|
Rank |
FIFA (27th May 2021)
4th
EFO ranking
Group One (3rd)
ELO rating 7th to 9th |
Colours |
The Nike 2020 home shirt -
White crew-necked jerseys with
navy blue collar and side trim,
white shorts with pale blue side stripe, white socks. |
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. |
²⁷
most goals as captain |
34th of 74, W 21 - D 6 - L 7 - F 74 - A 28. |
|
Raheem Sterling 73:31 |
P 56th of 102, W 35 - D
11 - L 10 - F 112 - A 38. |
England
Lineup |
|
|
two changes to the previous match (James & Shaw in
for Walker & Trippier) |
league position
(FINAL POSITIONS) |
|
|
1 |
Pickford, Jordan L. |
27 103 days |
7 March 1994 |
G |
Everton FC
(PL 10th) |
33 |
27ᵍᵃ |
24 |
James, Reece
T. |
21 192 days |
8 December 1999 |
RB |
Chelsea FC
(PL 4th) |
7 |
0 |
5 |
Stones, John |
27 21 days |
28 May 1994 |
RCD |
Manchester City FC
(PL CHAMPIONS) |
44 |
2 |
15 |
Mings, Tyrone D. |
28 97 days |
13 March 1993 |
LCD |
Aston Villa FC
(PL 11th) |
12 |
0 |
3 |
Shaw, Luke P.H. |
25 341 days |
12 July 1995 |
LB |
Manchester United FC
(PL RU) |
11 |
0 |
14 |
Phillips, Kalvin M. |
25 198 days |
2 December 1995 |
RM |
Leeds United AFC
(PL 9th) |
10 |
0 |
4 |
Rice, Declan |
22 155 days |
14 January 1999 |
CM |
West Ham United FC
(PL 6th) |
19 |
1 |
19 |
Mount, Mason T. |
22 159 days |
10 January 1999 |
LM |
Chelsea FC
(PL 4th) |
18 |
4 |
20 |
Foden, Philip W., off 63rd min. |
21 21 days |
28 May 2000 |
RF |
Manchester City FC
(PL CHAMPIONS) |
8 |
2 |
10 |
Sterling, Raheem S. |
26 192 days |
8 December 1994
in Kingston, Jamaica |
LF |
Manchester City FC
(PL CHAMPIONS) |
63 |
15 |
9 |
Kane, Harry E., off 74th min. |
27 325 days |
28 July 1993 |
CF |
Tottenham Hotspur FC
(PL 7th) |
56 |
34 |
England
Substitutes |
7 |
Grealish, Jack P., on 63rd min.
(62:44) for Foden |
25 281 days |
10 September 1995 |
RF |
Aston Villa FC
(PL 11th) |
8 |
6 |
0 |
2 |
11 |
Rashford, Marcus, on 74th min.
(73:48) for Foden |
23
230 days |
31 October 1997 |
CF |
Manchester United FC
(PL RU) |
43 |
21 |
11 |
22 |
result:
England 0 Scotland 0 |
unused
substitutes: |
6-Harry
Maguire, 8-Jordan Henderson, 12-Kieran Trippier, 13-Aaron
Ramsdale,
16-Conor Coady,
17-Jadon Sancho, 18-Dominic
Calvert-Lewin, 21-Ben
Chilwell, 23-Sam Johnstone, 26-Jude
Bellingham. |
team notes: |
Jack Grealish's great great
grandfather,
Billy Garraty, also played for
England in 1903. |
manager records: |
It is Gareth Southgate's record 25th match at the National Stadium, three
more than Hodgson. This was the thirtieth clean sheet in the
Southgate era. Only Bobby Robson (33) had more after 56 matches in
charge. |
Wembley records: |
This is the first scoreless draw between the two countries at Wembley
after 33 meetings. Only the second competitive scoreless draw at
the new stadium (first in October 2010). National Stadium record
P 75 - W 54 - D 12 - L 9 - F 172
- A 47. |
records: |
This is the first scoreless draw between the two countries at Wembley
after 33 meetings. The first between the countries since 1987, and
only in 1970 and 1872 previous to that. England's seventeenth
goalless draw in a major tournament, two more than any other country.
The 150th
time England have failed to score since the war. However -
The 200th clean sheet they have kept at home - The 75th clean sheet
they have kept in the month of June -
The
25th clean sheet they have achieved on a Friday. |
Manager Gareth Southgate played against Scotland during Euro '96. In
the two-legged play-off matches for a place in the 2000 European
Championship Finals, Southgate was an unused substitute in the first
match and started and finished the second match. |
|
4-3-3 |
Pickford - James, Stones, Mings, Shaw
- Phillips, Rice, Mount - Foden (Grealish), Kane
(Rashford), Sterling - |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
25 years 34
days |
Appearances/Goals |
25.5 |
5.3 |
|
|
Rank |
FIFA (23rd May 2021)
44th
EFO ranking
n/a
ELO rating
49th to 45th |
Colours |
Made by Adidas - Navy
crew-necked jerseys with hand-painted shadowed hoops, broad
white/red cuffs and white Adidas shoulder stripes, navy shorts
with white Adidas side stripes, navy socks with white
Adidas stripes. |
Captain |
Andrew Robertson |
Head Coach |
Stephen Clarke, 57 (29 August 1963), appointed 20 May 2019.
|
23rd match, W 8 - D 7 - L 8 - F - A. |
Scotland Lineup |
1 |
Marshall, David J. |
36 105 days |
5 March 1985 |
G |
Derby County FC, England |
46 |
0 |
2 |
O'Donnell, Stephen G. |
29 38 days |
11 May 1992 |
RWB |
Motherwell FC |
21
|
0
|
|
87th min. for bringing down Jack Grealish in the
centre circle at his fourth attempt. |
4 |
McTominay,
Scott F. |
24 192 days |
8 December 1996 in
Lancaster, England |
RD |
Manchester United FC, England |
25 |
0 |
5 |
Hanley, Grant C. |
29 210 days |
20 November 1991 |
CD |
Norwich City FC, England |
35 |
2 |
6 |
Tierney,
Kieran |
24 13 days |
5 June 1997 in Douglas, Isle of Man |
LD |
Arsenal FC, England |
22 |
0 |
3 |
Robertson, Andrew |
27 99 days |
11 March 1994 |
LWB |
Liverpool FC, England |
47 |
3 |
23 |
Gilmour, Billy C., off 76th min. |
20 7 days |
11 June 2001 |
RM |
Chelsea FC, England |
3 |
0 |
7 |
McGinn, John |
26 243 days |
18 October 1994 |
CM/ RM
|
Aston Villa FC, England |
35 |
10 |
|
15th min. for arguing with the referee after not
receiving a free-kick |
8 |
McGregor, Callum W. |
28 4 days |
14 June 1993 |
LM/CM |
The Celtic FC |
33 |
0 |
9 |
Dykes,
Lyndon J. |
25 254 days |
7 October 1995 in Gold
Coast, Australia |
RF |
Queen's Park Rangers FC, England |
14 |
2 |
10 |
Adams, Ché
E.F., off 86th min. |
24 340 days |
13 July 1996 in
Leicester, England |
LF |
Southampton FC, England |
6 |
2 |
Scotland
Substitutes |
17 |
Armstrong, Stuart, on 76th min.
(75:53) for Gilmour |
29 80 days |
30 March 1992 |
LM |
Southampton FC, England |
27 |
2 |
19 |
Nisbet, Kevin, on 86th min.
(85:10) for Adams |
24 102 days |
8 March 1997 |
CF |
Hibernians FC |
5 |
1 |
result:
England 0 Scotland 0 |
|
|
|
unused
substitutes: |
11-Ryan Christie, 12-Craig Gordon, 14-John Fleck, 16-Liam
Cooper, 20-Ryan Fraser, 21-Jon McLoughlin, 22-Nathan Patterson, 24-Jack Hendry, 25-James Forrest,
26-Scott McKenna. |
records: |
Scotland have failed to score in eight of their last twelve major
tournament matches. |
|
3-5-2 |
Marshall - O'Donnell, McTominay, Hanley, Tierney,
Robertson - Gilmour (Armstrong), McGinn, McGregor -
Dykes, Adams (Nisbet).
notes: when Armstrong replaced Gilmour,
he went onto the left, pushing McGinn and McGregor across |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
26 years 338
days |
Appearances/Goals |
26.1 |
1.7 |
|
One of my pet sayings when
watching England play, whether it is our football or cricket teams, is
that when all eleven players play well together, then we are capable of
beating anyone. Sadly, too
many of the England team against Scotland were woefully out of sorts, and
it showed. Let’s be honest,
Scotland did exactly what was expected, raising their game to a different
level because it was England they were up against. But alas, England never responded in kind and they were a little
lucky to escape with a point.
Gareth Southgate changed both full-backs with Reece
James and Luke Shaw coming in, to try and stem the runs of Andy Robertson
down the left, especially.
The
match started with a series of niggly fouls but it was the Scots who had
the first attack as Stephen O’Donnell centred to Che Adams, only for the
England defence to block the shot.
It was a frantic opening with both sides getting stuck in to their
challenges.
On 11 minutes Phil Foden and Mason Mount combined
down the right and eventually won a corner. From this England could, and definitely should have taken the lead. The cross came in and John Stones was there all on his own with a
free header. He headed well
enough but the ball, instead of ending up in the back of the net, crashed
against a post to be cleared by the relieved Scottish defenders. Stones will rue that miss for many years. Whether a goal then would have changed the course of the match, we
will never know, but it certainly would have lifted the England players
and fans.
Immediately after that incident England went close again. Scott McTominey was
badly caught in possession as Raheem Sterling robbed him of the ball. Sterling went to the bye-line, but his pull-back was put wide by
the inrushing Mount. Meanwhile
John McGinn was doing his best to niggle the England players, but he then
became the first to receive a yellow card as his ‘passion’ overstepped the
mark. In the 17th minute James’s long pass found Foden, who shot just wide. It wouldn’t have counted though as the Manchester City youngster
was flagged offside anyway.
A good burst by Shaw saw him find Mount who won a
fruitless corner. For the next
few minutes there was a lot of to-ing and froing but not much in the final
third at either end. Just
before the half-hour James put over another cross, but Kane couldn’t quite
direct the header, which flew wide. A minute later though, and England were indebted to a wonderful
save from Jordan Pickford. A
deep cross came in from the left and O’Donnell met it with a sweet volley. Somehow, Pickford managed to turn the ball away with a strong hand
for a superb save.
As the half came to an end it was pretty obvious that
the Scots were up for the game, much more it would seem than England were. I’m sure that’s not true, but that is what it looked like. Scotland were playing much better than some of their more recent
dire performances, but England just could not seem to get out of first
gear. Declan Rice was having a
battling game, in every sense, but he lacked support in midfield with
Kalvin Phillips having a much
quieter match and Mount only flitting in and out. For Scotland, who were winning the midfield battle, Chelsea starlet
Billy Gilmour looked a particularly fine talent, and having Kieran Tierney
back also made a big difference for the Scots. The last action of the half saw Adams win a corner, but that came
to nothing and the players trooped off with the scores equal, nothing
each!
After the break it was England who started brightly. Shaw won a corner and the home side had two chances in a minute. First Sterling, found Foden, but his shot was blocked, and then
Mount advanced to hit a shot on target. Goalkeeper David Marshall, was down smartly though, to turn the
ball round a post. On 55
minutes Kane found James and the full-back fired in a shot that flew
narrowly over the top. James
should have hit the target with that one, and to be honest, Marshall had
had an easy time so far.
Scotland still kept battling and after Kane had a
shot blocked they broke quickly and as a centre came in Tyrone Mings
headed over his own goal to clear the danger. From the corner Dykes heads for goal, but James is back to clear
from the line, although replays suggested it was drifting wide anyway, but
James wasn’t to know that.
It must be said that England’s delivery from corners
and set-pieces had been awful throughout the night, rarely clearing the
first defender, and being easily dealt with by the Scottish defence. Southgate decided a change was needed, but surprisingly, although
he, at last, thought that Jack Grealish was worth a go, he then took off
Foden, when any other number of candidates would have been more suited to
be the one substituted.
Grealish was soon in the action, and soon on the floor after a foul let
him know what was to come. He
did combine well with Mount and Shaw though, but Shaw’s final effort flew
well wide. At the other end
Adams sliced a shot wide before England attacked again. This time Robertson could consider himself, as they say in
Scotland, a wee bit lucky.
Sterling had his ankle tapped and went down in the penalty area. They are sometimes given, but not this time, and to be fair, it
would have been a tad harsh.
The last ten minutes saw both sides start to realise
that a point was useful to each team although chances were still created
as McGinn’s shot was deflected for a corner, whilst a nasty foul by
O’Donnell on Grealish earned a deserved yellow card. The clock ticked down to the 90th minute and there was
an almighty scramble in the Scottish goalmouth. Rice was at the heart of it as his shot was blocked as he fell, he
then tried to force the ball home from a prone position but, much to
Scotland’s relief, the ball was hacked clear, and the final whistle blew
to end the agony, for England fans at least. To see Scotland’s players celebrating on the pitch as though they
had won the Euro 2020 Cup, was very annoying to this England fan, but I
suppose you couldn’t help but admire how well they had played. I just wonder if we will see the same passion from the Scots when
they play Croatia in their final group match.
England meanwhile, have a lot to sort out before they
play the Czech Republic in their final group game. They can learn from the passion of the Scots as we saw very little
passion from them in this match, and I can honestly say that I have rarely
seen England play so poorly in such a big game. Pickford did well in goal, the back four held firm, Declan Rice
worked his socks off, but as for the rest, they need to have a re-think as
to what this tournament means to them.
|