating chances and successful passes in the final third, Shaw and Reece James exceed every other player in the squad – bar Grealish for the latter.

But Walker’s unrivalled pace is a priceless commodity, while Southgate will also be looking at which left-back would best challenge Germany’s dangerous wing-back Joshua Kimmich on the night.

Jack Grealish defines a ‘talisman’ for Aston Villa, but he also possesses exceptional close control, which drew a league-high 110 fouls in the Premier League last term, some 22 more than any other player – a staggering statistic when you consider he missed a third of the season through injury.

If you look closer, in terms of creating chances per 90 minutes, Grealish belongs to a ruling class of two: the only player to register superior numbers last season was Kevin De Bruyne.

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So, the national clamour for the Villa skipper to start for England has substance. Indeed, it took the 25-year old merely 12 minutes to notch his first assist after starting against the Czech Republic.

However, Arsenal youngster Bukayo Saka stole the show against the Czechs, with his lung-bursting runs injecting much-needed forward impetus after England’s notable sluggishness moving upfield in the first two games.

Indeed, the graphic below highlights how both players have been Southgate’s most progressive players so far – in terms of dribbles and distance with the ball – along with Marcus Rashford, who has notched only 58 minutes to date.

Upon the completion of the group stage, Kane ranked 43rd in the tournament with five shots. Incredibly, only one of those has been on target. Collectively, England have mustered only five shots on target. The numbers are damning.

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The chart below highlights only Sterling, Kane and Mount have produced any kind of firing output to note – but Kane’s expected goal figures and calibre suggest the Tottenham striker is due to break his duck.

England currently have the worst goal ratio in the competition with 0.67 goals per game. Conversely, Germany are a whisker off free-scoring leaders Denmark and Italy, with two per game.

The Three Lions are renowned for their prowess from set-pieces under Southgate, but that knack has failed to materialise this summer. England are now one of only four teams left in the competition yet to score from a set-play.

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Yes, England have scored the fewest goals out of the remaining teams at Euro 2020 – but they have also shipped the fewest. In fact, Southgate’s side are the only team yet to concede at all.

This approach is epitomised by England’s deep defensive line, which averages on a par with Austria and the Czech Republic, while Germany typically play eight metres higher up the pitch.

As the graphic below reveals, the switch to a 4-2-3-1 from a 4-3-3 against the Czechs produced only minor alterations in the final average positions. In fact, England have seemingly sunk progressively deeper with each game.

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However, clean sheets win tournaments – penalties aside – and England are well on course in that department. Meanwhile, the numbers behind Kane’s goal drought and the growing emphasis to feed the Spurs striker suggests Southgate’s pragmatic approach could well pay dividends.

England are favourites to beat Germany in the last 16 and end the hoodoo of having never managed a knockout victory over their greatest rivals in a major tournament since 1966.

England are ranked higher in the FIFA rankings (fourth vs 12th); they are in better form than Germany (eight wins and a draw compared with four wins, two draws and three defeats); and Southgate’s team will be backed by the vast majority of the 45,000 fans inside Wembley.

Germany have won one, drawn one and lost one in finishing second in Group F, and the tournament statistics would tell you they have been far from consistent.

Rob Dorsett analyses the strengths and weaknesses of Germany ahead of the clash at Wembley.

Southgate is considering switching to playing with three centre-backs. England have not played 3-4-3 this year and the last time they used the formation was when they beat Iceland 4-0 at Wembley in November 2020.

If Southgate does switch from the 4-2-3-1 he has employed at the tournament so far, the three centre-backs to start against Germany will be Kyle Walker, John Stones and Harry Maguire.

England reached the semi-finals of the 2018 World Cup with Walker, Stones and Maguire playing as the three at the back.

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The England manager is also considering a recall for Manchester City forward Phil Foden – and Sky Sports News understands it is a real possibility Mount could make a striking return to the starting 11.

Foden was left out of the matchday squad for the final group game against Czech Republic as a precautionary measure due to his yellow card but he looks set to win the battle with Rashford and Jason Sancho to start alongside Kane and Sterling.

Ben Chilwell and Mount have been forced to train away from the rest of the camp ever since they came into contact with Chelsea team-mate Billy Gilmour, who tested positive for coronavirus after the Scotland game. But both players have been included in tactical team meetings via Zoom and it seems Southgate is seriously considering including Mount from the off.

Germany: Ilkay Gundogan, Antonio Rudiger and Robin Gosens are all doubts for Germany’s Euro 2020 round-of-16 clash with England at Wembley on Tuesday. The key trio have started each of Germany’s games so far at Euro 2020.

Gundogan was substituted on 58 minutes after sustaining a bruised skull against Hungary and did not train fully with the squad on Monday, while Gosens, who starred and scored against Portugal, along with Chelsea defender Rudiger, are suffering with “cold symptoms”.

The potential unavailability of Gundogan could see Bayern Munich’s Leon Goretzka called up after he came on to replace the City midfielder and netted Germany’s equaliser against Hungary.

England secured their only major trophy and Geoff Hurst became the first player to score a hat-trick in a World Cup final. Martin Peters, Helmut Haller, Hurst and Wolfgang Weber had scored and at 2-2 the game went into extra-time. In the first period a shot from Hurst struck the crossbar and when referee Gottfried Dienst could not decide if the ball had crossed the line it was left to linesman Tofiq Bahramov who indicated it had. Hurst completed his hat-trick late on to secure World Cup success for England on home soil.

The game which helped define the career of England midfielder Paul Gascoigne, who started crying after receiving a booking that would have ruled him out of the final. But England did not reach the showpiece after suffering a shootout defeat to the eventual champions. Gary Lineker had levelled the game after Andreas Brehme’s opener. Lineker, Peter Beardsley and David Platt all converted from the spot in the shootout, with Brehme, Lothar Matthaus and Karl-Heinz Riedle replying for Germany. But when Stuart Pearce missed and Olaf Thon scored it was left to Chris Waddle, who skied his effort over the crossbar and consigned England to a painful defeat.

More penalty agony for England. Alan Shearer’s opener was cancelled out by Stefan Kuntz, while Gascoigne went close to a golden-goal winner in extra-time. There was some redemption for Pearce and Gascoigne who both converted in the shootout, while Shearer, Platt and Teddy Sheringham were also on target. But when Southgate’s effort was saved by Andreas Kopke, Andreas Moller scored to send Germany through to the final.

One of the highlights of Sven-Goran Eriksson’s England reign and Michael Owen’s international career came in Munich but there were few signs of what was to come when Carsten Jancker gave Germany a sixth-minute lead. Owen drew England level before Steven Gerrard put them ahead on the stroke of half-time. Owen netted again shortly after the break and then completed his hat-trick before Emile Heskey got in on the act to complete the rout.

A match that will be remembered for its controversy as Fabio Capello’s England were soundly beaten. Germany surged into a two-goal lead inside 32 minutes through Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski, before Matthew Upson’s header reduced the deficit. England finished the half strongly and Frank Lampard lobbed Manuel Neuer with the ball bouncing in off the bar. But the referee did not award the goal and Germany killed the game on the break, with Thomas Muller’s double sending them into the quarter-finals.

England boss Gareth Southgate: “Something we have spoken about over the last four years is that this team doesn’t carry the baggage from previous eras, many of them weren’t even born when many of those things happened and it is an irrelevance for them.

“It’s a real opportunity to progress to a quarter-final, albeit against a team with pedigree and experience.”

Germany manager Joachim Low played down the importance of practising penalties, despite the history of shootouts between the teams. “In a penalty shootout anything can happen,” he said.

“We were lucky here and there in the past, especially against the English side they were a little bit unlucky, but in terms of nerves it’s a totally different story.

“You need to have this calmness, this clarity about what you’re going to do there. You can talk about it beforehand but the walk up to the penalty point is a totally different story.”

England midfielder Declan Rice: “What is there to fear really? They’re great players but it’s a game of football. It’s going to be a real battle out there but one that we’re going to be up for and we’re really positive and ready for.”

England forward Dominic Calvert-Lewin: “We as a group are definitely not underestimating the challenge that we’ve got and the quality that they have. They always tend to play a certain way, they’re well-oiled.”

Read Also: England Manager Reacts To Maguire’s Red Card In 1-0 Defeat

Germany forward Kai Havertz: “This is a special game for me. We’ll do everything we can to win. Of course, you have to be prepared and after training you sometimes take a penalty or two…”

Germany winger Robin Gosens: “I’ve never played at Wembley and I’m really in the mood for it. Of course that [the lack of German supporters at the stadium] is a shame but for us it’s additional motivation. It’s great when the whole stadium is against you. We will do everything we can to ensure that the English are as quiet as possible in their own stadium.”

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