Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Sport
Andy Dunn

Dismal England thrashed at home to Hungary in Nations League as John Stones sent off

Gareth Southgate suffered THE biggest embarrassment of his international managerial career as England were put to the sword by Hungary for the SECOND time in eleven days.

And Southgate’s HUMILIATED side have now gone four matches without a win and without a goal from open play.

Two strikes from Roland Sallai and one apiece from Adam Nagy and Daniel Gazdag mean that England are now anchored to the bottom of Group A3 and face relegation to the second tier of the Nations League.

And a capacity Molineux crowd BOOED England and told Southgate .. “you don’t know what you are doing.”

England were thrashed by Hungary at Molineux (Getty Images)

In a return to the bad, old days, fans filed out early and pilloried Southgate when he sent on Harry Maguire for Bukayo Saka after John Stones had been sent off for a second bookable offence when England were three down.

There is no chance of the Football Association making a change but Southgate is now under more pressure than he has ever been since taking over in 2016.

---

At one point during an international camp that lasted just over two weeks but felt like ten, Gareth Southgate said he reckoned the major European countries were all pretty much on a par with each other.

With the World Cup five months away, he suggested there was no outstanding candidate from this continent.

In other words, Southgate believes his England have got a similar chance of success at Qatar 2022 as, say, France, or Germany, or Spain.

And, as it happens, the bookmakers pretty much agree.

But on the evidence of this four-game Nations League stint, Gareth and the bookies have got it wrong.

Southgate is making his assessment on the basis of achievements at the two previous major tournaments and the bookies are just taking us all for mugs.

Nothing definitive can be taken from matches that must have been something of a chore for the seniors who are guaranteed a place in Southgate’s final squad for Qatar 2022.

But the overall impression is that this is a squad that is not evolving, a squad that has become TOO functional.

The struggle to create opportunities has become stark, the shortage of creative spark alarming.

Jarrod Bowen and Conor Gallagher were two players with a huge incentive against the Hungarians.

If a World Cup squad was selected right now, they would, almost certainly, not be in it.

Their high motivation levels were evident in their work-rate but, to be brutally honest, they did not bring enough to the table in terms of manufacturing chances.

They are two smashing professionals and if they have a decent run of club form when the Premier League restarts, then Gallagher and Bowen might well make the plane.

And it felt a little harsh that Bowen was hooked at half-time and Gallagher followed him soon after.

Certainly, no-one could fault their effort, nor the effort put in by all of the players used by Southgate over the four matches.

Considering this was the most tortuous of international breaks - and most of the players will now have only three weeks off before club duties resume - the commitment was considerable.

But there was a predictability about England’s play over these past four matches that does not bode well for Qatar.

A fit and firing Phil Foden will make a big difference if Southgate puts complete faith in the Manchester City player - who only had a 25-minute cameo here - while Jack Grealish, who did not start this match, can be a safe-cracker.

Southgate was left stunned (Action Images via Reuters)

And despite the proliferation of good English right-backs, Trent Alexander-Arnold surely has to have a key role in the squad, even though Southgate seems to have more fondness for Kyle Walker, Reece James and Kieran Trippier.

The dearth of goals from open play is an obvious indication that Southgate needs to encourage more creativity, even if that is at the expense of defensive solidity.

With only two England matches remaining before World Cup 2022 kicks off, this squad is looking one-dimensional.

And don’t let Southgate or the bookies tell you otherwise.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.