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FINAL MEETING vs. GERMANY
  Monday, 26 September 2022
UEFA Nations League 2022 League A Group three match


England 3 Germany 3 [0-0]
 
 
The National Stadium connected by EE, Wembley, Brent, Greater London
Kick-off (BST): 7.48pm
Attendance: 78,949
Harry Kane won the toss
98½ minutes 47:31 & 51:05
Joshua Kimmich kicked off
a minute's silence was observed, black armbands worn, and wreaths laid, for HM Queen Elizabeth II.
   







[1-2] Luke Shaw 71
70:59
Reece James: FORTUNATE

 James' cross from near edge of penalty area is chested then left-footed low into the ground from far edge of 6-yd box
 
first goal in open play for 521 official minutes
[2-2] Mason Mount 75
74:05
Bukayo Saka: CREATIVE

 Saka ran towards the area then a short pass to Mount to strike right footed from 17yds rashing into near top corner
[3-2] Harry Kane penalty 83
82:57
Jude Bellingham: FOUL

 powerful right-footed kick to the top left corner
(Schlotterbeck fouled Bellingham 79:21)
VAR awarded 81:37
75th major tournament goal conceded at home>
[0-1]İlkay Gündoğan penalty 52 51:54
placed his right-footed kick into the bottom right hand corner
(Maguire fouled Musiala 49:26)
VAR awarded 50:38
[0-2] Kai Havertz 67 66:15
Tino Werner moves forward unopposed, and lays off to Havertz to shoot left-footed from 22yds into the far top corner





<350th major tournament goal at home







[3-3] Kai Havertz 87 86:34
Sergio Gnabry's shot from 20yds is only parried by Pope. Havertz reacts the quickest and sidefoots the ball past the keeper.
   
  Nico Schlotterbeck 82 81:55
Thilo Kehrer 83
 
  Commentator: Steve Bower with Graeme Le Saux
 
"HERROES & VILLAINS" Mirror Sport
Officials from Netherlands England Squad Type Germany Squad
Referee (black)
Danny Desmond Makkelie
39 (28 January 1983), Willemstad, Curaçao
, FIFA-listed 2011
13 Goal Attempts 10
8 Attempts on Target 4
Assistant Referees 0 Hit Bar/Post 0
Hessel Steegstra
44 (27 March 1978)
Jan de Vries
40 (14 July 1982)
6 Corner Kicks Won 2
Fourth official
Sander Van Der Eijk
31 (2 May 1991)
 
UEFA Delegate: Eduard Dervishaj, Spain
2 Offside Calls Against 1
12 Fouls Conceded 7
Video Assistant Officials                40.5% Possession 59.5%
Paulus Hendrikus van Boekel 47 (19 September 1975), Venray
Jeroen Manschot 39
 
 
England Team
 
Rank FIFA (25th August 2022) 5th
EFO ranking Group One (4th)
ELO rating 12th
Colours The Nike 2022 away uniform - Challenge red jerseys with navy blue winged collars(with turquoise trim)/cuffs, challenge red shorts, challenge red socks with navy blue tops.
Captain Harry Kane Manager Gareth Southgate, 52 (3 September 1970), appointed caretaker manager on 27 September 2016, appointed as permanent manager on 30 November 2016.
⁴³ most goals as captain
fiftieth of 74, W 29 - D 11 - L 10 - F 111 - A 43. P 76th of 102, W 46 - D 17 - L 13 - F 161 - A 53
England Lineup
    two changes to the previous match (Walker & Saka out, Stones & Shaw in) league position (15th September)  
1 Pope, Nicholas D. 30
170 days
19 April 1992 G Newcastle United FC (PL 11th) 10 5ᵍᵃ
the 34th goalkeeper to face a penalty-kick final app 2017-22
4 Stones, John, injured off 37th min. (36.25) 28
121 days
28 May 1994 RD Manchester City FC (PL 2nd) 59 3
5 Dier, Eric J.E. 28
254 days
15 January 1994 CD Tottenham Hotspur FC (PL 3rd) 47 3
6 Maguire, J. Harry 29
205 days
5 March 1993 LD Manchester United FC (PL 5th) 48 7
2
James, Reece T. 22
292 days
8 December 1999 RWB Chelsea FC (PL 6th) 15 0
7 Rice, Declan 23
255 days
14 January 1999 LDM West Ham United FC (PL 18th) 34 2
8
Bellingham, Jude V.W., off 90th +1 min. 19
89 days
29 June 2003 RDM Bsv Borussia 09 Dortmund, Germany 17 0
3
Shaw, Luke P.H. 27
76 days
12 July 1995 LWB Manchester United FC (PL 5th) 23 3
9 Kane, Harry E. 29
60 days
28 July 1993
 
CF
 
Tottenham Hotspur FC (PL 3rd) 75 51
¹⁶
the 102nd penalty-kick scored (139) the 25th player to reach the 75-app milestone
10 Sterling, Raheem S., off 66th min. 27
292 days
8 December 1994
in Kingston, Jamaica
LF Chelsea FC (PL 6th) 79 19
11 Foden, Philip W., off 66th min. 22
121 days
28 May 2000 RF Manchester City FC (PL 2nd) 18 2
England Substitutes
15
 
Walker, Kyle A., on 37th min. (36:53) for Stones 32
121 days
28 May 1990
 
RD
 
Manchester City FC (PL 2nd) 70 63 0
7
the 29th player to reach the 70-app milestone
scoreline: England 0 Germany 1
18
Saka, Bukayo A.T., on 66th min. (65:01) for Foden 21
21 days
5 September 2001
 
RF
 
Arsenal FC (PL TOP) 20 13 3
7
193rd player to reach the 20-app milestone
17 Mount, Mason T., on 66th min. (65:05) for Sterling 23
259 days
10 January 1999
 
LF
 
Chelsea FC (PL 6th)
 
32
22 5
10
 
101st goal by a substitute
scoreline: England 3 Germany 3
14
 
Henderson, Jordan B., on 90th+1 min. (90:30) for Bellingham 32
101 days
17 June 1990
 
DM
 
Liverpool FC (PL 7th) 70 46 2
24
the thirtieth player to reach the 70-app milestone
result: England 3 Germany 3
unused substitutes: 12-Kieran Trippier, 13-Aaron Ramsdale, 16-Conor Coady, 17-James Ward-Prowse, 20-Ivan Toney, 21-Ben Chilwell, 22-Dean Henderson, 23-Tammy Abraham.
team notes: John Stones appeared to have pulled his hamstring when running across the halfway line (34:28) after a superb interception and began another attacking play. He went down (34:39) and began to receive treatment (34:53), before eventually walking off the pitch (36:25).
This is England's highest scoring Nations League match, in this, their eighteenth.
Tottenham Hotspur have now provided the team captain for 96 matches, one more than Wolverhampton Wanderers, but still two less than Liverpool and 42 less than Manchester United.
Nick Pope becomes the 22nd goalkeeper to have achieved ten England appearances. He is alos the oldest goalkeeper to face a penalty kick since David James (37) in March 2008.
Mason Mount and Bukayo Saka had been waiting on the touchline as replacements since 62:20.
Luke Shaw's goal ended a run of 521 official minutes (554 actual) since England scored from open-play.
stadium notes: Germany have now played at the new National Stadium five times, one more than any other nation.
records: Not since June-November 1958 have England not won six consecutive competitive matches, equalling a record already set in 1925-27.
Not since 1993 (also set in 1958, 1977 and 1981) have England not won in six matches. The unwanted record is seven (1958).
The previous five meetings between these two nations have all been scoreless at halftime.
Harry Kane becomes England's record goalscorer against Germany with four goals. He has now scored against the Germans in their last three meetings, and the last four that England have scored a goal.
In the 71st minute, Luke Shaw scored the 254th England goal by a Manchester United player. Twelve minutes later, Harry Kane scored the 254th England goal by a Tottenham Hotspur player.
Kai Havertz's second goal is the twentieth goal England have conceded at a home venue in the month of September.
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 Pope -
Stones
(Walker), Dier, Maguire -
James, Rice, Bellingham
(Henderson), Shaw -
Foden
(Mount), Kane, Sterling (Saka)
Averages (Starting XI): Age 26 years 104 days Appearances/Goals 38.6 7.9
 
Germany Team
 
Rank: FIFA (25th August 2022) 11th
EFO ranking Group 5
ELO rating
9th
Colours Made by Adidas - White crew-necked jerseys with black centre stripe/cuffs/adidas shoulder stripes/underarm panel, black collar with gold trim, black shorts with white adidas sidestripes, white socks with black  adidas trim/calf hoop.
Captain Joseph Kimmich Manager Hans-Dieter Flick
57 (24 February 1965), appointed 25 May 2021, effective 1 August.
15th match, W 9 - D 5 - L 1 - F 45 - A 12.
Germany Lineup
22 ter Stegen, Marc-André 30
149 days
30 April 1992 GK FC Barcelona, Spain 30 0
5 Kehrer, J. Thilo 26
5 days
21 September 1996 RB West Ham United FC, England
 
22
 
0
 
83rd min. for an unknown reason, but given after England's third goal celebrations
   
15 Süle, Niklas 27
23 days
3 September 1995 RCD Bsv Borussia 09 Dortmund 42 1
23 Schlotterbeck, Nico 22
299 days
1 December 1999 LCD Bsv Borussia 09 Dortmund
 
5
 
0
 
82nd min. for a late tackle on Jude Bellingham on the edge of the area PENALTY
   
3 Raum, David, off 69th min. 24
157 days
22 April 1998 LB RB Leipzig 11 0
6 Kimmich, Joshua W. 27
230 days
8 February 1995 RDM FC Bayern München 70 5
21 Gündoğan, İlkay 31
337 days
24 October 1990 LDM Manchester City FC, England 62 16
62nd penalty against scored (91st overall)
18 Hofmann, Jonas, off half-time. 30
74 days
14 July 1992 RM Borussia VfL 1900 Mönchengladbach 16 4
14 Musiala, Jamal, off 79th min. 19
212 days
26 February 2003 AM FC Bayern München 17 1
19 Sané, Leroy A., off 69th min. 26
258 days
11 January 1996 LM FC Bayern München 47 11
7
Havertz, Kai L., off 90th+1 min. 23
107 days
11 June 1999 CF/AM Chelsea FC, England 30 10
Germany Substitutes
9
Werner, Timo, on half-time for Hofmann 26
204 days
6 March 1996 CF RB Leipzig 55 24
scoreline: England 0 Germany 2
10
Gnabry, Sergio D., on 69th min. (67:40) for Sané 27
74 days
14 July 1995 LM FC Bayern München 36 20
20 Gosens, Robin E., on 68th min. (67:44) for Raum 28
83 days
5 July 1994 LB FC Internazionale Milano, Italy 14 2
scoreline: England 2 Germany 2
13 Müller, Thomas, on 79th min. (78:12) for Musiala 33
13 days
13 September 1989 CM FC Bayern München 118 44
scoreline: England 3 Germany 3
17 Bella-Kotchap, Armel, on 90th+1 min. (90:01) for Havertz 20
289 days
11 December 2001
in Paris, France
CD Southampton FC, England 1 0
result: England 3 Germany 3
unused substitutes: 1-Oliver Baumann, 4-Matthias Ginter, 8-Max Arnold, 12-Kevin Trapp, 16-Benjamin Henrichs.
team notes: Germany, as a unified nation, had never taken a penalty-kick against England, until now. Gündoğan becoming the 86th different player to do so.
Gündoğan is the oldest player since Zinedine Zidane in Euro 2004 to score a penalty against England.
 
4-2-3-1 ter Stegen -
Kehrer, Süle, Schlotterbeck, Raum
(Gosens) -
Kimmich, Gündoğan -
Hofmann
(Werner), Musiala (Müller), Sané (Gnabry) -
Havertz
(Bella-Kotchap)
Averages (Starting XI): Age 26 years 137 days Appearances/Goals 32 4.1
 
    Match Report by Mike Payne

The Wembley pitch looked stunning as the two teams and the crowd showed their faultless tribute to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, it really was a memorable picture celebrating the life of a truly remarkable Monarch.

The match turned out to be a bit special too, although at half-time, all the doubts of recent games were still raising their ugly heads. It all started in a similar way to the Italy game, with Germany hustling England out of their stride, shutting them down at every opportunity. It was clear that Gareth Southgate had again opted for a defensive line-up, but also looking to break quickly when they had the chance. Germany had possession for much of the early stages, without creating too many problems for the England defence. Only England mistakes would gift the visitors their chances and once, when Nick Pope slipped, the goalkeeper was relieved to see a German shoot over the bar. That was followed by another dangerous error as John Stones almost sold Pope short with a backpass, but the keeper hacked that one away as a German forward pressed. At the other end Raheem Sterling was twice close to breaking through, but alas, both Harry Maguire and Harry Kane's passes failed to reach the Chelsea man.

Jude Bellingham and Declan Rice were working tirelessly to stem the possession of the Germans, and worryingly, the England defence was often at sixes and sevens, as the team tried to settle down to the job in hand. This they gradually did and on 25 minutes England should have been ahead. A fabulous pass from Luke Shaw gave Sterling a clear run at goal. When he shot goalkeeper, Marc-Andre der Stegan , saved well, when really he should have had no chance. A real let-off for the Germans and one wondered if England would regret that miss?

Two minutes later Kane tried a volley that whizzed past the far post with the keeper nowhere, and then after a spell of more German possession, Sterling had another fine chance which he again squandered. At times there were 9 England players defending, but they were still making chances at the other end, but just couldn't add the killer touch. Rice then broke from deep, but again the final pass has limited options and went astray. Meanwhile, Germany, with Ilkay Gundogan pulling the strings, were probing from side to side, trying to stretch England, who, it must be said, held them at bay well.

There was a blow for Stones in the 36th minute as he pulled up clutching his hamstring. Kyle Walker went on to replace him Two minutes later Sterling and Shaw combine to win a corner, but like many others in recent games, that was wasted. Do England actually practice taking corners? I do have my doubts. Just before the break Sterling had another fine chance, but shot straight at the keeper. The Chelsea striker could have had a first half hat-trick on another day. Right on half-time Joshua Kimmich fired in a powerful shot which whistled past Pope's right hand post, but apart from that England had kept Germany out quite well.

Wearing another hat, I am a Preston North End fan, and no goals for, and only the odd goal against, has been a feature of our season to date. All is well until a lapse of concentration, or a mistake, changes the picture. Deja vu perhaps?

Timo Werner came on for the Germans after the break but England are first to show. Once again Sterling shoots on target, but the shot is weak and the goalkeeper is down smartly to his left to save. That's four Sterling could have had. And just a minute later, that mistake, that was always going to happen, did. Maguire was the culprit, twice, sad to say, because up until then he had done well. First off, he tried a pass that was easily intercepted by Jamal Musiala. Musiala ran at Maguire and in the defender's attempt to stop him, he tripped him in the area. At first it seemed he had got away with it, but the VAR check confirmed what everyone in the stadium knew, it was a definite penalty. Gundogan despatched the spot-kick with the minimum of fuss, and those Sterling misses, suddenly took on a different meaning.

On 56 minutes, Reece James set up Bellingham for a shot, but the ball flew way over the bar. Straight away a clever flick by Phil Foden to James, and Bellingham was again presented with a shot at goal, again off target. In the next few minutes Werner missed two chances and another shot flew wide as Germany tried to press home their advantage. Eric Dier made a rare mistake that almost led to another goal, before another England corner was wasted, with Dier heading over. Southgate responded by sending on Bukayo Saka and Mason Mount for Foden and Sterling, but before either had time to settle, Germany added a second goal. The unfortunate Maguire was again at centre stage, losing possession in the German half, and then watching in horror as Werner set up Kai Havertz to cut inside and curl a terrific shot in off the far post, giving Pope no chance. Havertz had so much time and space to pick his spot. And that seemed to be that...or did it?

England started to hit back with first Bellingham shooting straight at the keeper, and then James crossed from the right on 72 minutes, across that eluded everyone and found Shaw coming in from the left. His shot squirmed in off the keeper and over the line, despite a last ditch clearance. Confirmation came after another VAR check. Could this be a lifeline at last? Sure enough it certainly could, as just three minutes later the two substitutes combined for an equaliser. Rice, to James and on to Saka, who burst through the German defence, and his pass to Mount was met with a first time shot which no goalkeeper would have saved. It was not to end there, though. Bellingham went down just inside the area as the attack continued with Kane going oh so close to scoring. Bellingham was hurt, but felt much better after yet another VAR check found that he had had his leg taken from under him, penalty! Up stepped the skipper, to allay all fears of any nerves with a superb spot-kick taken with aplomb!

Just as the fans and players were about to hail an amazing victory, and the fat lady was about to sing, there was one more twist, and mistake, in the story. Sergio Gnabry was not closed down at all and was able to fire in a shot at Pope. An easy save for a goalkeeper of his class? Sadly not, as he allowed the ball to bounce away from him, and Havertz was in like a whippet to shoot home the rebound. AARGH!!! Why do we love football so much? Even then, Saka had yet another chance to win it for England, but the keeper saved again. Still, plenty to write about and a 3-3 was a lot better than a 0-0 or 0-1, but oh, how we rued all those Sterling misses from earlier. So, a spirited performance to send us on our way to the World Cup, where who knows what might happen next?
  

Source Notes

TheFA.com
BBC Sport
DFB
  UEFA.com
Mike Payne - football historian and contributor
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