The Southampton striker came off the bench to net the
deciding goal with his first touch of international football, after the
visitors surrendered their lead on two occasions.
England twice came from behind to beat Scotland 3-2 at
Wembley on Wednesday night, with debutant Rickie Lambert heading the winning
goal.
The Southampton forward headed home a corner with his
first touch of the ball to hand the hosts victory in the first meeting between
the bitter rivals in 14 years.
James Morrison and Kenny Miller had twice given the Scots
the lead earlier in the match, only for Theo Walcott and Danny Welbeck to
cancel out the advantage on each occasion.
Lambert's goal provided a fitting end to a fabulous
contest, which saw England avenge their 1999 defeat to the Scots at Wembley.
Roy Hodgson named a strong side for the encounter, making
the most of a rare opportunity to field Jack Wilshere alongside Steven Gerrard
in midfield while Wayne Rooney ended all doubts about his injury status by
taking a place up front.
Meanwhile, Scotland boss Gordon Strachan looked to the
experienced Miller to lead the line, with the fit-again Scott Brown also
included in central midfield for a match where the Celtic man's oft-referenced
battling qualities would be required.
The game certainly started in a confrontational manner,
with the booing of national anthems setting the scene for some feisty early
tackles in an intense opening.
England eventually carved out the first real chance among
the melee, though Rooney could only scuff Leighton Baines' cross from the left
beyond the far post.
Scotland made them pay for that miss with just 11 minutes
on the clock, as Morrison's well-hit strike from the edge of the box squirmed
underneath Hart's poor attempted save to send the visiting fans into raptures.
Predictably, that blow did little to settle England
nerves, and Hodgson's side struggled to cope with the physicality of their
opposition's midfield and the speed of their counter-attacks in the immediate
aftermath.
It took until the 26th minute for the hosts to provide
the home fans with something to cheer, as Tom Cleverley went close following a
delightful lay-off inside the box from Rooney.
And just three minutes later, they were level.
Walcott darted in from the right to latch onto a
well-weighted Cleverley throughball and deceived Steven Whittaker, before
squeezing the ball in left footed at the near post to restore parity.
England were much improved after their equaliser, and
they were only denied a second goal shortly before the break by an incorrect
decision from the assistant referee.
Rooney was the unlucky recipient of the officials'
attentions, with the Manchester United striker wrongly flagged offside after
collecting a Gerrard pass in the box on his chest and controlling the ball to
fire home.
Wilshere was the only man to depart at half-time, as the
Arsenal midfielder made way for Frank Lampard with his troubling injury record
clearly in mind, but there was little time for England to adjust to the
tactical consequences of that switch before they found themselves behind for a
second time.
Miller did brilliantly to hold the ball up on the edge of
the box before turning a hapless Gary Cahill to smash home on his left foot,
much to the dismay of the shell-shocked hosts.
But, unlike in the first half, it did not take long for
England to muster a reply.
Just two minutes after Allan McGregor produced a
brilliant save to keep out Gerrard's free-kick, the England captain picked out
Welbeck with another pin-point set-piece delivery which the Manchester United
forward gratefully headed in.
A flurry of substitutions from both sides, which saw
Lambert handed his debut, followed - and the striker soon had his dream moment.
The 31-year-old rose highest to meet a Baines corner from
the left and directed the ball brilliantly home with his head to put the hosts
ahead for the first time in the match in the 70th minute.
Chances were at a premium for the remainder of the game,
but Lambert had one last opportunity to double his account in the dying
moments.
However, the striker could only hit the post from close
range following a cross from the right, though it is unlikely the miss will
play on his mind much after a near-perfect debut.
0 comments:
Post a Comment