World Cup 2018 Day 5 winners and losers: New-look England in more ways than one
It was one of those games that turns proper nouns into verbs. Ninety minutes had come and gone in Volgograd on Monday, and England, in its 2018 World Cup opener, a game that was supposed to mark the dawn of a new era, was … well, there was only one way to succinctly describe it.
England was Englanding.
It was seemingly playing down to inferior opposition, stuttering at the smallest hint of adversity, sputtering as it tried to unlock a sturdy defense. It had flubbed chances in the first half, and failed to create many in the second. It was headed for a result – a 1-1 draw with one of the worst teams in Russia – that would have brought all the old criticism, jokes and schadenfreude flooding back.
And then something strange happened:
Captain Kane comes through for England in stoppage time! pic.twitter.com/g27zfflL6e
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) June 18, 2018
Suddenly, the past was irrelevant. That verb, “to England,” had been redefined. Prophecies and promises that this year will be different came true.
Which, of course, is a tad silly. One somewhat fluky set-piece goal shouldn’t flip the narrative of a game, just as one game shouldn’t flip the narrative of a team. But here’s the thing: The original narrative was going to miss the mark. Never once during the 90 minutes did this look like “same old England.” Whether the match ended 2-1 or 1-1 or 1-2, this England performancewas different. It was refreshing. It was encouraging.
At the very least, it certainly warranted three points. As the match-winner, Harry Kane, said afterward, it was “no less than we deserved.”
xG map for #Tun–#Eng. Thanks to the ref and the finishing of non-Harry Kane players, this was a very dramatic game. Over on Earth-2 it was 5-0 and people are wondering if this could be the year. pic.twitter.com/mmxEYtzww0
— Caley Graphics (@Caley_graphics) June 18, 2018
The “same old England” tag had come to carry multiple meanings. At one point, it equated to a decent performance overshadowed by a poor result. At recent major tournaments, though, including Euro 2016, it was used to describe a poor result brought about by a poor performance. It did not tell of missed chances, but rather a failure to even create them.
That’s why Monday really was different. It was a vast improvement on the Euros and the 2014 World Cup. England easily could have been 3-0 up in the first half.
England nearly get an early goal but Hassen is able to get a toe to it and make the save! pic.twitter.com/YkRQYnHXeT
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) June 18, 2018
Had the match finished 1-1, the story would have been missed chances. England’s finishing would have led this column as a Day 5 loser. Instead, thanks to Harry Kane’s winner, we have a clear path to the narrative that England’s performance merited.
Winner: New-look England
We had heard all about England’s exciting next generation in the buildup to Russia. We knew about Kane and Raheem Sterling, Jesse Lingard and Dele Alli, and so on. We knew about John Stones and the Three Lions’ determination to play out of the back. We knew about manager Gareth Southgate’s 3-5-2, and his defined system that strayed from England’s incoherence of the past. We had been told about a squad overflowing with energy and personality.
What we hadn’t seen was all of this in practice. We especially hadn’t seen it in practice against a team like Tunisia – against a clearly overmatched adversary, one that would dare England to break it down.
But England did just that. Its 3-plus Expected Goals were the most of any team at the tournament so far. It is still only one game, with tougher challenges to come. Southgate’s side is by no means suddenly a World Cup favorite. But Monday’s performance, despite a result that many will characterize as an escape, was very promising.
Winner: Penalty-box body slams
Apparently legal! At least if you’re Tunisian …
Blatantly not a foul, all he did was spear Kane to the floor for no reason when he didn’t have the ball pic.twitter.com/S0BeYu5O0P
— Jordan Sadd (@jordan_sadd) June 18, 2018
England had two convincing penalty shouts ignored, while Tunisia had a questionable penalty given at the other end. Had the score held at 1-1, notorious Colombian referee Wilmar Roldan might have had a place among the “losers” here. Instead …
Loser: Tunisians marking Harry Kane without body slamming him
Kane has a knack for floating into space to get on the end of second balls. But he tapped in a rebound for England’s first goal while in acres of space. And, well, watch Tunisian defender Yassine Meriah (4) and substitute Mohamed Ben Amor (14) at the back post on the winner:
Captain Kane comes through for England in stoppage time! pic.twitter.com/g27zfflL6e
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) June 18, 2018
Loser: Roy Hodgson
Given what we saw Monday, let’s recall this photo of Kane at Euro 2016 …
What’s wrong with that picture? [Thinking emoji]
Ah, yes. Remember the (not so) good old days when Kane was taking corners for England?
Have to wonder what former England manager Roy Hodgson was thinking while he watched Kane’s predatory instincts win a game for the Three Lions at the World Cup.
Winner: Belgium hype
In Group G’s other match, Belgium sped past Panama, 3-0. In many ways, its performance actually wasn’t quite as impressive as England’s.
But the result, superficially at least, gave the best first impression of any pre-tournament favorite. The Red Devils were the only of the near-consensus top six that triumphed by multiple goals. So prepare for the Belgium hype – which was already significant before the World Cup, and with good reason – to ratchet up even more.
Winner: Sweden
Sweden is a winner because … uh … it won a game! It topped South Korea 1-0 on a VAR-awarded penalty. But …
Loser: Anybody who watched Sweden-South Korea
We – viewers – were all winners on Friday. We were all losers if we spent two hours of our Monday mornings watching Sweden and South Korea try to lull us back to sleep. But hey, don’t claim you weren’t warned.
Loser: Sweden’s goal differential
Sweden had to win. And it did. But only getting the solitary goal against what is clearly Group F‘s worst team could prove costly. Because if Mexico beats South Korea by any score other than 1-0, or if Germany’s presumed victory over Sweden is by more than one goal, the Swedes will go into Matchday 3 needing a Germany stumble against South Korea and/or a multi-goal victory of their own over Mexico. The former is unlikely. And the latter?
Well, Sweden hasn’t scored multiple goals in a match since a qualifier against Luxembourg in early October.
Winner: Panama
Panama didn’t get a result. Its fans didn’t get to celebrate. But Panamanians everywhere got to link arms and belt out their national anthem before a World Cup match for the first time.
Panama is appearing in their first World Cup ever … and the emotion on their faces as they sang their national anthem was everything! ❤️pic.twitter.com/i74i8kk5nt
— Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports) June 18, 2018
So they’re all winners. What a special moment. Players and fans will cherish this experience, no matter how the final two games turn out, for the rest of their lives.
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Henry Bushnell covers global soccer for Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Question? Comment? Email him at henrydbushnell@gmail.com, or follow him on Twitter @HenryBushnell, and on Facebook.
More World Cup on Yahoo Sports:
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• Time to panic for Germany after Mexico defeat?
• Mexicans celebrate with tears, a marriage proposal and more
• Brazil struggles to break down Swiss, settles for draw