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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Rob Smyth

Ukraine 1-1 England: Euro 2024 qualifier – as it happened

England's Kyle Walker celebrates scoring their equaliser with teammates.
England's Kyle Walker celebrates scoring their equaliser with teammates. Photograph: Aleksandra Szmigiel/Reuters

That’s it for tonight. I’ll leave you with David Hytner’s report from Wroclaw. Goodnight!

Updated

The goalscorer Kyle Walker speaks to Channel 4

It was always gonna be tough coming here; they’re a proud nation. I thought we lacked a bit of the cutting edge that we normally have in front of goal. But sometimes you have come away from home, take a point and move on.

It’s been on my mind [that he hasn’t scored for England] but now I can tick that off. I played with H [Harry Kane] for a number of years and I know that he likes to drop deep and look for that run. Nine times out of 10 he’ll pick you out.

Sometimes you just have these nights. We had a lot of possession and should have created a few more clear-cut opportunities. We know we can do better, but this is a good Ukraine side. The support they had tonight was fantastic. I wish their country all the best.

“England will be ok, I’m sure,” says Simon McMahon, “but France, Portugal, and, yes, Scotland now the only teams with 100% records in the qualifying groups. Time for a bit of BA Robertson, I think.”

Ukraine defended extremely well, and as I type Oleksandr Zinchenko is conducting the crowd. He was their best player and scored a nice goal to put them ahead. Their next match is a biggie: Italy away on Tuesday night.

Fans of Ukraine show their support following the Euro 2024 European qualifier match against England.
The Ukrainian fans cheer their team after the match. Photograph: Maja Hitij/Getty Images

Updated

The state of play in Group C

  • England P5 Pts 13

  • Ukraine P4 Pts 7

  • Italy P2 Pts 3

  • North Macedonia P3 Pts 3

  • Malta P4 Pts 0

The other game today is North Macedonia v Italy, which kicks off at 7.45pm BST.

Full time: Ukraine 1-1 England

Peep peep! An underwhelming draw for England, though they are still on course to qualify for Euro 2024. In a game of few chances, Oleksandr Zinchenko gave Ukraine the lead on the break before Kyle Walker equalised on the stroke of half-time with his first international goal.

Georgiy Bushchan made one brilliant save, brushing Bukayo Saka’s heatseeker onto the bar, but England created nothing in the last half hour.

Updated

90+2 min England haven’t done enough to win this game. Saka hit the bar in the 59th minute but since then they’ve created very little.

90 min Four added minutes. A word for Marc Guehi, who hasn’t had a huge amount to do but has looked very comfortable. It feels like he is now established as the third-choice centre half.

90 min: Ukraine substitution Mykhailo Mudryk has cramp and is replaced by the debutant Yehor Nazaryna.

89 min A promising Ukraine break ends with Walker vrooms back to dispossess Mudryk. He is quite majestic in one-on-ones.

88 min “I think we have to see this game and the international break in the context of unwanted fixtures for players who are four matches in to the new season,” says Rick Harris. “You have to turn up or risk not making the next squad, but you are basically trying to avoid injury.”

I wouldn’t quite go that far, but I know what you mean and I certainly wouldn’t be getting the hashtags out because of an underwhelming draw with Ukraine.

86 min: England substitution Conor Gallagher for Bukayo Saka.

85 min Rashford whacks the free-kick into the mixer and Bushchan punches the ball away. It’s knocked back into the area and deflects towards Maguire in the six-yard box. Bushchan gets to the a ball a split-second before Maguire, who takes him out and is booked.

England’s Harry Maguire is beaten to the ball by Ukraine keeper Georgiy Bushchan.
England’s Harry Maguire is beaten to the ball by Ukraine keeper Georgiy Bushchan. Photograph: Adam Nurkiewicz/The FA/Getty Images

Updated

84 min Rashford plays a good pass to the underlapping Chilwell, whose low cross is blocked. Then Rashford is pulled back by Konoplia. Free-kick to England on the left wing, just outside the area…

82 min England need to be careful because Ukraine are starting to look dangerous on the counter-attack. A late sting certainly isn’t beyond the realms.

Updated

81 min Stepanenko finds Mudryk on the left. He tries to run Walker, who matches him for pace and then leans in to force Mudryk over the byline. Superb defending.

79 min England have lost a bit of rhythm since the introduction of Foden and Rashford. They don’t look like scoring just now.

78 min “Brian Clough’s most famous statement on referees was when he gave John Motson, and by extension everyone in the media, a talking to about their poor treatment of referees,” writes Kári Tulinius. “He was absolutely correct.”

77 min: Ukraine substitution The excellent Oleksandr Zinchenko, not yet ready to do 90 minutes, is replaced by Vitaliy Buyalskiy.

76 min You suspect Ukraine would be happy enough with a draw, especially as Italy lost at home to England. Their meeting in Milan on Tuesday already feels crucial.

74 min A draw would be an okay result for England, though their performance hasn’t been the best. On reflection, the starting XI probably wasn’t dynamic enough.

72 min Saka’s deep corner is met by Maguire, whose header is comfortably held by Bushchan. Not much of a chance.

70 min The corner breaks towards Mudryk on the edge of the area. He’s taken out by Rashford but the referee allows play to continue. England break through Kane, whose driven cross is put behind for a corner by Mykolenko.

70 min Zinchenko breaks down the right and reverses a pass to Tsygankov, who wins a corner off Chilwell. It should have been a goalkick but there you go.

67 min “You’re right to blame modern managers and players for their sense of entitlement, Rob,” says Tom Atkins. “Oh for the days of Ferguson, Benitez, Clough or Revie when decisions were accepted with grace and evenhandedness…”

Heh, indeed. I do think it’s worse now though. (Also, Clough never criticised referees did he?)

66 min: Double substitution for England Marcus Rashford and Phil Foden replace James Maddison and Jude Bellingham, who didn’t have their finest games.

Updated

66 min: Double substitution for Ukraine Artem Dovbyk and Serhiy Sydorchuk replace Roman Yaremchuk and Georgiy Sudakov.

65 min We’ve just seen a replay of the penalty appeal. Saka’s shot hit the left arm of Kryvtsov, which he was using to break his fall; they are rarely given.

64 min Kane drags a left-footed shot well wide from 25 yards.

63 min: England penalty appeal Saka wriggles away from a defender in the area and has a low shot blocked. England think there was a handball; VAR disagrees.

61 min “I love watching Zinchenko play for Ukraine, since they always put him smack in the middle of the midfield,” says Joe Pearson. “Such an artistic and creative player in that position!”

I bet Mikel Arteta wishes he could clone him and play him as a No8 as well as a roaming left-back.

60 min Bushchan did indeed get a touch – that’s a cracking save.

59 min: Saka hits the bar! Almost another screamer from England’s player of the year. Kane gave the ball to him on the edge of the area, and immediately you knew what was coming. Saka shimmied infield and lashed a ferocious rising drive that thumped off the crossbar. Did Bushchan get a touch on that? If so it was an – excuse me – damn fine save.

Bukayo Saka of England shoots st goal and hits the bar after Ukraine’s keeper Georgiy Bushchan got a touch to it.
Bukayo Saka goes close to putting England ahead. Photograph: Ashley Western/Colorsport/Shutterstock

Updated

59 min “I was always under the impression that players complain about a decision to put some doubt in to the referee’s mind, so that subsequent decisions might be more sympathetic, ie ‘maybe I was a bit harsh booking Maddison earlier, so I won’t give this decision against him/Player X’,” says Dan Christmas. “Of course, Player X is very rarely booked due to their telepathic abilities so maybe I’m barking up the wrong busy.”

I might be wrong but I honestly think most of the outrage at refereeing decisions is sincere, even when it is palpably irrational.

57 min A promising Ukraine attack ends with Sudakov slicing well wide from 20 yards.

56 min “I think we’re in great danger of forgetting just how bad England had been (and for how long) before Southgate,” says Francis Mead. “We now have a team that plays with a recognisable system and confidence - that was very rare for England teams over the last several decades.”

Yeah, be careful what you wish for and all that. I find some of the criticism of Southgate quite bizarre, although I’m neutral so it’s easy to be detached and think you know it all.

54 min Maddison’s deep corner bounces awkwardly in front of the unmarked Maguire at the far post. He can only knock the ball up in the air, into the six-yard box, and Bushchan punches clear.

Updated

53 min Saka plays in the overlapping Henderson, whose cross isn’t pushed away properly by the diving Bushchan. It almost falls for Bellingham but Konoplia reacs well to turn it behind for a corner.

52 min Maguire slaps the ground in pain after Mudryk accidentally stands on his foot. He’ll be fine.

Updated

51 min Kane is fouled 30 yards from goal by the substitute Kryvtsov. Maddison plays the free-kick square to Walker, whose floated cross is headed onto the roof of the net by Maguire. A half chance at best.

48 min Henderson clips a flat a cross towards Bellingham, whose mistimed header from 14 yards is easily saved by Bushchan.

48 min “Interesting to see Channel 4 (who I think do this quite well, in an unobtrusive sort of way? Or maybe I’m just relieved they’re not ITV) highlighting Henderson serving at the site of the Ukraine goal once the fire was already out,” says Tom Hopkins. “I wonder if this game was a bit of a test of whether he still belongs in the team. Thus far, I can’t see that he does. Would be very surprised to see him in Germany.”

I’d expect him to be in the squad, though maybe not the starting XI. A lot will depend on how Alexander-Arnold does as a No8. You could also play Foden there, though both Southgate and Guardiola seem reluctant.

46 min Peep peep!

Half-time substituton Serhiy Kryvtsov replaces Mykola Matviyenko, presumably because of injury.

“No idea why Maddison’s whingeing about the yellow,” says James Humphries. “That was yer classic ankle-scissor, and he even held on after the ball was clearly away. Cynical boy.”

I find the deluded entitlement of modern footballers and managers fascinating. You could have two identical incidents, one on each side, and I reckon 98 per cent of players would think that one merited much greater punishment than the other.

Half time: Ukraine 1-1 England

Peep peep! Goals from Oleksandr Zinchenko and Kyle Walker enlivened a largely dull half in Wroclaw. England dominated possession without creating much, though they were more penetrative after the unwelcome shock of Zinchenko’s goal. See you in a bit for the second half.

45 min Saka’s deep cross is headed back across goal by Kane, but Bellingham slips and nobody else is able to get to it.

44 min “I’m really struggling to understand why Southgate has picked two defensive midfielders in Rice and Henderson and left out AGAIN the in-form Rashford,” says Rick Harris. “We have no threat down the left which was so predictable. Maddison is very similar to Grealish - impact sub at best.”

Well, Henderson plays as a No8 so he’s not really a defensive midfielder, though I know what you mean. Personally I think he’s right to have a look at Maddison, although I’d also like to see him try Foden as one of the No8s.

43 min Yaremchuck is booked for standing on Henderson’s foot. There was a check for offside on Walker’s goal but he was fine.

That was an excellent goal, and a delightful moment for Walker. Kane had time on the ball, near the centre circle, and considered his options. Walker’s aggressive run infield demanded a pass, and Kane curled the ball superbly over Mykolenko. Walker controlled it neatly on the half-volley, ignored the vertigo and flicked the ball past Bushchan from close range.

Updated

GOAL! Ukraine 1-1 England (Walker 41)

Kyle Walker has scored his first goal for England!

Kyle Walker slams the ball past Ukraine’s Georgiy Bushchan to put England back on level terms, with his first goal international goal.
Kyle Walker slams the ball past Ukraine’s Georgiy Bushchan to put England back on level terms and open his international account. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
Kyle Walker celebrates with teammates after scoring England’s equaliser against Ukraine.
So it’s no wonder he’s so happy. Photograph: Eddie Keogh/The FA/Getty Images

Updated

41 min “You wrote that Saka’s shot was blocked by ‘Stepanenko (I think),” says Scott Blair. “Given that I suspect most of us following the fitba’ on the Guardian website don’t have the game on the telly, I would just be brass-necking that. Stepanenko. Of course it was! Who else?!”

I’m just terrified of being cancelled (I think).

39 min Nothing much is happening. England haven’t been bad, just been a bit meh. Ukraine are doing a number of them. It’s a Mourinho masterclass!

37 min “Thanks, Shaun Tooze, very kind, but I don’t think I could cope with a Scotland v England final, so I’ll settle for us knocking England out during the group phase on our way there,” says Simon McMahon. “As for you James Humphries, you’ll be pleased to know that ‘Dundee’ beat Dunfermline 3-0 in the Scottish Challenge / IrnBru / Tunnocks Tea Cake Cup this afternoon. Jim McLean would have been proud.”

36 min Bellingham angles a superb through pass to Maddison, whose first touch on the edge of the area is unusually poor. Instead of taking it in his stride, which would have put him in on goal, he left the ball slightly behind.

34 min This is all a bit ponderous from England. Ukraine deserve credit, though – they’re well organised defensively and have given England very little room in the final third.

England are starting to get frustrated with a few refereeing decisions. Maddison, unhappy at not getting a free-kick, takes out Zabarnyi and is booked.

32 min “Enjoying the MBM as ever,” says Peter Allan. “Last night’s MBM of the Scotland game was great too. Oh wait- there wasn’t one. Or any coverage till well after the game. Still, as long as football’s coming home eh?”

If it was up to me we’d be retro MBMing Scotland 3-1 Czechoslovakia from 1977 right now. I don’t really have any editorial involvement (I work remotely, as a freelancer) but I do know they are very stretched at the moment. It’s not possible to do all the games we’d like to. For example I really want us to do every Brighton game in the Europa League, as it’s such a great story and the Guardian and Brighton share a love of foie gras, but we don’t have the resources.

30 min I thought it was Mudryk who put Henderson through a couple of minutes ago, but it might have been a very good pass from Kane; it’s hard to tell from the angle we’ve seen.

29 min Twenty seconds later, Henderson clips over the bar from the edge of the area. The first chance was the big one.

England's Jordan Henderson shoots past Ukraine's Vitalii Mykolenko.
England's Jordan Henderson goes close. Photograph: Aleksandra Szmigiel/Reuters

Updated

28 min Kane is tackled by Mudryk, who inadvertently plays a through pass to Henderson in the area. He could shoot – should shoot – but instead tries a square pass to Maddison, who is tackled.

Updated

27 min That was the first shot on target at either end.

That was a well-worked goal. Tsygankov found the overlapping Konoplia on the right side of the area, and his cutback was finished calmly by the onrushing Zinchenko.

Oleksandr Zinchenko of England slams the ball past England keeper Jordan Pickford to open the scoring.
Oleksandr Zinchenko of England slams the ball past England keeper Jordan Pickford to open the scoring. Photograph: PressFocus/MB Media/Getty Images
Ukraine’s Oleksandr Zinchenko celebrates after opening the scoring against England.
Then celebrates alongside the joyous Ukrainian fans. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters

Updated

GOAL! Ukraine 1-0 England (Zinchenko 26)

Well that’s made life interesting.

England keeper Jordan Pickford shows a look of frustration after Oleksandr Zinchenko of Ukraine opened the scoring.
England keeper Jordan Pickford is frustrated at going behind. Photograph: Kieran McManus/Shutterstock

Updated

23 min Ukraine break when Konoplia nicks a telegraphed pass from Chilwell, but Zinchenko’s through pass to Yaremchuk is too heavy.

Updated

23 min Saka is limping. He was kneed in the thigh by Mykolenko a few minutes ago, so maybe the problem.

22 min Stepanenko is booked for taking a shortcut through Maddison.

21 min Mykolenko’s cross is miskicked towards his own goal by Rice, but Walker gets between Mudryk and the ball, which allows Pickford to come out and claim the ball.

19 min Bellingham’s inswinging cross is inadvertently headed towards his own goal by Matviyenko, giving Bushchan something to do. He saves comfortably.

17 min For all England’s possession, the keeper Georgiy Bushchan has had the square root of bugger all to do. England’s tempo hasn’t been great, though it is a very hot day in Wroclaw so maybe they’re playing the long game.

England's Harry Kane holds off the challenge of Ukraine's Mykola Matviyenko.
England's Harry Kane holds off the challenge of Ukraine's Mykola Matviyenko. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters

Updated

16 min At times when England have the ball their formation is 3-1-5-1, with Chilwell and Saka as the wide players and Walker in defence. Have you ever seen the like.

15 min Maddison strolls past Sudakov, who pulls him back and is a little fortunate to avoid a yellow card.

13 min A loose ball is chested down on the edge of the area by Saka, who hits a rasping drive that is well blocked by Matviyenko (I think). Moments later Bellingham plays a neat one-two with Henderson, only to leave the ball behind in the area.

Updated

12 min Henderson combines with Saka on the right but overhits his cross. England win the ball back quicksmart; they are very dominant at the moment.

11 min Ukraine enjoy their first extended spell of possession. The pace of the game is pretty slow, which might be related to the heat.

9 min Maddison turns Konoplia neatly and flips a pass out to Saka near the byline on the right. He plays it back to Walker and the attack loses momentum, but that was a confident bit of play from Maddison.

7 min Ukraine have barely had a kick. England’s shape is interesting, with Chilwell playing very high on the left and Walker sometimes tucking in as a third centre-back. The days of neat, symmetrical formations are long gone.

Ukraine's Viktor Tsygankov is beaten by England's Ben Chilwell who sticks the ball into the Ukrainian box.
Ukraine's Viktor Tsygankov is beaten by England's Ben Chilwell who sticks the ball into the Ukrainian box. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters

Updated

6 min “Not paid attention to England since the Euros,” says Graham Randall. “The whole Qatar thing didn’t sit right. Time to get back on the bandwagon I think.”

They’re in serious danger of winning Euro 2024. They were deceptively close to winning the World Cup as well.

4 min Bellingham walks past Stepanenko with disdain and slides a dangerous pass towards Saka in the area. He takes the ball in his stride but then runs out of room.

3 min Lots of early possession for England, albeit in harmless areas. Maguire is now playing to the left of Guehi, so I’m going to shut up about tactics.

1 min Harry Maguire is playing as the right-sided centre-back, with Guehi on the left. Maguire usually starts on the left for England, though not necessasrily for Manchester United anymore.

1 min Peep peep! Jordan Henderson gets the game under way, with England kicking from left to right as we watch.

Here come the players. It’s pretty warm, around 26 degrees, and the Ukraine fans are making a decent noise. This should be a good game.

England’s James Maddison and Marc Guehi take to the pitch ahead of the match against Ukraine.
England’s James Maddison and Marc Guehi take to the pitch ahead of the match against Ukraine. Photograph: Adam Nurkiewicz/The FA/Getty Images

Updated

A guide to Wroclaw

“It’s from a few years back,” writes James, “but my Guardian guide to Wrocław gives a bit of background to the place.”

“If I remember my MBMs correctly, isn’t Simon McMahon a Dundee fan?” says James Humphries. “Very surprising to hear such confidence, particularly considering <gestures broadly at the last 30 years of Scottish football in general, and Dundee in particular>. I’m still waiting to find out how we eff it up from 15 points out of 15, personally.

“Anyhow! Ukraine got a hope today, do we think, or is it another page in the long, sad history of England getting jammy groups?”

The Dundee part is correct, but you missed one small detail. As for today, it’s not beyond the realms but I can’t see it. I don’t think this is a particularly jammy group; England are just very good, and tournaments are getting bigger so it’s very hard not to qualify. I miss the days of an eight-team Euros. Look how tight some of these groups were, and the quality of the teams that didn’t make it.

Updated

Nick Ames on the bond between Ukraine and England

“Can you please assure Simon McMahon that there are very many (me included) from England wishing Scotland all the best,” writes Shaun Tooze. “Meeting in the final would be a bit special wouldn’t it*. But, you know, the French, Germans, Portuguese, Italians, Dutch...

"*understatement of the history of the universe.”

‘At Bayern you have to win every game… I’m enjoying those different emotions’

David Hytner’s preview

“Afternoon Rob,” says Simon McMahon. “When I read the line ‘They qualify without breaking sweat these days, and barring an astonishing collapse they’ll be in Germany next summer’ in your preamble, I assumed you were talking about Scotland. I have my lederhosen packed already and, rather than just being glad to qualify, am seriously hopeful that we could do some actual damage in the tournament itself. God knows we’ve waited long enough.”

It’s great isn’t it. The rebirth of Billy Gilmour makes me especially happy, never mind the emergence of Gerd McTominay.

James Maddison starts on the left of England’s attack

The state of play in Group C

  • England P4 Pts 12

  • Ukraine P3 Pts 6

  • Italy P2 Pts 3

  • North Macedonia P3 Pts 3

  • Malta P4 Pts 0

The other game today is North Macedonia v Italy, which kicks off at 7.45pm BST.

Team news: Guehi starts

No big surprises in the England team. Marc Guehi replaces the injured John Stones at centre-back, Jordan Henderson starts in midfield and James Maddison is preferred to Marcus Rashford and Phil Foden.

Ukraine (4-2-1-3) Bushchan; Konoplia, Zabarnyi, Matviyenko, Mykolenko; Stepanenko, Zinchenko; Sudakov; Tsygankov, Yaremchuk, Mudryk.
Substitutes: Trubin, Lunin, Mykhaylichenko, Kryvtsov, Sydorchuk, Yarmolenko, Dovbyk, Buyalskiy, Vanat, Popov, Nazaryna, Karavaev.

England (4-1-2-3) Pickford; Walker, Guehi, Maguire, Chilwell; Rice; Henderson, Bellingham; Saka, Kane, Maddison.
Substitutes: Johnstone, Ramsdale, Trippier, Colwill, Tomori, Phillips, Dunk, Eze, Rashford, Foden, Gallagher, Wilson.

Referee Georgi Kabakov (Bulgaria)

Updated

Preamble

Hello and welcome to live coverage of the Euro 2024 qualifier between Ukraine and England. If you’re looking for jeopardy, you’ve come to the wrong place. Tonight’s match is being played in Poland, which used to be where England qualified for major tournaments by the skin of their teeth: Peter Shilton touching a last-minute heatseeker onto the crossbar in 1989, Gary Lineker scoring a spectacular late equaliser two years later.

They qualify without breaking sweat these days, and barring an astonishing collapse they’ll be in Germany next summer. The most interesting thing about these games is the evolution of the team rather than the need for three points. Some players, like James Maddison, Marcus Rashford and Trent Alexander-Arnold when he’s fit, are trying to play their way into Gareth Southgate’s best XI for next summer; others, like Harry Maguire and Jordan Henderson, are trying to stay in it.

It’s a bigger game for Ukraine, who are scrapping with Italy and North Macedonia for the other automatic qualification place. A result tonight would set them up for an even more important match on Tuesday: Italy away.

Kick off 5pm BST/6pm Wroclaw/7pm Kyiv

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