Match day cleanup
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Report | |||||||
Event | 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification (UEFA) | ||||||
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Date | 1 September 2017 | ||||||
Venue | National Stadium, Ta' Qali | ||||||
Player of the Match | Harry Kane (England) | ||||||
Referee | Artur Dias Soares | ||||||
Attendance | 16,994 | ||||||
← Malta - Slovenia England - Scotland Malta - Scotland England - Slovakia → |
Malta v England was a 2018 World Cup Qualifying match. It took place on 1 September 2017 at National Stadium, Ta' Qali.
England scored three late goals to overcome Malta's stubborn resistance and stay in control of their qualifying group for next summer's World Cup.
Gareth Southgate's side struggled to break down physical, resilient opponents and it was 53 minutes before Harry Kane broke the deadlock with a calm close-range finish from Dele Alli's pass.
As Malta tired, England exerted their authority and Ryan Bertrand sealed the win with a long-range shot that slipped past Malta goalkeeper Andrew Hogg with five minutes left.
England - who are now two points ahead of Slovakia as they prepare to meet at Wembley on Monday - began to carve Malta open with ease and added two more in injury time, substitute Danny Welbeck steering in Kane's pass before the striker added his second with virtually the final kick of the game from Marcus Rashford's delivery.
England's performance must be placed in the context of opponents who are physical, resilient, organised - and ultimately the scoreline had a convincing appearance.
This was still, however, a largely colourless display until Malta, one of the minnows of the game with a world ranking of 190 and with a record of six defeats from six Group F games, tired and conceded those three late goals.
It does not make for the easiest task but this was, in large part, a conservative and uninspired England display, lacking spark and relying on Spurs pair Alli and Kane to finally make the breakthrough.
England opened brightly, with early wasted chances for Raheem Sterling and a Kane header that was well saved by Hogg, but then became bogged down in mediocrity, a state they only escaped in the final 10 minutes.
And even England's set-up had an over-conservative appearance. Was there really any need for Liverpool's Jordan Henderson and West Bromwich Albion's Jake Livermore providing the midfield base against a Malta side whose main, perhaps only, ambition was damage limitation?
This was a win that keeps England on course for the World Cup in Russia, with hopes of taking another important step against Slovakia.
Southgate's side, however, have provided little compelling evidence in this group that they will make a serious impact at the sharp end of the finals, should they qualify.
There is still time for England to develop, but this has been a campaign short on thrills and one not designed to send fear through the first tier of European clubs.
Kane may have handed the captaincy over to Henderson in Malta - but he was once more the man who took responsibility to ease England's anxiety.
After rescuing a point with an injury-time equaliser against Scotland at Hampden Park in June, Kane was the beneficiary of good work from Spurs team-mate Alli before sliding in a calm finish for his fourth goal in his past three internationals, his 10th in 20 appearances, adding a second late on.
Kane may have had what is now becoming his trademark goalless August but he is usually red-hot come September and he was not just involved as a scorer, he provided an enticing delivery for Welbeck to add the third in the final seconds, finding time to add one more himself.
Alex-Oxlade Chamberlain showed no hangover from having to complete the formalities of a £35m move to Liverpool before leaving with England's squad for Malta, delivering an impressive performance before being substituted with 14 minutes left.
He was one of the few England players who showed pace and a direct approach in a grim first 45 minutes, in sharp contrast to the struggles of Sterling.
Oxlade-Chamberlain was operating from a wide-right position which he does not expect to fulfil at Liverpool, where he hopes to be a central midfielder, but looked at home and had the beating of the Maltese defence.
And in Rashford, with his lightning pace, England have a shaft of light as Southgate searches for a game-changer going into the World Cup.
It was not sparkling but it was job done - and Oxlade-Chamberlain and Rashford were two of the brighter lights.
Match[]
Details[]
1 September 2017 19:45 BST |
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0–4 | England ![]() |
National Stadium, Ta' Qali Attendance: 16,994 Referee: Artur Dias Soares |
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Report (BBC) | Kane ![]() Bertrand ![]() Welbeck ![]() |
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League table[]
Team | Pld |
W |
D |
L |
GF |
GA |
GD |
Pts |
Notes |
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7 | 5 | 2 | 0 | 14 | 2 | +12 | 17 | Qualification to 2018 FIFA World Cup |
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7 | 5 | 0 | 2 | 13 | 4 | +9 | 15 | Possible Second round |
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7 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 12 | 10 | +2 | 11 | |
![]() |
7 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 6 | 4 | +2 | 11 | |
![]() |
7 | 1 | 2 | 4 | 6 | 14 | −8 | 5 | |
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7 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 2 | 19 | −17 | 0 |
See also[]
External links[]
England – 2018 FIFA World Cup Matches |
Qualifying matches |
2018 FIFA World Cup |
Group A ·
Group B ·
Group C ·
Group D ·
Group E ·
Group F ·
Group G ·
Group H |