|
Match
Summary |
|
Officials
from Germany |
France |
Type |
England |
Referee
(yellow) - Markus Merk
42 (15 March 1962), Kaiserslautern, FIFA-listed 1992.
Assistant
Referees - Christian Schröer, 39 (29 January 1965), and
Jan-Hendrik Salver,
35 (1 March 1969).
Fourth official - Ľuboš Micheľ,
36 (16 May 1968), Stropkov, Slovakia,
FIFA-listed 1994;
UEFA
Delegate -
Gerhard Kapl, Austria
UEFA Referee observer - Nikolay Levnikov, Russia
|
16 |
Goal Attempts |
11 |
6 |
Attempts on Target |
4 |
|
Hit Bar/Post |
|
5 |
Corner Kicks Won |
2 |
3 |
Offside Calls Against |
1 |
16 |
Fouls Conceded |
17 |
54% |
Possession |
46% |
|
France
Team |
|
Rank: |
FIFA (9th
June 2004)
2nd
EFO ranking
Group 1 (3rd)
ELO rating
1st |
Colours: |
Made by Adidas -
Blue
collared v-necked jerseys with a red chest band and white Adidas half
sleeve trim, white shorts
with blue Adidas side trim, red socks with white/blue tops. |
Capt: |
Zinédine Zidane |
Manager: |
Jacques
Santini, 52 (25 April 1952), appointed 17 July 2002,
22nd match, W 19 - D 2 - L 1 - F 59 - A 9. |
France
Lineup |
16 |
Barthez,
Fabien
A. |
33 |
28 June 1971 |
G |
Olympique de Marseille |
67 |
35ᵍᵃ |
13 |
Silvestre,
Mikaël S., off
79th min. |
26 |
9 August 1977 |
CD |
Manchester
United FC, England |
31 |
2 |
Silvestre cautioned in the 72nd min. for Unsporting
Behaviour
for a foul. He brought down Rooney, resulting in the penalty-kick. |
3 |
Lizarazu,
Bixente |
34 |
9 December 1969 |
LB |
FC Bayern München,
Germany |
95 |
2 |
4 |
Vieira,
Patrick |
27 |
23 June 1976
born in Senegal |
CM |
Arsenal
FC, England |
70 |
4 |
5 |
Gallas,
William E. |
26 |
17 August 1977 |
RB |
Chelsea
FC, England |
17 |
0 |
6 |
Makélélé,
Claude, off 90th+4 min. |
31 |
18 February 1973
born in DR Congo |
CM |
Chelsea
FC, England |
32 |
0 |
7 |
Pir�s,
Robert E., off 75th min. |
31 |
29 January 1973 |
RM |
Arsenal
FC, England |
71 |
14 |
Pir�s cautioned in the 49th min. for Unsporting
Behaviour. |
15 |
Thuram-Ulien,
R. Lilian |
32 |
1 January 1972
born in Guadelope |
CD |
Juventus FC, Italy |
100 |
2 |
12 |
Henry,
Thierry D. |
26 |
17 August 1977 |
F |
Arsenal
FC, England |
60 |
25 |
10
|
Zidane,
Zinedine Y. |
31 |
23 June 1972 |
LM |
Real
Madrid CF, Spain |
90 |
25 |
20 |
Trezeguet,
David S. |
26 |
15 October 1977 |
F |
Juventus FC, Italy |
52 |
28 |
France
Substitutes |
scoreline: France 0 England 1 |
11 |
Wiltord,
Sylvain, on 75th min. for Pir�s |
30 |
10 May 1974 |
F |
unattached |
63 |
22 |
19 |
Sagnol,
Willy, on 79th min. for Silvestre |
27 |
18 March 1977 |
D |
FC Bayern München,
Germany |
24 |
0 |
scoreline: France 2 England 1 |
17 |
Dacourt,
Olivier N.A., on 90th+4 min. for
Makélélé |
29 |
25 September 1974 |
M |
AS
Roma, Italy |
17 |
1 |
result: France 2 England 1 |
unused
substitutes: |
1-Mickaël Landreau,
2-Jean-Alain Boumsong,
9-Louis Saha,
14-Jérôme Rothen, 18-Benoît Pedretti, 21-Steve
Marlet, 22-Sidney Govou, 23-Grégory Coupet. |
team
notes: |
This is by far, the most experienced team to face
England thus far. Sylvain Wiltord was out of contract at Arsenal
FC, and not yet signed for Olympique lyonnaise. Lilian Thuram made
his 100th international appearance for France. He is only the third
Frenchman to reach the milestone following Marcel
Desailly (115) and Didier Deschamps (103). He becomes the
seventh player at Euro 2004 with over a hundred appearances. He is also the third
player to reach his hundredth cap against England, following Streich
in 1984 and Figo earlier this season. Frank Lampard's opening goal put an end to France's clean sheet streak
of eleven matches (one short of Italy's record of twelve). The last time France had conceded a goal was against Turkey
in the Confederations Cup on 26 June 2003. They had gone 1,077 minutes
without conceding a goal. Zinedine Zidane's equalizing free-kick is the
24th direct free-kick conceded by England. The third time that two
goals from direct free-kicks have been scored in a season. The sixth
competitive (non-BC) and second in Major Finals Tournament. |
|
4-4-2 |
Barthez -
Gallas*, Thuram, Silvestre (Sagnol*), Lizarazu -
Pir�s (Wiltord), Vieira, Makélélé
(Dacourt), Zidane -
Henry, Trezeguet.
*When Sagnol came on for Silvestre after 78 minutes, he became the
right-back
and Gallas moved from right-back to central defender. |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
29.2 |
Appearances/Goals |
62.3 |
9.1 |
|
|
England
Team |
|
Rank: |
FIFA (9th
June 2004)
13th
EFO ranking
Group 3
ELO rating
8th |
Colours: |
The 2003 home
uniform -
White
collared shadow hooped jerseys with white collar/cuffs trimmed with navy, red v-neck/panel thinning down sleeves, navy
shorts with red thinning side panel, white socks with navy hoop. |
Capt: |
David Beckham, 33rd captaincy. |
Head Coach: |
Sven-Göran
Eriksson, 56
(5 February 1948), appointed 30 October 2000, took post 12 January 2001,
39th match, W 20 - D 12 - L 7 - F 73 - A 38. |
England
Lineup |
1 |
James, David B. |
33 |
1 August 1970 |
G |
Manchester City FC |
25 |
19
ᵍᵃ |
James cautioned in the 90th+2 min. for
Unsporting Behaviour for a foul after
bringing down Henry, resulting in the penalty. After a bad Gerrard backpass. |
2 |
Neville, Gary A. |
29 |
18 February 1975 |
RB |
Manchester
United FC |
64 |
0 |
3 |
Cole,
Ashley |
23 |
20 December 1980 |
LB |
Arsenal
FC |
27 |
0 |
4 |
Gerrard, Steven G. |
24 |
30 May 1980 |
CM |
Liverpool
FC |
25 |
3 |
15 |
King, Ledley
B. |
23 |
12 October 1980 |
CD |
Tottenham
Hotspur FC |
6 |
0 |
6 |
Campbell,
Sulzeer J. |
29 |
18 September 1974 |
CD |
Arsenal
FC |
59 |
1 |
7 |
Beckham, David R.J. |
29 |
2
May 1975 |
RM |
Real Madrid CF, Spain |
69 |
13 |
8 |
Scholes, Paul, off 76th min. |
29 |
16 November 1974 |
LM |
Manchester
United FC |
63 |
13 |
Scholes cautioned
in the 54th min. for Unsporting Behaviour for a foul
on Vieira, after he lost possession. |
9 |
Rooney,
Wayne M.,
off 76th min. |
18
233 days |
24 October 1985 |
F |
Everton
FC |
14 |
5 |
10 |
Owen, Michael J., off 69th min. |
24 |
14 December 1979 |
F |
Liverpool
FC |
57 |
25 |
11 |
Lampard,
Frank J. |
25 |
20 June 1978 |
CM |
Chelsea
FC |
20 |
3 |
Lampard cautioned in the 71st min. for Unsporting
Behaviour for a
foul, after a clumsy challenge on Vieira on the halfway line. |
England
Substitutes |
scoreline: France 0 England 1 |
23 |
Vassell, Darius
C., on 69th min. for Owen |
24 |
13 June 1980 |
F |
Aston
Villa FC |
19 |
6 |
18 |
Hargreaves, Owen
L., on 76th min. for Scholes |
23 |
20 January 1981
born in Canada |
M |
FC
Bayern München, Germany |
20 |
0 |
21 |
Heskey,
Emile W.I., on 76th min. for Rooney |
26 |
11 January 1978 |
F |
Liverpool
FC |
43 |
5 |
result: France 2 England 1 |
unused
substitutes: |
12-Wayne
Bridge, 13-Paul Robinson,
14-Phil
Neville, 16-Jamie Carragher, 17-Nicky Butt, 19-Joe Cole, 20-Kieron Dyer, 22-Ian Walker.
|
team
notes: |
Gary Neville and unused
substitute, Phil, are brothers. Wayne Rooney becomes the youngest
England player in a European Championship Finals match, and the second youngest player
overall. The record holder is Enzo Scifo who
was only 18 years, three months and 25 days old, when he made his Euro debut for Belgium exactly twenty years ago.
England have never won their opening European
Championship Finals group match, on this, their seventh attempt.
David
Beckham's penalty is the second he has missed whilst playing for
England, he joins Ernest Needham, Roger Byrne and Franny Lee. His missed penalty was the
fourteenth missed spot kick in
regulation time at the European Championships. It was also the first time
England have failed to convert a regulation time penalty kick in any Finals match. Zinedine Zidane's equalizing
free-kick is the fourth direct free-kick conceded by David James. |
|
4-4-2 |
James -
Neville, Campbell, King, Cole -
Beckham, Lampard, Gerrard, Scholes (Hargreaves) -
Rooney (Heskey), Owen (Vassell). |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
26.0 |
Appearances/Goals |
39.0 |
5.6 |
|
|
Match Report
(Mike Payne's exclusive report coming shortly) |
Zinedine Zidane scored a
majestic free-kick and a penalty in injury time to secure holders
France a stunning victory over England in Group B. Frank
Lampard had given England a first-half lead when he rose to head
home David Beckham's free-kick. The brilliant Wayne Rooney won
England a second-half penalty, but Beckham saw his spot-kick saved
by Fabien Barthez. Zidane equalised with a free-kick and then
converted from the spot after David James fouled Thierry Henry.
That late double blow left England's players inconsolable at the
final whistle, whilst the French stayed on the pitch to celebrate
their opening game win. The atmosphere at the Estádio Da Luz
was electric as both teams finally started their Euro 2004
campaigns. And while England captain Beckham and France
skipper Zidane, team-mates at Real Madrid, exchanged pleasantries in
the tunnel before kick-off, there was no room for friendship on the
field.
The pre-match hype - the game being England's biggest since their
World Cup quarter-final defeat to Brazil in 2002 - added an extra
edge to the encounter where duels between club team-mates were
abundant.
Henry of Arsenal faced Sol Campbell
in an England defence shorn of the services of John Terry, who was
replaced by Ledley King. England coach Sven-Göran Eriksson
opted to stick with the 4-4-2 formation which had worked so well in
the 6-1 Euro 2004 warm-up win over Iceland. England's midfield
quartet of Paul Scholes, Steven Gerrard, Lampard and Beckham settled
quickly, allowing them to absorb some early France pressure.
Zidane, Patrick Vieira and Robert
Pir�s produced the fluid football so typical of the French, to whom
the first real goalscoring opportunity fell when David Trezeguet
headed over from Vieira's precision cross. For England,
Scholes combined well with the outstanding Rooney before the
Manchester United midfielder picked out Michael Owen going in on
goal. Only the close attention of William Gallas prevented
Owen from testing Barthez as France cleared their lines. Gallas also
had to be alert to deny Gerrard, who had surged into the area
following an England counter-attack. King, who was starting
his first match for England, looked impressive and the anonymity of
Henry in the first half owed much to the Spurs centre-half's
concentration at the back. The England defender made an
important clearance to cut out Vieira's flick-on as France sought to
test James.
Yet in truth, for all France's possession,
England goalkeeper James had little to do in the first half.
And England's
controlled approach - epitomised by the superb holding play of
Rooney - paid dividends just before half time. Lizarazu sent
Beckham tumbling on the right-hand side of the France area and the
England captain picked himself to deliver a teasing cross which
Lampard headed past a stationary Barthez. It was the first
time the French defence had been breached in 11 games, but that
record was of no interest to England's fans, who could not contain
their glee. The onus was very much on France to pick up the
pace after the break and one lightning quick counter-attack saw
Vieira surge forward before finding Henry, whose curled shot was
gathered by James.
Henry started to become more influential as
the game wore on, but it was the raw aggression of Rooney that stood
out as he tormented France with his power and pace.
If England had anything to
prove it was that they could produce a strong second-half display.
Eriksson replaced the ineffective Owen with Darius Vassell in an
attempt to freshen things up and, just as signs of weariness were
creeping into the play, Rooney stormed forward. The Everton
teenager was crudely hacked down by Mikael Silvestre, who was
fortunate to receive only a caution, and England were duly awarded a
penalty. But Beckham saw his spot-kick brilliantly saved
by Barthez to give France a lifeline. And England were made to
pay a heavy price for that miss in the dying minutes of the game.
Substitute Emile Heskey needlessly
gave away a foul on the edge of the area and the imperious Zidane
strode forward to send a curling free-kick past James. And
England then lost all sense of discipline when Gerrard attempted a
dangerous back-pass to James, with Henry in close pursuit. The
France striker pounced on the loose ball and was hauled to the
ground by a despairing James. Referee Markus Merk pointed to
the spot and Zidane showed no nerves as he converted the penalty
with aplomb to hand France victory and control of Group B.
|
Source Notes
|
TheFA.com FFF.fr
Allezlesbleus.free.fr
Digital Spy BBC Sport ESPN Soccernet UEFA Euro 2004 website
____________________
CG
|