âBoringâ & âdismalâ â but are England still âreadyâ for Euro 2024?
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Boos rang out at Wembley as Englandâs grand send-off for the European Championship they hope to finally win ended with defeat by the same team who stunned them in 2016 â and the BBC pundits were also unimpressed.
Jon Dagur Thorsteinsson scored the only goal as Iceland came out 1-0 victors against an England team who played most of their likely starters for Germany.
âWe had no width, there was no punch of directness or aggression or physicality in the play,â said former England defender Matt Upson, watching the game for BBC Radio 5 Live. âIt was really quite dismal. It was a bit boring to watch.
âWhat a tough watch that was. Itâs not pleasant going into a major tournament.
âEven if they didnât play that well or had an off-night thatâs fine, but whatâs been delivered there was really flat and disjointed. It didnât have the character at all. So flat from England.â
Former striker Dion Dublin, who played four times for the Three Lions in 1998, was similarly concerned by the lacklustre display.
âNobody really had a good game tonight,â he added. âThereâs not really one player in an England shirt who will say âIâve done my bit, Iâve earned my shirtâ.
âThey just seemed off it tonight. I donât know if they came into this with a little bit of expectation. I didnât see any partnerships working.
âI donât know what it was tonight. Iceland were better, they were more dynamic, they looked fitter. They got into such a good shape and made it hard for England. They deserved the win.â
Iceland, who knocked Roy Hodgsonâs England out at the last-16 stage of the Euros eight years ago, have not qualified for this summerâs tournament.
âWe didnât show enough characterâ
England boss Gareth Southgate admitted the âperformance wasnât good enoughâ but says âwe learned a lotâ.
The Three Lions go to the Euros on the back of a win and a defeat after beating Bosnia-Herzegovina 3-0 in Newcastle on Monday.
âIt was obviously a disjointed and disappointing performance and we didnât show enough character, but I think itâs good for us before an international tournament,â Southgate told Channel 4.
âWeâve got to be better without the ball. I think there were a lot of reasons for that and across the two games we probably havenât had our full side out. Weâve been able to look at people, weâve been able to learn about the balance of the team.
âIâve been involved in a lot of last matches leading into a tournament. Inevitably players have one eye on whatâs coming in terms of early challenges. No excuses on the result but there are a lot of things we can put right quickly.â
England midfielder Declan Rice added: âWhen we have that much of the ball, we have a couple of clear-cut chances and get beat 1-0 at home just before a Euros, itâs not ideal.
âBut there were a lot of positive performances. In the end it becomes a frustration game, youâre chasing your tail a little bit and get caught on the counter-attack.
âInside Iâm hurting and between now and the next game thereâs work to be done.â
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Published3 hours ago
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Published4 hours ago
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âTonight hasnât gone as we hoped â but weâll be readyâ
Southgate is not too worried, though.
England face Serbia in their opening group game next Sunday before matches against Denmark and Slovenia.
âWeâll be ready,â said Southgate, set for his fourth major tournament as England boss. âTonight hasnât gone as we would have hoped.
âI said to the players that not every day will go as you want and tonight was one of those.
âBut also, not everything will be wrong. We had enough chances really to win the game, but we conceded too many chances as well.â
Arsenalâs Rice also took some positives out of the Wembley defeat.
âItâs not ideal we lost but thereâs a lot of learning curves you can build on as a team,â he added.
âMaybe against the teams that sit in itâs about being a bit mentally switched on. I felt at times we were a little stretched, not as compact as we usually are.â
Under Southgate, the Three Lions lost to Italy on penalties in the Euro 2020 final, while they reached the semi-final and quarter-final in the past two World Cups.
Can England still win Euro 2024? âAbsolutelyâ
Despite the performance and result against Iceland, former England striker Wayne Rooney remains convinced the Three Lions can still go all the way at Euro 2024.
When asked on Channel 4 whether they could win the tournament, he replied: âAbsolutely.
âAs I said before, itâs a very exciting squad, theyâve certainly got the players and the firepower. I hope the backline is strong, thatâs my only concern.
âBut I think weâve got more than enough to go and take teams head on, and if we do that weâve got a great chance.â
Ex-England midfielder Joe Cole, also working as a pundit for Channel 4, added: âI know there were a few boos after the game. This team is used to giving us performances and wins.
âBut go away, have a few days with your family and the tournament starts when you get on that plane.
âThereâs a few things to brush up on, but overall weâre ready and weâre going to be OK.â