|
Rank |
FIFA (17th
Sept 2020)
4th
EFO ranking
Group One ELO rating 7th to 11th |
Colours |
The Nike 2020 away uniform - Mega
blue and royal blue
collared jersey and shorts. Abstract three-lions pattern
throughout with challenge red sidestripes.
Mega blue socks
with a thin challenge red/sport royal blue hoop. |
Captain |
Harry Kane |
Manager |
Gareth Southgate, 50 (3 September 1970), appointed caretaker manager on 27 September 2016, appointed as permanent manager on 30 November
2016.
|
²⁵
most goals as captain |
27th of 74, W 16 - D 5 - L 6 - F 64 - A 25. |
P 46th
of 102, W 27 - D 10 - L 9 - F 93 - A 35. |
England
Lineup |
|
|
five changes to the previous match ( ) |
league position
(1st October) - 3 games played |
|
|
1 |
Pickford, Jordan L. |
26 221 days |
7 March 1994 |
G |
Everton FC (PL
3rd) |
28 |
25ᵍᵃ |
|
sixth goalkeeper to face five penalty
kicks |
2 |
James, Reece
T. |
20
311 days |
8 December 1999
|
RWB
/L/RB |
Chelsea FC (PL
9th) |
3 |
0
|
18th player to be sent off for England |
|
arguing with the referee after full time |
least experienced player to be sent
off |
|
|
3 |
Maitland-Niles, Ainsley C., off 36th min. |
23 46 days |
29 August 1997 |
LWB |
Arsenal FC (PL
5th) |
3 |
1 |
4 |
Walker, Kyle
A. |
30 139 days |
28 May 1990 |
RD/LB |
Manchester City FC (PL
13th) |
51 |
0 |
5 |
Coady, Conor D. |
27 233 days |
23 February 1993 |
CD/ RCD |
Wolverhampton Wanderers FC (PL
16th) |
3 |
1 |
6
|
Maguire, J. Harry |
27
223 days |
5 March 1993 |
LD |
Manchester United FC (PL
14th)
|
28 |
1
|
17th player to be sent off for England |
|
5th min. after he
challenged late on Yussuf Poulsen after he had played the ball. |
31st min. after leaving his foot in on Kasper Dolberg after getting the ball. |
|
|
7 |
Rice, Declan, off 76th min. |
21 274 days |
14 January 1999 |
LM |
West Ham United FC (PL
11th) |
11 |
0 |
8 |
Phillips, Kalvin M. |
24 317 days |
2 December 1995 |
RM |
Leeds United AFC (PL
7th) |
4 |
0 |
|
86th min. after
he was adjudged to have pushed Yussuf Poulsen |
9 |
Kane, Harry E. |
27 78 days |
28 July 1993 |
CF |
Tottenham Hotspur FC (PL
8th) |
49 |
32 |
10 |
Mount, Mason T., off 73rd min. |
21 278 days |
10 January 1999 |
RF |
Chelsea FC (PL
9th) |
10 |
2 |
11 |
Rashford, Marcus, off 72nd min. |
22
350 days |
31 October 1997 |
LF |
Manchester United FC (PL
14th) |
40 |
10 |
the 87th player to reach the 40-app milestone
(3rd youngest) |
England
Substitutes |
scoreline:
England 0 Denmark 1 |
12 |
Mings, Tyrone D.,
on 36th min. (35:02) for Maitland-Niles |
27 215 days |
13 March 1993 |
LCD |
Aston Villa FC (PL
4th) |
4 |
2 |
0 |
2 |
23 |
Calvert-Lewin, Dominic N., on 72nd min.
(71:49) for Rashford |
23 212 days |
16 March 1997 |
LF |
Everton FC (PL
3rd) |
3 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
21 |
Sancho, Jadon M., on 73rd min.
(72:02) for Mount |
20 203 days |
25 March 2000 |
RF |
Bsv Borussia 09 Dortmund, Germany |
15 |
8 |
2 |
7 |
14 |
Henderson, Jordan B.,
on 76th min.
(75:36) for Rice |
30 119 days |
17 June 1990 |
LM
|
Liverpool FC (PL
2nd)
|
57 |
42 |
0 |
15 |
|
85th min. after arguing with the referee after yet another foul was awarded |
|
result:
England 0 Denmark 1 |
unused
substitutes: (five permitted
for the October round of fixtures) |
13-Nick
Pope, 15-Bukayo
Saka, 16-Trent
Alexander-Arnold, 17-Joe
Gomez, 18-James
Ward-Prowse, 19-Jack
Grealish, 20-Danny
Ings, 22-Dean
Henderson. |
team
notes: |
Conor Coady becomes Wolverhampton Wanderers' 300th starter for
England. |
records: |
England's 62nd home loss. The first for over two years and the second
under Southgate. The first time that England have had two
expulsions in the same match. This is the 100th occasion England
have failed to score whilst under a Conservative government. Despite this defeat, England secured
their place in Group A after Iceland also lost. |
manager Gareth Southgate was an unused sub against
Denmark in the 2002 WCF, and had to
withdraw from the
squad in November 2003. |
|
3-4-3 4-4-1 after 31 minutes |
Pickford - Walker, Coady,
Maguire - James,
Phillips, Rice (Henderson), Maitland-Niles
(Mings) - Mount (Sancho), Kane, Rashford
(Calvert-Lewin). notes: Walker
went to left-back, and James to left-back-then right-back, after
Maguire's sending off |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
24 years 359
days |
Appearances/Goals |
23.6 |
4.2 |
|
|
Rank |
FIFA (17th
Sept 2020)
16th
EFO ranking
Group Five ELO rating 15th to 13th |
Colours |
Made by Hummel - White v-necked jersey with red sleeve
chevrons/collar trim, red shorts with white side chevrons,
white socks with red tops. |
Captain |
Simon Kjær |
Head Coach |
Kasper Hjulmand, 48 (9 April 1972),
appointed 12 June 2020, effective 1 July 2020.
|
fifth match, W 3
- D 1 - L 1 - F 8 - A 2. |
Denmark
Lineup |
1 |
Schmeichel, Kasper P. |
33 345 days |
5 November 1986 |
G |
Leicester City FC, England |
58 |
44ᵍᵃ |
18 |
Wass, Daniel |
31 136 days |
31 May 1989 |
RB |
Valencia CF, Spain |
24 |
0 |
4 |
Kjær, Simon T. |
31 202 days |
26 March 1989 |
CD |
AC Milan, Italy |
100 |
3 |
6 |
Christensen, Andreas B., off half time |
34 187 days |
10 April 1986 |
CD |
Chelsea FC, England
|
36
|
1
|
|
38th min. after he had pulled back Harry Kane as he was preparing to run |
7 |
Skov,
Robert, off half time |
24 147 days |
20 May 1996 in Marbella,
Spain |
LB |
TSG 1899 Hoffenheim, Germany |
8 |
4 |
10 |
Eriksen, Christian D. |
28 243 days |
14 February 1992 |
RM |
FC Internazionale Milano, Italy |
100 |
34 |
|
59th
penalty against scored
(88th overall) |
|
|
|
23 |
Højbjerg, Pierre-Emile K., off 88th min. |
25 70 days |
5 August 1995 |
CM |
Tottenham Hotspur FC, England
|
37
|
3
|
|
45th+1 min.
following a high tackle on Harry Kane after a throw-in.
SUSPENDED. |
|
|
8 |
Delaney, Thomas J. |
29 41 days |
3 September 1991 |
LM |
Bsv Borussia 09 Dortmund, Germany |
47 |
5 |
20 |
Poulsen, Yussuf Yurary |
26 121 days |
15 June 1994 |
R/CF |
RB Leipzig, Germany |
47 |
7 |
12 |
Dolberg Rasmussen, Kasper, injured
off 37th min. |
23 8 days |
6 October 1997 |
CF |
Olympique Gymnast Club de Nice, France |
21 |
5 |
9 |
Braithwaite Christensen, Martin,
off 73rd min. |
29 131 days |
5 June 1991 |
L/RF |
FC Barcelona, Spain |
44 |
7 |
Denmark Substitutes |
11 |
Sisto,
Pione S.I., on 37th min.
(36:36) for Dolberg |
26 253 days |
4 February 1995 in
Kampala,
Uganda |
LF |
FC Midtjylland |
24 |
1 |
scoreline:
England 0 Denmark 1 |
13 |
Jørgensen, Mathias J., on half time for
Christensen |
30 174 days |
23 April 1990 |
CD |
Fenerbahçe SK, Turkey |
33 |
2 |
5 |
Mæhle Pedersen, Joakim, on half time for Skov |
23 147 days |
20 May 1997 |
LB |
KRC Genk, Belgium |
5 |
1 |
3 |
Vestergaard, Jannik, on 73rd min.
(72:58) for Braithwaite |
28 72 days |
3 August 1992 |
CD |
Southampton FC, England |
18 |
1 |
21 |
Jensen, Mathias, on 88th min.
(87:26) for
Højbjerg |
24 287 days |
1 January 1996 |
M |
Brentford FC, England |
2 |
0 |
result:
England 0 Denmark 1 |
unused
substitutes: |
2-Peter Billing, 14-Henrik Dalsgaard, 16-Jonas Lössl, 22-Jesper
Hansen. |
team
notes: |
Christian Eriksen is the youngest Dane to reach one hundred
appearances. Goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel's father, Peter, also
played as the goalkeeper for Denmark against England in four matches
between 1989 and 1994. |
records: |
The last time Denmark won at Wembley was also by a single penalty, in
September 1983. Denmark become only the seventeenth nation
to score
twenty goals against England. |
|
4-3-3 |
Schmeichal - Wass, Kjær,
Christensen (Jørgensen), Skov (Mæhle)
- Eriksen, Højbjerg
(Jensen), Delaney - Poulssen, Dolberg
(Sisto), Braithwaite
(Vestergaard) |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
28 years 317
days |
Appearances/Goals |
47.5 |
6.2 |
|
In
this, the third match of this International break, England took on Denmark
in a match that they really needed to win before taking on Belgium away,
next month.
The only problem was, Denmark, one
of the best organised teams in Europe, were on a very good run of results
themselves, so it wasn’t going to be easy.
Not only that, England, or more to
the point, one of their players, was to shoot his own team in the foot
after just half an
hour of the match.
To compound the
problem another player later entered the record books for all the wrong
reason.
England did start
well though and as early as the third minute Harry Kane had a chance due
to a poor Danish pass, but his deflected shot was safely gathered by
Kasper Schmeichel.
Two minutes later, the first incident
that affected the match arrived, when Harry Maguire was booked for a late
tackle.
Being booked so early meant the
Manchester United player would have to tread carefully for the rest of the
game.
Easier said than done.
Denmark were also looking positive
and after Conor Coady’s excellent interception conceded a corner, a ball
in to the near post was met by Kasper Dolberg, but his shot went past the
outside of the post.
The Danes broke quickly at times and England’s
defenders, still trying to get used to the 3-4-3 system, gave away a
series of silly free-kicks.
Maguire and Declan Rice the guilty players.
England then tried to make ground, and on 13 minutes
Mason Mount’s good turn ended with a shot that Schmeichel again saved
comfortably.
Reece James was sending in some testing crosses from the
right but no England players could get on the end of them and both Marcus
Rashford and Kane looked a little sluggish compared to their normal game.
There was a worrying moment as Christian Eriksen,
back on familiar turf, broke down the middle as England’s defence opened
up.
Luckily for the home side though, Eriksen skied his
shot high over the bar.
Meanwhile, James and Mount were working well down
England’s right, and another Mount cross was again wasted as Kane and
Ainsley Maitland-Niles failed to react quickly enough.
As the play went from end to end, another chance
came Kane’s way in the 28th minute, but he couldn’t adjust his feet for a
decent contact with his shot and Denmark cleared with ease.
On 31 minutes, the inevitable
happened.
The Spanish referee had already shown that he was
always going to punish any England tackle, and when Maguire’s first touch
let him down, the
defender lunged into his opponent to try and recover the ball, catching
Dolberg, despite winning the ball first.
Out came the red card, and there was nothing England
could do about it.
Maguire’s already poor night had just got horribly
worse.
You have to feel sorry for Maitland-Niles too, as the
Arsenal player, making his first start for his country, was the
sacrificial lamb as Gareth Southgate brought on Tyrone Mings as an extra
central defender, and moved to a 4-2-3 formation.
If all that wasn’t bad enough, what happened a few
minutes later made the mountain England had to climb just that little bit
higher.
A Danish cross into the middle bounced awkwardly on
the edge of the box with Kyle Walker trying to clear from Dolberg.
Jordan Pickford came out to also get involved and
suddenly Dolberg went down screaming at the top of his voice.
I must confess I never heard any gunshot, but it
seemed that he must have been hit.
Replays showed that there was minimal contact but
the referee, whose whistle was dominating the Wembley air at this stage,
awarded a penalty to Denmark.
Up stepped Eriksen, on the occasion of his 100th
cap, to shoot straight down the middle with Pickford diving out of the
way.
For the rest of the half Denmark kept possession well and
used the extra man effectively as England tried hard to come to terms with
the mess they found themselves in.
There was little from England’s attack to report and
to be honest, neither goalkeeper had much to do.
One sensed that Denmark had what they came for and
would now try and preserve that lead.
To be fair to England, they came
out after the break, determined to find a way back into the match.
After Eriksen missed a great chance to increase the
lead, Rashford shot wide and James cut inside to force Schmeichel into
another comfortable save.
Kane and Rashford both fired in shots but Schmeichel
was not truly tested until the 66th minute, when the goalkeeper made the
save of the match.
From a corner and a flick on, the ball reached the
head of Mount.
He did everything right and the ball was heading for
the top corner.
Schmeichel was not to be beaten though and somehow
he clawed the ball away with his left hand, much to the home players
disbelief.
Two
minutes later and Daniel Wass missed a sitter when he was left all alone
for a header but sent it over the bar.
On came Jadon Sancho and Dominic Calvert-Lewin, but
the former hardly had a touch and did nothing, whilst the latter was again
feeding on scraps.
On 77 minutes James forced Schmeichel into another
good save from a free-kick after Kane had been felled on the edge of the
box..
Three minutes later Kane’s header saw Calvert-Lewin
and Coady almost touch home an equaliser.
But it just wasn’t to be.
The hard working Kalvin Phillips, who had run his
socks off, was booked by the referee after a good challenge provoked
another screaming Dane.
Don’t you just hate it when players scream!
It was another poor decision by the Spanish ref, and
when substitute Jordan Henderson complained at the decision, he too was
booked.
The English frustrations were really kicking in
towards the end of the match, and that was just on my settee!
Meanwhile the cool, calm, Danes saw the result out
perfectly to extend their impressive run of results, something that must
not be forgotten after the disappointment of England’s result.
The final twist came after the
final whistle as the players were leaving the field.
James, who had had an otherwise impressive match,
blotted his copybook by arguing a little too much with the referee, who,
needless to say, had the last word by showing the England player a red
card, the first time ever that two England players had been sent off in
the same match.
Not an England International night to remember for anyone
really and one last thing, has Jack Grealish trod on
Gareth Southgate’s cat?
|