From Weston to Euro 2024 final â Watkinsâ âunbelievableâ moment
Watkins score late winner for England
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Published
âIâve been waiting for that moment for weeks,â said Ollie Watkins afterwards â and boy did he take it.
With the clock about to hit 90:00 in Englandâs Euro 2024 semi-final against the Netherlands, with the score at 1-1 in Dortmund, the ball fell to the striker from Devon, who was still playing in the English Football League just over four years ago at the age of 24.
The Aston Villa man turned Stefan de Vrij and hammered a shot into the bottom corner for one of the most important England goals ever scored.
Rewind nine years and he had just finished a loan spell at non-league Weston-super-Mare from League Two Exeter City.
Asked after his Dortmund heroics whether he could have imagined this at the time, he said: âYou can dream but I am a realist. I was just focused on getting back into the first team at Exeter.
âI didnât dream about that to be honest. I canât lie and say I did. Scoring for England is amazing but I didnât think Iâd do it in a tournament like that.â
Watkinsâ winning goal more than justified Gareth Southgateâs decision to choose him to replace Englandâs all-time top scorer Harry Kane, with nine minutes to go. He came on alongside Cole Palmer, who set up his goal.
âI was wondering when the changes were going to happen. The changes were right and they were perfect,â said former England captain Alan Shearer on BBC Radio 5 Live.
Former Brentford striker Watkins had only played 20 minutes at a major tournament before this, in the group stage against Denmark, having been left out of the Euro 2020 and 2022 World Cup squads.
âWhen I was on the bench I said to [sub keeper] Dean Henderson, âI can make a difference today and need to get onâ. I took my chance, scored it and now we are in the final. One last game,â he said.
That game is against Spain in Sundayâs Euro 2024 final â as England bid to be European champions for the first time in menâs football.
Watkinsâ rise to the top
âThe best feeling ever!â â Watkins on scoring England winner
Unlike many England players, Watkins started his career lower in the football pyramid â at Exeter City.
âHe had the perfect attitude, the perfect character and physical ability. He had all the boxes ticked yet, at 17, 18, 19 years old he never played as well as he should have done,â said Paul Tisdale, Watkinsâ first manager at Exeter.
At the age of 18, mostly playing on the wing, Watkins had made four first-team appearances for City before being sent on loan to Weston-super-Mare in the Conference South, the sixth tier.
He scored 10 goals in 18 starts there â and broke into the Exeter team, as a striker.
âSuddenly the engine turned on. Iâve never seen a player have a quantum shift in their output as much as Ollie did,â said Tisdale.
He left for Championship Brentford in 2017 for ÂŁ1.8m having scored 26 goals in 78 appearances for Exeter.
Another 49 goals followed in 143 games for the Bees before he became the most expensive Championship player ever when he joined Aston Villa for ÂŁ28m three years later.
In this squad, only Ivan Toney â his rival for the spot to replace Kane late in games â has played more EFL games.
England playersâ EFL appearances
League games only (including play-offs)
Watkins has kicked on at Villa with 70 goals in 169 games, hitting 19 Premier League goals last season to take his club into the Champions League.
Dean Smith, who managed him at Brentford and Villa, said: âI look at him now â he has become more of a selfish player, which is a good thing.
âHis biggest strength could be his biggest weakness. He could beat himself up over things but it would also drive him.
âHis emotional control now allows him to accept âI will miss chances but Iâll be ready for the next oneâ.â
Just last month Watkins said: âEven when I first went to Villa, Iâd just been bought for ÂŁ30m and I was still unsure whether I deserved to be there.
âI hadnât done it in the Premier League, so I would say there was a bit of that before. But now Iâm in a really good place.
âI had a really good year, got the most assists in the league, scored a lot of goals and people still werenât including me in their squads to come to the Euros.
âEveryone has their own opinion, but I donât feel like I have that big profile where Iâm talked about. Or where if I was left out of the squad, people would be like: âOh, I canât believe they didnât pick Ollie Watkins.â
âIâm happy Iâm here now.â
And so is Gareth Southgate.
âOllie has trained every day and been ready to play, as the whole group has been,â he said.
âThereâs a lot of new players in the group. Half have not been to a tournament but they have bonded so well, got each otherâs back and tonight was a good example of that.â
âYou can make a difference, you can win us a tournamentâ
Watkinsâ goal â timed at 89:59 â was the latest winning goal scored in a European Championship or World Cup semi-final, excluding extra time.
It came with one of only 10 touches Watkins has had in the tournament.
âWe talk about being ready,â said Kane. âWeâre a big team at being ready.
âWhen it matters, you might get five minutes, one minute, but you can make a difference, you can win us a tournament. Heâs been waiting, heâs been patient.
âWhat he did was outstanding and he deserves it.â
Ex-England striker Ian Wright was impressed watching the game for ITV.
âThis is what Ollie Watkins does. This is the exact attitude I would want to have,â he said.
âYou want Cole Palmer to come on and hit a pass that is perfect. In the moment, get back to the basics. It was absolutely perfect. Nobody did that to those defenders all night. They had an easy ride until he came on.
âUnbelievable moment. Thatâs what you have come on to do â just take a shot. Whatâs the worst that can happen? Ollie Watkins has done brilliantly.
âHeâs waited for his opportunity and heâs done it. Now weâre into the final. Itâs just amazing.â