Selasa, 19 Juni 2018

England vs. Tunisia: World Cup 2018 Live

43': England Threatens

Harry Maguire, the English center back, is a menace in attack. His nice knockdown header sets up a good half-volley chance for Jesse Lindgard, but his shot is deflected out.

39': Everybody Shoots, Nobody Scores

A goalmouth scramble gives numerous England players an opportunity to put a shot on goal but they all whiff.

37': Was That Penalty Reviewed?

As Dr. Joe Machnick explained on the Fox broadcast, every single penalty decision is reviewed by the video assistant referee system, and despite the protestations of England, this one stood. If you need a refresher, here's how the VAR system works.

33': GOAL! Tunisia.

Battling for a cross, Kyle Walker put his arm in the face of Tunisia attacker Fakhreddine Ben Youssef. As he fell, Colombian referee Wilmar Roldan called the penalty.

Ferjani Sassi calmly slots a penalty into the bottom left corner, past a diving Jordan Pickford. We're tied, 1-1.

Matthew Futterman: And there, Mr. Draper, is your England mistake! On cue...

No surprise, Volgograd Arena absolutely explodes as Ferjani Sassi converts the penalty. Tunisia doesn't get to the World Cup very much, and its fans have descended here in force. Whabi Khazri was wide open on the left and about to collect a pass in a dangerous spot when he slipped. If Tunisia could ever steal another goal and go into halftime with a lead, oh my...

31': England's Attack Slows Down

Harry Maguire heads a Kieran Trippier free kick on frame, but it's easily saved by replacement keeper Farouk Ben Mustapha. A few English players appealed half-heartedly for a penalty, believing Maguire was held, but the referee showed no interest.

Photo
England vs. Tunisia: World Cup 2018 Live
England's Dele Alli and Tunisia's Ali Maaloul.Credit Toru Hanai/Reuters

27': England Escapes

Sloppy defending by England leads to a chance for Tunisia, but a shot from the top of the box, subsequent corner, and speculative header all fail to seriously threaten. It is hard to imagine Tunisia scoring off of anything other than an English mistake.

23': Not Close, but a Shot at Least

Tunisia with their first shot! Unfortunately it comes from about 35 yards out, and is blasted about that high over the goal.

20': Tunisia Overwhelmed

This night might get worse before it gets better for Tunisia, as it's all one way traffic right now. England is finding plenty of space behind the Tunisian defense, slotting through balls and cutting beautiful passes back to the penalty spot.

Matthew Futterman: After 20 minutes Tunisia looks completely incapable of threatening England here with any kind of sustained attack. England's three-man back line is becoming a one-man back line because Tunisia can't seem to manage more than two passes in the middle of the field. If England can start connecting on all the sitters this game is going to get ugly.

15': Tunisia's Goalkeeper Exits

We have an extended stoppage as trainers surround Tunisian goalkeeper Mouez Hassen, who walks off the field holding back tears. He's being subbed out here, adding insult to injury for Tunisia.

Hassen went down once earlier in the match, but resumed and made a wonderful diving save on the John Stones header. It is unclear what is wrong with Hassen, but he has been replaced by Farouk Ben Mustapha.

11': GOAL! Kane Scores for England

The dam finally bursts! Off of a corner, John Stones's towering header is barely parried away by the Tunisian goalkeeper Mouez Hassen, but Harry Kane is right there to put away the rebound. A perfect poacher's goal.

9': Tunisia Gets the Ball

Tunisia gets their first extended spell of possession and works the ball into the final third, but an errant pass goes out for an England throw-in.

Matthew Futterman: So, England is dominating early but may have left its finishing boots in the hotel. If you are an England fan, you are either thinking this is great because the team has created three great chances at the goal in the first 10 minutes, or, here we go again, the major tournament hex continues.

6': Sterling's Chance

The last chance was Raheem Sterling in a nut shell. He did the hard part right, making a perfect late, looping run around three Tunisian defenders to get open for Lindgaard. But when the pass arrived, it somehow wrong-footed him, and bounced off his shins for a goal kick.

5': Lingard to Sterling ... Miss

Again England breaks forward, and again they can't convert. Jesse Lindgard slots a beautiful ball across to Raheem Sterling, but he is unable to get a solid foot on the ball to put it into the open goal.

3': England Has Chances Early

England is already assaulting Tunisia's goal. A ball over the top unleashed Dele Alli, but his square ball across the goal to Raheem Sterling was half cleared, and Jesse Lindgard's follow-up subsequently bundled out for a corner.

1': England in Red

We're underway! A couple of monochromatic squads, as Tunisia is wearing all white and England is in all red.

Bugs Invade Volgograd

It was close to 90 degrees this afternoon in Volgograd. And tiny bugs flying all around the arena in swarms. In other words. If things go south for England as they sometimes do on these big stages, there are some built-in excuses. — Matthew Futterman

England's Starting Lineup

No big surprises for England in the starting 11, and the formation looks to be the expected 3-5-2 (or 5-3-2 if you prefer). Leicester City defender Harry Maguire has beaten out Gary Cahill for the final center back spot, while Kieran Trippier and Ashley Young are the wing backs. In attack, Harry Kane and Raheem Sterling are supported by Dele Alli and Jesse Lindgard, with Jordan Henderson the only defensive-minded midfielder.

1. Jordan Pickford

5. John Stones

6. Harry Maguire

2. Kyle Walker

18. Ashley Young

12. Kieran Trippier

8. Jordan Henderson

20. Dele Alli

7. Jesse Lingard

10. Raheem Sterling

9. Harry Kane

Tunisia's Starting Lineup

22. Mouez Hassen

4. Yassine Meriah

2. Syam Ben Youssef

12. Ali Maâloul

11. Dylan Bronn

13. Ferjani Sassi

17. Ellyes Skhiri

9. Anice Badri

8. Fakhreddine Ben Youssef

23. Naïm Sliti

10. Wahbi Khazri

Some Pregame Reading

• Our soccer columnist Rory Smith talked to Tottenham star Dele Alli to figure out why this England team is ... different. Why it feels so ... happy?

• Raheem Sterling has been a frequent target of Fleet Street outrage ever since he burst onto the scene six years ago, with the latest furor over a tattoo with a gun. While some see an entitled young player, many others wonder if Sterling would be so heavily criticized if he were white.

Continue reading the main story

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