Wayne Rooney admits England must improve in order to qualify for 2014 World Cup

 

John Curtis
Thursday 18 October 2012 05:41 EDT
Comments
WAYNE ROONEY Imaginative but sometimes let down by his touch, before he nodded England ahead. Replaced late on. 6/10
WAYNE ROONEY Imaginative but sometimes let down by his touch, before he nodded England ahead. Replaced late on. 6/10 (GETTY IMAGES)

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Wayne Rooney insists England need to improve on their performance during last night's 1-1 draw with Poland in Warsaw to qualify for the 2014 World Cup.

England lead Group H by one point from Montenegro, who have a game in hand, after Rooney's 32nd goal for his country was cancelled out by Kamil Glik midway through the second period.

Rooney believes a share of the spoils is not a disaster after the game eventually went ahead a day late due to a waterlogged pitch on Tuesday.

However, the Manchester United striker knows England have to produce better performances.

He said: "Do England have to improve to qualify? Yes, of course. We know we can play a lot better than that.

"But at least we got the point. It was a hard-fought point. It was a difficult game, a difficult pitch. We weren't at our best but we dug in and got a draw.

"We know we can play better but this is a difficult place to come. It is a decent point.

"We knew it was a tough group, but we're confident. We believe in ourselves and we believe we are the best team in the group, so we are confident of qualifying."

Skipper Steve Gerrard is never afraid to admit the truth and acknowledged England were "not totally at the races."

He said: "It was difficult conditions and a difficult pitch but we can't use that as an excuse.

"I thought Poland dealt with the conditions and played to the conditions slightly better than us. That's the reason we didn't get three points.

"The pitch was slippy, wet, cutting up. I think it was only laid a week and a half ago so it wasn't ideal. Both teams tried to make the most of it and they did it better than us.

"We did okay until we scored but never built on the one-goal lead. We never passed the ball well enough, for whatever reason."

Gerrard refused to use the 20-hour delay before the game went ahead for England's poor showing.

The Liverpool midfielder said: "When you're fired up, pumped up, you've had your massages and you're ready to go, that's not ideal (when the game is called off).

"But we're professionals. We're playing at the top level and we had to get ourselves up for this but I didn't think we were totally at the races."

PA

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