England Progress to Knockout Stages Despite Goalless Draw Against Slovenia.
England secured their place in the knockout stages of the tournament with a 0-0 draw against Slovenia in Cologne. Despite already being assured of a spot in the last 16, the Three Lions faced boos from the crowd and are likely to encounter further criticism for their lacklustre performance, having previously edged past Serbia and drawn with Denmark.
England will have to wait until Wednesday’s final group games to discover which of the four best third-placed teams they will face in the last 16. This raises further questions about the favourites’ capability to end their 58-year wait for major tournament glory, as their star-studded forward line struggled against a resolute Slovenian defence.
Gareth Southgate made a notable decision with his team selection, choosing to make only one change from the opening two games. Conor Gallagher replaced Trent Alexander-Arnold, with Southgate showing faith in the other 10 players who started all three matches in Germany. However, this decision did not yield the desired reaction, leaving the England boss disappointed.
Slovenia, now nine games unbeaten, including a 2-0 victory over Portugal in a pre-tournament friendly, posed a significant challenge. Declan Rice had identified Benjamin Sesko as Slovenia’s main threat. Sesko, who could have been an Arsenal player next season, shrugged off a thigh injury to start and had the first chance of the game, heading straight at Jordan Pickford four minutes in.
England took 20 minutes to create a serious threat, with an offside flag denying them a slick opening goal. Rice’s pass found Phil Foden, but the Manchester City midfielder was offside before squaring for Bukayo Saka to tap in. England’s lack of attacking threat on the left, highlighted as a major weakness in previous games, persisted. Newcastle right-back Kieran Trippier deputised on the left side of defence due to Luke Shaw’s lack of match fitness, with Foden often drifting inside.
Despite these challenges, Southgate’s men appeared most threatening down the left, with a teasing Trippier cross narrowly missing Gallagher and Harry Kane at the back post. Southgate took action at halftime, replacing Gallagher with Kobbie Mainoo in an attempt to invigorate the team. Alas nothing significant came up with the changes and the game ended in a goalless draw.
As England await their next opponent, they must address their underwhelming performances to bolster their chances of success in the knockout stages.