|
Match
Summary |
|
Officials
from Belgium |
England |
Type |
Kazakhstan |
Referee
(yellow)
-
Paul Allaerts
44 (9 July 1964), Mol, FIFA-listed 2000.
Assistant
Referees - Danny Huens, 38 (1 September 1970) and Vincent Despiegeleer.
Fourth official - Peter Vervecken, 41
(9 December 1967), Arendonk, FIFA-listed 2002.
Teams presented to FA Chairman Sir David
Richards. |
20 |
Goal Attempts |
5 |
10 |
Attempts on Target |
2 |
0 |
Hit Bar/Post |
0 |
9 |
Corner Kicks Won |
1 |
4 |
Offside Calls Against |
0 |
13 |
Fouls Conceded |
19 |
65.9% |
Possession |
34.1% |
|
England
Team |
|
Rank: |
FIFA (8th
October 2008) 14th
EFO ranking
Group 2
ELO rating 7th |
Colours: |
The
2007 home shirt -
White
v-neck jersey with red horizontal stripe/navy double diamond trim and
abstract side panel, white shorts with navy pintrim/double diamond, white socks
with navy thin band/double diamond. |
Capt: |
Rio Ferdinand, second captaincy |
Manager: |
Fabio
Capello, 62 (18 June 1946), appointed 14 December 2007, effective 7 January 2008,
8th match, W 6 - D 1 - L 1 - F 20 - A 6. |
England
Lineup |
1 |
James, David
B. |
38 |
1 August 1970 |
G |
Portsmouth FC |
43 |
36ᵍᵃ |
2 |
Brown, Wesley M. |
28 |
13 October 1979 |
RB |
Manchester United FC |
20 |
1 |
3 |
Cole,
Ashley |
27 |
20 December 1980 |
LB |
Chelsea FC |
68 |
0 |
4 |
Gerrard, Steven G. |
28 |
30 May 1980 |
RM/CM |
Liverpool FC |
69 |
13 |
5 |
Ferdinand,
Rio G. |
29 |
7 November 1978 |
CD |
Manchester United FC |
71 |
2 |
6 |
Upson, Matthew J. |
29 |
18 April 1979 |
CD |
West Ham United FC |
10 |
0 |
7 |
Walcott, Theo J., off 79th
min. |
19 |
16 March 1989 |
RF/M |
Arsenal FC |
5 |
3 |
8 |
Lampard, Frank J. |
30 |
20 June 1978 |
CM |
Chelsea FC |
65 |
13 |
9 |
Heskey, Emile W.I. |
30 |
11 January 1978 |
CF/F |
Wigan Athletic FC |
49 |
5 |
10
|
Rooney, Wayne M., off 87th min. |
22 |
24 October 1985 |
LF/F |
Manchester United FC |
47 |
16 |
the 326th
(193rd post-war) brace scored |
11 |
Barry, Gareth, off 46th min. |
26 |
23 February 1981 |
LM |
Aston Villa FC |
24 |
1 |
England
Substitutes |
16 |
Wright-Phillips, Shaun
C., on 46th min. for Barry |
26 |
25 October 1981 |
LM |
Manchester City FC |
20 |
4 |
scoreline: England 3 Kazakhstan 1 |
15 |
Beckham, David R.J., on 79th min. for Walcott |
33 |
2 May 1975 |
M |
LA Galaxy, United States |
106 |
17 |
scoreline: England 4 Kazakhstan 1 |
17 |
Defoe, Jermain C., on 87th min. for Rooney |
26 |
7 October 1982 |
F |
Portsmouth FC |
31 |
6 |
result: England 5 Kazakhstan 1 |
unused
substitutes: |
12-Scott Carson, 13-Glen Johnson, 14-Wayne
Bridge, 18-Peter Crouch; |
team
notes: |
Jermain Defoe
became the latest substitute to enter the
match so far, 87 minutes, and to then score a goal (replacing Woodcock
in 1982). The fifteenth goal scored by a substitute in
qualification history. The third substitute goal at the new
National Stadium. Wayne Rooney's two goals puts him equal with
Michael Owen and Shaun Wright-Phillips. All three have scored three
goals at the new stadium. It is Joe Cole's first match that he has
missed at the new stadium. It means that Steven Gerrard and Gareth
Barry are now equal with him with number of appearances at the new
stadium, all three have played nine of the ten matches. Rio Ferdinand
has eight. |
Coach Fabio Capello played for Italy against England in
June (scoring one) and November 1973 (scoring another), and in May and
November 1976. |
|
1st
4-3-3 |
James -
Brown, Ferdinand, Upson, Cole -
Gerrard, Lampard, Barry -
Walcott, Heskey, Rooney. |
2nd
4-4-2 |
James -
Brown, Ferdinand, Upson, Cole -
Walcott (Beckham), Gerrard, Lampard, Wright-Phillips -
Heskey, Rooney (Defoe). |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
27.8 |
Appearances/Goals |
42.8 |
5.2 |
|
|
Kazakhstan
Team |
|
Rank: |
FIFA (8th
October 2008) 131st
EFO ranking
n/a
ELO rating 122nd |
Colours: |
Made by Umbro -
Blue crew neck jerseys with yellow trimmed
collar/underarm panels/cuffs/hem, blue shorts
with yellow side trim/hem,
blue socks. |
Capt: |
Ruslan Baltiev |
Manager: |
Bernd Storck, 45 (25 January 1963 in Germany),
appointed caretaker coach 15 September 2008,
1st match, W 0 - D 0 - L 1 - F 1 - A 5. |
Kazakhstan
Lineup |
1 |
Mokin, Aleksandr |
27 |
19 June 1981 |
G |
FC Almaty |
5 |
0 |
14 |
Logvinenko, Yuri |
20 |
22 July 1988 |
LB |
FK Aktobe |
2 |
0 |
3 |
Kirov, Aleksandr, off 85th min. |
24 |
4 June 1984 |
CD |
FC Almaty |
1 |
0 |
4 |
Kuchma, Aleksandr |
27 |
9 December 1980 |
CD |
FC Astana |
37 |
2 |
|
the 45th own goal scored for England |
|
|
|
5 |
Kislitsyn, Aleksandr |
22 |
3 August 1986 |
RB |
FC Shakhter Karagandy |
1 |
0 |
16 |
Ibraev, Sabyrkhan |
20 |
22 August 1988 |
RM |
FC
Tobol Kostanay |
2 |
0 |
7 |
Nuserbaev, Tanat |
20 |
1 January 1988 |
F |
FC Ordabasy Shymkent |
1 |
0 |
8 |
Skorykh, Sergei |
24 |
25 May 1984 |
CM |
FC
Tobol Kostanay |
19 |
0 |
9 |
Ostapenko, Sergei, off 76th min. |
22 |
23 February 1986 |
F |
FC Almaty |
17 |
4 |
10 |
Baltiev, Ruslan |
30 |
16 September 1978 |
LM |
FC
Tobol Kostanay |
68 |
10 |
21 |
Kukeev, Zhambyl |
20 |
20 September 1988 |
CM |
FC Almaty |
12 |
1 |
Kazakhstan
Substitutes |
scoreline: England 3 Kazakhstan 1 |
17 |
Maltsev, Gleb, on 76th min. for Ostapenko |
20 |
7 March 1988 |
F |
FC Irtysh Pavlodar |
1 |
0 |
13 |
Sabalakov, Tajgat, on 85th min. for Kirov |
22 |
9 July 1986 |
M |
FC
Tobol Kostanay |
1 |
0 |
result: England 5 Kazakhstan 1 |
unused
substitutes: |
2-Kairat
Nurdauletov, 15-Ilya Vorotnikov, 18-Andrey Morev, 20-Maxim Azovskiy, 23-Bekzat Beissenov. |
|
4-4-2 |
Mokin -
Kislitsyn, Kuchma, Kirov (Sabalakov), Logvinenko -
Ibraev, Kukeev, Skoryh, Baltiev -
Ostapenko (Maltsev), Nuserbaev. |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
23.3 |
Appearances/Goals |
15.0 |
1.5 |
|
|
Match Report
by Mike Payne |
A month had
elapsed since England's sensational win in Croatia, and against the
visitors from Kazakhstan an expectant crowd looked for more of the
same. But England have a habit of following a good performance with one
not quite so good, and at Wembley only a late flurry of activity spared
their blushes. There was only ever going to be one winner but England
had one of those infuriating nights when the result was better than the
performance.
The first half was instantly forgettable as
England failed to show the attacking form that Fabio Capello had
promised. They looked disjointed and lacklustre and actually made
Kazakhstan look a reasonable outfit. Indeed, the visitor's debutant
winger Tanat Nusserbayev, looked the best player on the field in that
opening 45 minutes. His counterpart, Theo Walcott, the hero in Croatia,
apart from the early minutes, had a more disappointing evening.
England's best efforts of the first-half came from a curling Walcott
shot and a long range right-footer from Frank Lampard, which hit a
stanchion. Other than that, it was pretty sterile stuff and the crowd
showed their displeasure as the half-time whistle blew.
It could have been much worse after the
restart as within two minutes the visitors should have been ahead.
Sabrykhan Ibrayev's cross found Sergey Ostapenko and he headed the ball
down for what seemed an easy chance for Nusserbayev. With an open goal
at his mercy he only succeeded in slicing the ball over the bar. It was
a big relief for England and thankfully, five minutes later they at last
made a breakthrough of their own. Not unexpectedly the goal came from a
set piece as Lampard's well hit corner saw the goalkeeper floundering
and captain Rio Ferdinand was able to head an easy goal. The relief
amongst players and fans was obvious.
Still though, Kazakhstan caused problems and
David James was forced into a good save from that man Nusserbayev
again. England took a while to settle after the break but ever so
gradually the rhythm started to return. When England scored again after
64 minutes it seemed the match was won.
This time it was a free-kick
from Lampard that caused problems for the Kazakhstan defence as, under
pressure from Rooney, Alexandr Kuchma headed into his own net. It
looked all over but then, four minutes later, the visitors were handed a
way back into the game. Ashley Cole had had a pretty fraught night from
the fans and he did himself no favours when his awful back pass fell
short of James and gave Zhambyl Kukeyev the chance to score his first
international goal. It was actually very well taken in the end.
If truth be told the goal was no real threat to England and towards the
end they reasserted their strength. On 76 minutes Walcott's
fine work set up Wayne Rooney for a good header to make it 3-1. David
Beckham was then sent on with just over 10 minutes to go and he quickly
made an impact, with a telling free-kick that again found Rooney
finishing clinically. Then in the last minute the scoreline was given a
more than flattering look when another substitute, Jermaine Defoe, ran
on to an Emile Heskey pass to make it 5-1.
Not the most satisfying of performances by
England, but once again they (eventually) scored five goals and it keeps
the team at the top of the group. As for Kazakhstan, they probably
didn't deserve such a large defeat, but their problems are at the back,
especially in second-halves.
|
Source Notes |
BBC Sport
TheFA.com
SkySports.com/football
UEFA.com
RateTheRef.com
Mike Payne - football historian and contributor
____________________
CG
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