|
Rank |
FIFA (27th May 2021)
4th
EFO ranking
Group One (3rd)
ELO rating 8th |
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. |
The 100th match wearing a Nike uniform |
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. |
²⁸
most goals as captain |
36th of 74, W 23 - D 6 - L 7 - F 77 - A 28 |
P 58th of 102, W 37 - D
11 - L 10 - F 115 - A 38 |
England
Lineup |
|
one change to the previous match (Trippier in for
Grealish) |
league position
(FINAL POSITIONS) |
|
|
1 |
Pickford, Jordan L. |
27 114 days |
7 March 1994 |
G |
Everton FC
(PL 10th) |
35 |
27ᵍᵃ |
2 |
Walker, Kyle
A. |
31 32 days |
28 May 1990 |
RD |
Manchester City FC
(PL CHAMPIONS) |
58 |
0 |
5 |
Stones, John |
27 32 days |
28 May 1994 |
CD |
Manchester City FC
(PL CHAMPIONS) |
46 |
2 |
6 |
Maguire, J. Harry |
28 116 days |
5 March 1993 |
LD |
Manchester United FC
(PL RU) |
34 |
3 |
|
77th min. for tripping Josh Kimmich as he sprinted into the penalty area. |
12 |
Trippier, Kieran J. |
30 283 days |
19 September 1990 |
RWB |
Club Atlético de Madrid, Spain
(LL CHAMPIONS) |
30 |
1 |
the 125th player to reach the 30-app milestone |
14 |
Phillips, Kalvin M. |
25 209 days |
2 December 1995 |
RDM |
Leeds United AFC
(PL 9th) |
12 |
0 |
|
45th min. after his foot bounced off the ball into Toni Kroos' shin. |
4 |
Rice, Declan, off 88th min. |
22 166 days |
14 January 1999 |
LDM |
West Ham United FC
(PL 6th) |
21 |
1 |
|
8th min. for an adjudged foul on Gortezka just outside the penalty area. |
|
|
3
|
Shaw, Luke P.H. |
25 352 days |
12 July 1995 |
LWB |
Manchester United FC
(PL RU) |
13 |
0 |
25 |
Saka, Bukayo A.T., off 69th min. |
19 297 days |
5 September 2001 |
RF |
Arsenal FC
(PL 8th) |
7 |
1 |
9
|
Kane, Harry E. |
27 336 days |
28 July 1993 |
CF |
Tottenham Hotspur FC
(PL 7th) |
58 |
35 |
10
|
Sterling, Raheem S. |
26 203 days |
8 December 1994
in Kingston, Jamaica |
LF |
Manchester City FC
(PL CHAMPIONS) |
65 |
17 |
second most appearances as a City
player |
England
Substitutes |
7
|
Grealish, Jack P., on 69th min.
(68:23) for Saka |
25 292 days |
10 September 1995 |
RF |
Aston Villa FC
(PL 11th) |
10 |
7 |
0 |
3 |
scoreline:
England 1 Germany 0 |
8 |
Henderson, Jordan B.,
on 88th min. (87:10) for Rice |
31 12 days |
17 June 1990 |
LDM |
Liverpool FC
(PL 3rd) |
61 |
43 |
0 |
18 |
result:
England 2 Germany 0 |
|
unused
substitutes: |
11-Marcus Rashford, 13-Aaron
Ramsdale, 15-Tyrone Mings, 16-Conor Coady,
17-Jadon Sancho,
19-Mason
Mount, 20-Phil Foden, 23-Sam Johnstone, 24-Reece James,
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 27th match at the National Stadium,
five
more than Hodgson. Southgate, Alf Ramsey and Bobby Robson all
managed their 58th matches against (West) Germany, only Southgate won.
Southgate is also the first to manage England on three separate
occasions against Germany (combined). This is also his 43rd
competitive match in charge of England, equal with Bobby Robson. |
Wembley Stadium record: |
The 300th match at the Empire and new National Stadiums combined.
W 188
- D 73 - L 39 - F 648 - A 226.
It is the 33rd time England have recorded a 2-0 victory at the venue,
now equal with the record 1-0's. |
records: |
England's first competitive win over Germany/West Germany at Wembley
since 1966. Bukayo Saka is England's youngest starter in a Finals
knockout match since Wayne Rooney in 2004. The last time England
kept four Major Final Tournament clean sheets was for the 1966 World
Cup Finals, and only Germany have done it in the European Championship
Finals, in 2016. This is the first time England have won a European
Championship Finals knockout match outright since their
1968 play-off victory against USSR. This is the fifth time England have kept a record
number of six consecutive clean sheets (1966-67, 1974-75, 1983 and
2006). |
Manager Gareth Southgate first played for England against Germany in the
Euro 1996 semi-final. His shoot-out kick being saved. He was an unused
substitute for the match during Euro 2000. He did start in the
qualification match that was the last at the old Wembley Stadium, but
an unused substitute in the 5-1 victory in Munich. |
|
3-4-3 |
Pickford - Walker, Stones, Maguire - Trippier, Phillips,
Rice (Henderson), Shaw - Saka
(Grealish), Kane, Sterling |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
26
years 230 days |
Appearances/Goals |
34.5 |
5.3 |
|
|
Rank |
FIFA (23rd May 2021)
12th
EFO ranking
Group Five
ELO rating
10th to 12th |
Colours |
made by Adidas - Carbon grey jerseys with black
sleeves/neck/collar, carbon grey Adidas sleeve stripes, lack/red/yellow
cuffs, black shorts with carbon grey Adidas side stripes,
black socks with grey Adidas striped tops. |
Captain |
Manuel Neuer |
Head Coach |
Joachim Löw, 57 (3 February 1960),
appointed Head Coach on 13 July 2006. |
198th
& Final match, W 124 - D 40 - L 34 - F 467 - A 200. |
Germany Lineup |
1 |
Neuer, Manuel P. |
35 94 days |
27 March 1986 |
G |
FC Bayern München |
104 |
0 |
4 |
Ginter, Matthias L., off 87th min. |
27 161 days |
19 January 1994 |
RD |
Borussia VfL 1900 Mönchengladbach |
44 |
2 |
|
25th min. for dragging down Luke Shaw next to the penalty box.
SUSPENDED. |
|
|
|
|
5 |
Hummels, Mats J. |
32 195 days |
16 December 1988 |
CD |
Bsv Borussia 09 Dortmund |
76 |
5 |
2 |
Rüdiger, Antonio |
28 118 days |
3 March 1993 |
LD |
Chelsea FC, England |
45 |
1 |
6 |
Kimmich, Joshua W. |
26 141 days |
8 February 1995 |
RWB |
FC Bayern München |
59 |
3 |
8 |
Kroos, Toni |
31 176 days |
4 January 1990
in
Greifswald, German Dem. Rep. |
RM |
Real Madrid
FC, Spain |
106 |
17 |
18 |
Goretzka, Leon C. |
26 143 days |
6 February 1995 |
LM |
FC Bayern München |
35 |
15 |
20 |
Gosens, Robin E., off 87th min. |
26 359 days |
5 July 1994 |
LWB |
Atalanta BC, Italy |
11 |
2 |
|
72nd min. for a late kick on Kieran Trippier's foot near the halfway line. |
7 |
Havertz, Kai L. |
22 18 days |
11 June 1999 |
RAM |
Chelsea FC, England |
18 |
5 |
11 |
Werner, Timo, off 68th min. |
25 115 days |
6 March 1996 |
CF |
Chelsea FC, England |
42 |
6 |
25 |
Müller, Thomas, off 90th+2nd
min. |
31 289 days |
13 September 1989 |
LAM |
FC Bayern München |
106 |
39 |
Germany
Substitutes |
10 |
Gnabry, Serge D., on 68th min.
(67:52) for Werner |
26 350 days |
14 July 1995 |
CF |
FC Bayern München |
26 |
16 |
scoreline:
England 2 Germany 0 |
23 |
Can, Emre, on 87th min. for Ginter |
27 168 days |
12 January 1994 |
RD |
Bsv Borussia 09 Dortmund |
37 |
1 |
19 |
Sané, Leroy A., on 87th min. for Gosens |
25 169 days |
11 January 1996 |
LWB |
FC Bayern München |
34 |
7 |
14 |
Musiala, Jamal, on 90th+2
min. (91:07) for Müller |
18 123 days |
26 February 2003 |
LAM |
FC Bayern München |
5 |
0 |
result:
England 2 Germany 0 |
unused
substitutes: |
3-Marcel Halstenberg, 9-Kevin Volland, 12-Bernd
Leno, 15-Niklas Süle, 17-Florian Neuhaus, 21-İlkay Gündoğan,
22-Kevin Trapp, 24-Robin Koch. |
records: |
Thomas Müller has now appeared in a record-equalling 26 consecutive
Major Tournament matches (equal with Mesut Özil). Harry Kane's goal was the 200th goal Germany have conceded under
Joachim Löw. Toni Kroos announced his retirement from
international football on 2 July. |
|
3-4-3(2-1) |
Neuer - Ginter
(Can), Hummels, Rüdiger -
Kimmels, Kroos, Goretzka,
Gosens (Sané) - Havertz, Werner
(Gnabry), Müller (Musiala) |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
28 years 200
days |
Appearances/Goals |
58.7 |
8.6 |
|
What a night, what
a game and what a performance! England 2 Germany 0, how good that scoreline sounds. This was always going to be a special match in the
England team’s long and rich history, and with Wembley half full, the
expectation was felt in the stadium and all around the country. Was it going to all fall flat, like it had so many
times before? Not tonight Josephine!!
At the
start, the England players showed a bit of nervousness, and the
experienced and tournament-adept Germans certainly began on the front
foot. In the third minute a cross from the
left was headed out for a corner by Kyle Walker. Then, a minute later, Leon Goretzka hit a firm shot at goal, but straight
at Jordan Pickford. There was a period of probing by both
sides without success, but on eight minutes Goretzka homed in on goal between two chasing
defenders. As he approached the penalty area, he
dramatically went down in a heap as Declan Rice drew level with him. Rice was booked, harshly as it turned
out, because replays showed that Rice never challenged him, but the German
stuck his foot out towards the West Ham man, and then fell. Only eight minutes gone and dark
tactics already there to be seen. Luckily the free-kick from Kai Havertz was blocked by the wall and was
cleared.
The first 10 minutes had been dominated by Germany,
but, just gradually, England settled, with Bukayo Saka trying to make
ground down the right before being fouled by Antonio Rudiger. England did have a bit more possession in the next five minutes and
it culminated with a surging run and shot by Raheem Sterling which brought
a flying save from Manuel Neuer in goal. That was better from England and Saka made another good break
before being crowded out by the strong German defenders. When the ball was in promising positions for England, the Germans
packed their penalty box, with Harry Kane on his own, and not receiving
the ball at all. For a while
it seemed that Germany always had a spare man to pass to, whereas England
were struggling to put their own passes together. This frustrated their fans at times, as once again the ball went
backwards just a little too often.
Matthias Ginter blatantly pulled
down Luke Shaw on 25 minutes, and deserved his booking. From the free-kick Kieran Trippier won a corner. When that came into the box, Harry Maguire missed the target with
his header. Havertz should
also have been booked, when he blatantly barged Maguire over from behind
shortly afterwards. Just after
the half-hour Joshua Kimmich put over a very dangerous cross, which
thankfully eluded the incoming Robin Gosens and went out harmlessly for a
goal-kick.
The Germans then created another good chance as the
England defence were split open by a through pass to Timo Werner. He looked odds on to score but out came Pickford to dive at his
feet and smother the shot. The
England fans could breathe again.
Goretzka committed several fouls
in this opening half, and he clattered Kane down with yet another fierce
challenge two minutes from half-time, no reaction from the referee. Seconds later Kalvin Phillips was booked for his first foul of
note. With seconds to go
before the break, England had a great chance. Sterling made another of his surges into the danger area, and as he
was challenged the ball broke to Kane. A normal, confident Harry Kane, would have snapped that chance up,
but as he turned to avoid one defender, another came in to desperately
hack the ball away with neither Kane nor Saka able to finish it off. That was close. The
half had been reasonably even, with both sides having chances. Meanwhile, the crowd, and all the millions watching the TV
coverage, had bitten down their finger nails, now it was time for the
toenails!
The first chance of the second-half brought one of the
best moments of the match, especially from an England viewpoint. A cross came into the England box, and the defence failed to clear
properly. The ball dropped to
Havertz, just on the edge of the box, and the Chelsea player fired in a
great shot. Somehow though,
Pickford made the save of the game, leaping high to tip the ball over the
bar, much to the dismay of the Germans. It was a wonderful save.
England defenders in a back three
formation, were doing lots of unheralded play, with John Stones, Walker
and Maguire excelling. As the
clock ticked round to the hour mark, one couldn’t help thinking that the
Germans were frustrating England at every turn. Anden when England gained a promising position, they would turn
and go backwards again, giving the Germans time to reorganise their massed
defensive set-up.
It was therefore no surprise that one of the
biggest cheers of the night, amongst many I might add, came in the 68th
minute when Jack Grealish appeared on the line ready for action. Saka, who had played well, was replaced by the talismatic Aston
Villa player, and there is no doubt it visibly gave everyone a lift. The noise increased, (were they sure there were only 43,000
inside?), and within seven minutes of coming on, Grealish had a hand in a
goal for England.
Sterling began the move with another of his
surging runs at the defenders, the ball went to Kane, on to Grealish, who
then fed the overlapping Shaw.
The ball from Shaw into the six-yard area was perfect and there was
Sterling, following up, to poke it over the line! Cue pandemonium!!
Maguire was harshly booked by the referee,
and then came the game’s turning point on 81 minutes. Sterling was again at the heart of the moment, but this time for
the wrong reasons. With the
England defenders caught out, his backpass went straight to Havertz, who
then laid the perfect through ball for Thomas Muller to run on to, with
not an England player in sight. The crowd held its breath, Muller must score, surely? His record for goalscoring is fantastic, this was the German
moment, surely? It was like
watching a slow-motion replay, Muller pulled back his foot, Pickford came
out, and Muller beat him easily, but then watched in horror as his shot
went inches wide of the left-hand post. No-one could quite believe it, and the roar that went up was a
mixture of relief, disbelief, dismay and agony!
At that moment the
fans around the country had the belief that maybe, just maybe, this could
be England’s day. Four minutes
later that notion was confirmed. Great play by Shaw pushes England forward, he laid the ball to his
left to Grealish, who looked up to see an England man in the middle. The cross came in and the ball was headed past Neuer by the man we
all knew would finally come good, HARRY KANE!!! Get in!
Jordan Henderson came on for the final five minutes,
replacing Rice, who had worked his socks off in a thrilling display. Still the Germans pushed forward as the England fans had no
toenails left, it was still in doubt, for many of us until that referee
blew his final whistle to end an amazing afternoon’s football.
I will end this report with a quote from a beautiful
little girl, dressed in her England colours waving her St George’s flag,
who would have only been about eight or nine years old, being interviewed
by the ITN news. "What did you
think of that?" said the reporter,
she replied, "That’s the best game I’ve seen in years!"
Bless her.
|