|
Rank |
FIFA (12th August 2021)
27th
EFO ranking
Group Seven
ELO rating
29th |
Colours |
Made by Nike - White
collared jerseys with red/white collars/cuffs, red shorts
with white sidetrim, white socks with red hoop. |
Captain |
Robert Lewandowski |
Manager |
Paulo Manuel Carvalho de Sousa, 51 (30
August 1970 in Viseu, Portugal), appointed 21 January 2021.
|
eleventh match, W 3 - D 5 - L 3 - F 26 - A
17 |
Poland Lineup |
1 |
Szczęsny, Wojciech
T. |
31 143 days |
18 April 1990 |
G |
Juventus FC, Italy |
59 |
0 |
3 |
Dawidowicz, Paweł M. |
26 172 days |
20 March 1995 |
RB |
Hellas Verona FC, Italy |
6 |
0 |
15 |
Glik, Kamil J., off 80th min. |
33 217 days |
3 February 1988 |
CD |
Benevento Calcio, Italy |
88 |
6 |
|
after ht whistle following a melee as the teams were walking off the pitch |
5 |
Bednarek, Jan K. |
25 149 days |
12 April 1996 |
LB |
Southampton FC, England |
35 |
1 |
10 |
Krychowiak, Grzegorz, off 68th min. |
31 222 days |
29 January 1990 |
DM |
FC Krasnodar, Russia |
84 |
5 |
|
60th min. for a lunge and an elbow barging into Jack Grealish again |
7 |
Jóźwiak, Kamil J., off 80th min. |
23 139 days |
22 April 1998 |
RM |
Derby County FC, England |
19 |
2 |
8 |
Linetty, Karol |
26 218 days |
2 February 1995 |
RCM |
Torino FC, Italy |
37 |
5 |
|
79th min. for hacking at Harry Kane near the touchline |
16 |
Moder, Jakub P. |
22 154 days |
7 April 1999 |
LCM |
Brighton & Hove Albion FC, England |
15 |
2 |
23 |
Puchacz, Tymoteusz, off 80th min. |
22 228 days |
23 January 1999 |
LM |
1.FC Union Berlin, Germany |
7 |
0 |
|
77th min. for sliding tackle from behind bringing down Raheem Sterling |
14 |
Buksa, Adam, off 63rd min. |
25 58 days |
12 July 1996 |
RF |
New England Revolution, United States |
3 |
4 |
9 |
Lewandowski, Robert |
33 18 days |
21 August 1988 |
LF |
FC Bayern München, Germany |
125 |
72 |
mst apps |
mst gls |
Poland
Substitutes |
11 |
Świderski, Karol, on 63rd min.
(62:31) for Buksa |
24
228 days |
23 January 1997 |
RF |
Panthessaloníkios Athlitikós Ómilos Konstantinopolitón FC, Greece |
10 |
3 |
17
|
Szymański, Damian, on 68th min.
(67:30) for Krychowiak |
26
84 days |
16 June 1995 |
CD |
Athlitikí Énosis Konstadinoupóleos, Greece |
6 |
1 |
|
90th+3rd min. for removing his shirt when celebrating his goal |
|
|
scoreline:
Poland 0 England 1 |
6 |
Helik, Michał S., on 80th min.
(79:26) for Glik |
25
364 days |
9 September 1995 |
CD |
Barnsley FC, England |
5 |
0 |
21 |
Frankowski, Przemysław, on 80th min.
(79:27) for Jóźwiak |
26
149 days |
12 April 1995 |
RM |
Le Racing Club de Lens, France |
18 |
1 |
13 |
Rybus, Maciej, on 80th min.
(79:36) for Puchacz |
32
21 days |
18 August 1989 |
RB |
FC Lokomotiv Moskva, Russia |
65 |
2 |
result:
Poland 1 England 1 |
unused
substitutes: |
2-Kamil Piątowski, 4-Tomasz Kędziora, 12-Łukasz Skorupski, 18-Nicola Zalewski,
19-Jakub Kamiński, 20-Bartosz Slisz, 22-Bartłomiej Drągowski. |
records: |
Poland have not been beaten at home in WC or EC qualification since
March 2013. |
Manager Paulo Sousa played for Portugal in friendly matches against England
in December 1995 and
April 1998. |
|
4(1-3)-4-2 |
Szczęsny - Dawidowicz, Glik
(Helik), Bednarek - Krychowiak (Szymański) - Jóźwiak
(Frankowski),
Linetty, Moder, Puchacz
(Rybus) - Buksa
(Świderski), Lewandowski |
Averages (Starting XI): |
Age |
27 years
158 days |
Appearances/Goals |
43.5 |
8.8 |
|
Right
from the start of this latest World Cup Qualifier in Warsaw, it was
obvious that Poland were going to try and muscle England out of their
normal dominant stride. Some
of the tackling was ferocious, but England gave as good as they got,
although it seemed to me that they were penalised far more often than the
Poles were. Indeed, Kalvin
Phillips was booked in the first ten minutes when he inadvertently stood
on Tymoteous Puchacz's toe.
You would have thought the Pole had been shot from his reaction, but that
is modern football for you, especially in these vital matches.
The hostile atmosphere on the pitch and in the
stadium, not helped by the booing by some, of our National Anthem, and even louder booing of the "Taking the Knee", meant that it took a little
while for England to settle.
In the first ten minutes England were physically battered, but the referee
was a little more lenient towards the home side.
A nasty foul by Kamil Jozwiak on Jack Grealish was far worse than
the Phillips misdemeanour.
It was all very stop start throughout the first 30
minutes, although Harry Kane was to the fore in one attack as in the 21st
minute a great ball in was met by Kane's head, although he couldn't direct
it at goal, and a defender easily cleared.
There were a lot of niggly fouls going on with no-one daring to
make the first mistake. Poland
were making it hard for England by pressing them well, and slight
defensive hesitancy just before the half-hour mark, allowed dangerman
Robert Lewandowski to get a toe in, and he almost succeeded in lobbing
over Jordan Pickford, but the goalkeeper managed to save the shot.
There was so much pushing and shoving so far, and to be honest the
referee looked a little out of his depth as the fouls persisted against
the England players, mostly unpunished.
Raheem Sterling, Kane and Grealish, particularly, took some fearful
stick, and when John Stones went down injured it gave both teams the
chance to have a blow from the fierce pace of the game.
England won a rare free-kick in the 39th
minute, and that produced a corner, which was cleared.
As the half came to a close though, England were pushing forward
better, and attacking the Poland side with more determination.
The half ended goalless but as the players left the field all hell
broke loose as the tempers, already frayed, boiled over at something said
or done. Harry Maguire was
particularly incensed by something, and both he and Kamil Glik were booked
at the end of the fracas. At
the end of the half, I wrote in my notes, "I'll be surprised if this match
ends with 11-a-side on the pitch!"
England made a good start to the second-half as a
fine move down the left in the 47th minute, ended with Grealish
shooting across goal and just missing the far post.
Grealish was adamant that the ball had been deflected for a corner
but the referee, again, was not interested.
Sterling also made a good break, down the right, but not for the
first time he was crowded out.
But the signs were more positive from England, and after another run by
Sterling fizzled out, a marauding run by Maguire set up Phillips, who
fired in a shot from range.
Goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny saved comfortably.
The midfield of England, Declan Rice, Mason Mount and
Phillips, were certainly getting through a lot of good work, and these
three do so much that goes unnoticed.
On 58 minutes a fine move down the left involving Luke Shaw, Mount
and Grealish ended with Glik blocking the ball for a corner.
That was cleared but as England came again, Grzegorz Krychowiak was
booked for yet another foul on Grealish.
It was about time!
Three minutes later a Shaw free-kick was met by Maguire's head, and the
ball rebounded off the foot of the far post, before being hacked away.
A Linesman's flag went up though, so it probably wouldn't have
counted. England were
definitely stretching the Poles more this half, as the foul count grew,
and it just needed an end product.
The Poles started to make a series of substitutions as there were
visible signs they were rattled.
Yet another blatant shirt pull on Grealish went unpunished, but
when Puchacz went down screaming at the linesman after a shoulder barge
from Kyle Walker, the ref gave a free-kick!
So frustrating to watch.
It is all very well referees now deciding to let more contact go,
surely they should still retain an element of protection when a foul is
committed?
After 71 minutes, Lewandowski, fired in a shot at
goal, which Pickford saved comfortably, and from his clearance, England
took a deserved lead, and what a good goal it was.
The move was developed in midfield and eventually the ball found
Kane, thirty yards from goal.
He looked up and hit a screamer that bent in the air and beat the
goalkeeper all ends up. What
would we do without 'our Arry'?
Grealish was then wrestled to the ground by
Pawel Dawidowicz, how
many times Grealish was fouled would be worth seeing!
These roughhouse tactics continued but England were handling it
well, and you couldn't help thinking that if they could just get one more
goal then it would be all over.
You tended to give up on the German referee after Karol Linetty
scythed down Kane without punishment again.
Then, suddenly, a lapse of concentration from Pickford, so nearly
cost a goal, and had every England fan almost having a seizure!
His clearance was charged down, and as the ball crept slowly
towards the goal, one's heart was in one's mouth.
Thankfully, Pickford raced back and managed to gather the ball off
the line. Phew!
Poland were trying their hardest to get back into the match, but England's
defence, excellent all through, were holding on.
One brilliant piece of control by Lewandowski, ended with a shot
curled just wide, and just as you thought England had weathered the storm,
and we were into four minutes added on, the hosts found an equaliser.
A
great turn by a Polish forward saw him completely deceive Walker and cross
to the middle. Mount should
have cleared further, but the ball came back and a shot was blocked by
Phillips before the ball then found Lewandowski on the left of goal.
As the class act he is, he produced the most exquisite of crosses
to the far post where substitute Damian Szymanski rose above Shaw to power
a header home. It was a fine
goal, but cruel on England, who had battled so hard.
It
was a surprise that Gareth Southgate did not use any substitutions, but as
he said afterwards, England seemed in complete command until that last
couple of minutes.
And none of
the players should be downhearted as we
didn't lose, and this result hurts Poland far more than it does England.
Southgate's team is still in pole position (if you will pardon the
pun) to qualify at the top of the group.
|