England vs Slovakia match report: Roy Hodgson's gamble fails to pay off as goalless draw ensures runners-up spot

Slovakia 0 England 0

Mark Ogden
Stade Geoffroy-Guichard
Tuesday 21 June 2016 06:59 EDT
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England were frustrated despite having the better of the game
England were frustrated despite having the better of the game (Getty)

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All roads still lead to Paris for England, but the route to the final on July 10 has now become so much more perilous after Roy Hodgson’s selection gamble backfired and set his team on course for a potential Euro 2016 quarter-final meeting with France after Slovakia refused to buckle in Saint Etienne.

Six changes to his starting line-up was a bold move by the England manager, but it failed to pay off.

England dominated this game, but their failure to win ensures they progress to the knock-out stage as runners-up in Group B.

A clash with the Group F runners-up in Nice now lies ahead next Monday, but win that, and it will most likely be the hosts at the Stade de France in the quarter-finals. And then the Germans in the semi-finals.

The cost of failure here at the Stade Geoffroy Guichard, the scene of England’s 1998 World Cup defeat against Argentina, looks set to be a heavy one.

England went into the game having won their three previous encounters with Slovakia, enjoying a 4-0 victory at Wembley in the most recent meeting in March 2009.

And having made such wholesale changes to his starting line-up – tight hamstrings were the reason for the omissions of Wayne Rooney and Kyle Walker – Hodgson knew that only another victory against the Slovaks would prevent criticism of his selection.

The England manager, keen to freshen his team ahead of the knock-out stages, also knew that the route to the final was much less hazardous for the group winners, so his changes were a gamble, despite the fact that each of the new faces were experienced Premier League stars.

This was not a team of novices in Saint Etienne, so Hodgson was justified in having faith in the likes of Jack Wilshere, Ryan Bertrand and Nathaniel Clyne to perform.

But Hodgson’s decision to shuffle his pack will have sent a message to Slovakia that England were not taking this game as seriously as they perhaps should, considering the ramifications of finishing first, second or third.

England started well, however, with Jamie Vardy flashing a left foot volley from Clyne’s cross across the face of the Slovakia goal inside the opening five minutes.

Wilshere struggled to find his feet at the Stade Geoffroy-Guichard
Wilshere struggled to find his feet at the Stade Geoffroy-Guichard (Getty)

And aside from a Viktor Pecovsky effort moments later, which flew high and wide from 30 yards, England were able to keep Slovakia pinned back inside their own half.

Jordan Henderson, selected ahead of the rested Dele Alli, drove the England midfield with Wilshere struggling to make an impact.

Adam Lallana, who has started all three games so for far in this tournament, was also having an impact and the Liverpool midfielder sparked the move which led to Daniel Sturridge having a close range shot blocked by Peter Pekarik, who was later forced to undergo lengthy treatment after having his nose broken by Bertrand’s flailing elbow.

Lallana was England’s biggest threat in the early stages, with one shot fired wide from Vardy’s pass before the pair Lallana teed up Henderson to have a shot blocked.

Slovakia goalkeeper Matus Kozacik then produced two fine saves to keep his team level – denying Vardy with his legs after the Leicester City forward had raced onto Henderson’s long pass before producing another block from Lallana.

England were knocking on the door, but a combination of dogged Slovakian defending and the unfortunate bounce of the ball kept them searching for the breakthrough as they went in level at the interval.

England’s luck was summed up on 44 minutes when Henderson’s perfectly-struck volley was blocked by the head of Jan Durica, who knew nothing about the shot until it hit him in the face.

Greg Dyke, the FA chairman, was watching from the stands alongside the Duke of Cambridge just 24 hours after suggesting that only reaching the semi-finals would be enough guarantee Hodgson’s future as manager.

This was not the performance an England team heading for the last four. The effort was there, but the quality – the crucial element at this level – continued to prove elusive.

Still, Slovakia were a huge disappointment, with Marek Hamsik and Vladimir Weiss both offering little to no threat for Jan Kozak’s team.

Clyne went close for England in the second half
Clyne went close for England in the second half (Getty)

Half-time marked the fourth successive game that England have failed to score a first-half goal and with the second-half producing a low-key start, the chants of ‘Rooney, Rooney’ from the English supporters.

Hodgson initially turned a deaf ear, but a mix-up between Chris Smalling and Joe Hart, which almost let in Robert Mak to put Slovakia ahead – Smalling’s poor awareness had left Hart exposed – raised the stakes and highlighted the threat posed a team who were growing into the game.

Rooney began to prepare himself to enter the field, but as the captain stripped on the sideline, Clyne went close to scoring after being released by Sturridge.

So near, and yet so far once again. England were making the right moves, but they simply could not find the cutting edge.

And eleven minutes into the second-half, Wilshere made way for Rooney. The Arsenal midfielder is a favourite of Hodgson’s, but his inability to influence this game highlighted his lack of match sharpness after missing almost the entire Premier League season through injury.

Can he be risked again once England enter the knock-out stages? It is a dilemma that may have been answered for Hodgson in Saint Etienne.

England certainly looked more threatening with Rooney on and when Dele Alli replaced Lallana and Alli was inches away from scoring on 61 minutes when his effort from Henderson’s cross was cleared off the line by Martin Skrtel.

Television replays showcased the quality of Skrtel’s clearance, with the Liverpool centre-half denying a certain goal by flicking out his left leg.

Skrtel and his defensive team-mates were having one of those nights when every block, interception and last-ditch challenge was going their way.

Slovakia were certainly helped by a succession of crosses which were meat-and-drink for their powerful centre-halves, but as the game wore on, they dropped deeper and deeper, yet continued to mount formidable resistance.

England just huffed and puffed, running out of ideas. Sturridge missed a volley from Dier’s lobbed throughball and Rooney scuffed one wide from 20 yards.

It was all so predictable and straightforward for Slovakia, but the road ahead is now anything but for England.

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