England show class and character in clinical rout of Panama
THERE is something about this England side that sets it apart from its World Cup sides of the last few decades. It showed on Sunday when England ran riot against Panama, teaching the World Cup debutants a harsh lesson in a 6-1 — a scoreline that includes captain Harry Kane’s hat-trick — humbling for their biggest victory ever at world football’s showpiece tournament.
It would be too early, though, to claim England can go on and actually win the World Cup but this was a statement from them. Put into perspective that one of the dark-horses at this tournament, Belgium, couldn’t breach the Panamanian defence till half-time in their game, this triumph — England were 5-0 up even before the first-half had ended — could make Gareth Southgate’s team cautiously optimistic that they have a good chance of winning their first World Cup title since their sole triumph in 1966.
Plenty of sides have come and gone since including England’s golden generation of the 2000s but none was able to deliver that long-sought title at the global stage. The England side that played during the first decade of the 21st century had some their most gifted players, went into every tournament as favourites yet failed spectacularly, resulting in endless dialogue why the players who were so good at club level wouldn’t fare so well for the national team.
Some of those stars including Rio Ferdinand, Jamie Carragher, Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard revealed in the buildup to the World Cup in Russia the rifts that plagued the England side they played in because of their club loyalties. There was individual energy but no synergy. Then there was also the incessant media hype surrounding the team. The players, their personal lives, were all the talk heading into the World Cup. Every action was under scrutiny.
This time too, Raheem Sterling’s ‘rifle’ tattoo on his right foot made the headlines until the Manchester City star clarified what it really meant. Before the game against Panama, there was the issue that threatened to derail the team — assistant coach Steve Holland accidentally disclosing the England side for the game against the Central Americans. However, this young England side — the youngest lot picked since the 1962 World Cup — showed the character to not let all that was happening off the pitch to hamper them on it.
“We have a totally new squad, a new manager and we’ve started well,” midfielder Jordan Henderson told reporters after the match. “We played a great first half and got all the goals we needed.”
FLYING START
In sweltering heat at the Nizhny Novgorod Stadium, England made a flying start, with John Stones’ two headed goals, two penalties from Kane and a searing strike from Jesse Lingard putting them well clear by the end of the first half. Kane completed a hat-trick with a goal he didn’t know much about, and becoming the tournament’s top goal-scorer so far with five goals, before Panama got a consolation through Felipe Baloy.
“It’s been great so far,” Kane said at the post-match press conference when asked if he wanted to win the tournament’s golden boot. “It’s a long way to go if my goals help the team to win, it’s a perfect situation.”