It's coming home, or it's coming Rome: Controversy as England reach Euro final v Italy

By Nils Bastek / Wire

A penalty rebound converted by Harry Kane gave England a deserved 2-1 win over Denmark in their Euro 2020 semi-final to set up a home showpiece against Italy on Monday (AEST).

Kane saw his 104th-minute penalty – controversially not overturned by video review despite Raheem Sterling going down under minimal contact from Joakim Maehle – saved by Kasper Schmeichel but made no mistake with his second attempt.

The decision divided the football world but was enough to see England end a 55-year wait to reach a major final, and end decades of hurt. One more win will end the same drought since their one and only trophy, the 1966 World Cup – also lifted at Wembley.

Denmark’s fairytale run since the collapse of Christen Eriksen with cardiac arrest in their opening game ended despite Mikkel Damsgaard’s brilliant free kick giving them a 30th-minute lead.

But Simon Kjaer’s own goal levelled matters before the break and with England dominant, the winner was a matter of time in coming even if Denmark survived the initial 90 minutes.

The vast majority of the 65,000 crowd inside Wembley – the biggest attendance at a UK sporting event since the coronavirus pandemic began – could not hide their delight at seeing England continue their progress which was fully merited despite the disputed nature of the winning goal.

The delirious fans sang the now well-worn song claiming “football’s coming home”, to the birthplace of the game. They will return to Wembley against an Italian lineup that beat Spain on penalties a day earlier.

The influential Sterling cut in from the right and tumbled but was well on the way to the ground even before he was grazed by Maehle.

Contact, however slight, was enough to convince the review the decision was not clearly mistaken and Kane took full advantage for his fourth goal of the tournament.

Denmark, playing on a wave of emotion since Eriksen’s collapse, started slowly but gradually turned matters. Young talent Damsgaard had already curled wide before finding the net with a beautiful free-kick over the wall.

It was England’s first goal conceded in the tournament and in a total of 691 minute – though by then keeper Jordan Pickford had narrowly broken England’s personal clean sheet record by six minutes of World Cup-winning goalkeeper Gordon Banks, who didn’t concede for 720 minutes in May-July 1966.

Sterling was denied an equaliser by a point-blank Schmeichel save but his presence awaiting Bukayo Saka’s cross forced Kjaer into a 39th-minute own goal.

It was the 11th own goal of the tournament with only nine having been recorded combined at every previous edition since 1960.

Denmark’s tiring legs conceded possession and territory to England, who did however struggle to create.

Defender Harry Maguire’s header was superbly clawed out by Schmeichel – whose father Peter was a Denmark hero in their Euro title win of 199 – and extra-time loomed.

Schmeichel denied captain Kane and substitute Jack Grealish while Sterling fired over from the edge of the box.

Eventually the pressure told though and England’s Wembley exploded with equal measure of joy and relief.

HOW THE FOOTBALL WORLD REACTED

“England were tested; they went a goal down but they showed their character,” Socceroos icon John Aloisi said on Optus Sport. “They showed what they’re made of. They were the better team over the 120 minutes.

“Sterling was outstanding from start to finish. He got stronger. And Kane, that is what you want your leader to do. He led from the front. He got a bit fortunate from the penalty but he was outstanding.”

Aloisi said he couldn’t see why the penalty stood.

“We looked at 10 replays and that is why they keep showing it because no one knows who gave away the penalty,” Aloisi said.

“Was there enough contact? I don’t think there was. Let’s not take away from Sterling being positive. But, in my opinion, it wasn’t a penalty.”

Michael Bridges, also on Optus Sport, hailed England’s resolve after conceding to Daamsgard’s brilliant freekick.

“It was an unbelievable comeback (from England),” the former Premier League striker said.

“It is the first time England have gone behind in this tournament so far, so the resolve was there, they showed the intent, got the goal and then started to dominate.

“That was crucial, to get back before halftime.”

While England enjoyed some fortune, they’ve had plenty go against them in the past.

“It’s been a long time coming,” said former England striker Gary Lineker on the BBC.

“It’s finally happened. I was doubting I’d ever see it again in my lifetime at one point.

“The longer the game went on, the more England looked likely to score, even though you have those self-doubts.

“There was about two or three minutes at the end where England were passing it around and keeping the ball. They were singing “ole” at Wembley Stadium in the semi-final of a major tournament!

“I’ve been around, watched tournaments and played in tournaments over the years and so many things have gone wrong – the ‘Hand of God’, Frank Lampard’s goal, Chris Waddle hitting the inside of the post, it being a quarter of an inch away from Gazza’s studs.

“We have seen big injuries to big players prior to tournaments but in this one, England just seem to have had a bit of luck for once! You need that to win a tournament.”

Metro Scotland summed up the feeling for many fans outside of the UK, showing an image of Sterling going to ground with the headline They Think It’s Fall Over – a nod to the famous commentary of  Kenneth Wolstenholme at the end of England’s 1966 final victory when fans started to invade the pitch and he said: “They think it’s all over… it is now.”

 Sterling has a habit of going to ground easily, but that will barely be remembered in future years if England can get past a massive test against Italy.

That matchup will see the tricky Manchester City wide player and Kane taking on Italy’s defensive rocks Leonardo Bonucci and Giorgio Chiellini.

“Harry Kane needs to rest up, he has got Chiellini and Bonucci all night, he is the type of player they will fancy playing against, a physical contest,” said former England defender Gary Neville on ITV. “It will be a really tough test, you are not going to get an easy match in the final.

“Italy have grown into the tournament better than I thought they would. We have seen a lot over the years about possession football, but two teams who have been more methodical has made the final.

“England have been a good team, one goal conceded in six matches is outstanding, Southgate set his stall out at the start of this tournament. The only way we was going to get to a final was keeping clean sheets.”

England manager Gareth Southgate is blessed with some incredible attacking talent, but also showed a ruthless streak, replacing substitute Jack Grealish after the second goal to shore up his defence.

“You don’t achieve what Southgate has achieved in his career without having a tough streak, without being able to make big decisions,” said England legend Alan Shearer. “He has been a captain in every dressing room he has been in.

“He had to take off Jack Grealish today because it is clear he doesn’t trust Grealish defensively.

“That worked, because then Denmark couldn’t get the ball, England passed the ball. I lost count of the number of passes.”

 

The Crowd Says:

2021-07-13T04:50:07+00:00

Dangersphere 10

Roar Rookie


Pansies like yourself are the reason the sport has become the laughing stock it is today. You refuse to acknowledge the very real issues of simulation in the game that, over the last 2 decades, have gone from rarity to 5-6 times per game. People like you who continue to justify it and make excuses are the reason its perpetuated. I've played soccer most of my life so I think I understand the difference in physicality thank you. I'll repeat myself "Go watch a 1980’s WC match to see the standard of hardness that use to be the norm, and how far we’ve deviated from that." -if you think what we see today regarding "exaggeration" is justifiable, you're beyond delusional.

2021-07-10T02:11:00+00:00

chris

Guest


Your response verifies my point. Harden up? The reason footballers exaggerate a nudge or a nick on the ankles is to highlight to the ref that there was contact. The slightest (unfair contact) can cause a pass or shot to go astray. Hence the exaggeration. A bit like basketball where any touch is deemed a foul. You follow a game that does not have any subtleties and so your comments are useless. If you want to discuss football by all means do, but leave the "harden up" and "real men flopping about" for your AFL mates.

2021-07-09T07:21:24+00:00

Dangersphere 10

Roar Rookie


The whole point of VAR is to overturn soft calls like that. There was no way that was enough contact for him to flop to the ground like that, he's a fully grown man! I had hoped that with the video reviews and so called "harsher penalties for diving" we'd see the end of it years ago, but that never transpired. I think in football we've gotten so used to the incredible softness of the modern player, that we now just go along with it, review or no review. Controversy is seemingly intertwined with the sport now, and there seems to be no intention of changing that anytime soon. Go look at a 1970's-1990's match and compare it to today, the difference in physicality is honestly astonishing.

2021-07-09T07:17:26+00:00

Dangersphere 10

Roar Rookie


What are you 12? People are capable of following multiple sports :laughing: I follow both (+ tennis), but have been a football die hard for far longer. Hence why I've seen this unfortunate story unfold many times before... we can make all the excuses we want, the truth is in the vision right in front of us. Maybe a little AFL might be the tonic you people actually need, so you can harden up and stop normalising grown men dropping like flies at the first sign of contact. It's the reason I lost my passion for the sport in the first place. Far too much controversy and flopping around, not enough actual play or moments of quality. Go watch a 1980's WC match to see the standard of hardness that use to be the norm, and how far we've deviated from that. It's pathetic.

2021-07-09T06:40:35+00:00

Michael Fernandez

Roar Rookie


Well we've seen others do it for so long, we may as well join in

2021-07-09T06:39:38+00:00

Michael Fernandez

Roar Rookie


Every country cheats to some extent, mostly in team contact sports. It happens for and against every country. And yes, we would be bleating on about the unfairness if we're us, just as we did for Lampards "goal" against Germany which was more of a disgrace that this, a there was no doubt the goal had crossed the linek with inches to spare (no doubt other nations didn't feel the same sense of injustice then as they do for the Danes). So when the shoes on the other foot, the fans it benefits will accept it happily as "these decisions even themselves out". Fans from every country does this, not just England.

2021-07-09T03:02:26+00:00

Guppy

Guest


We can only assume the ref didn't give Kane a stonewall penalty earlier just to confuse everyone then

2021-07-09T02:54:31+00:00

Big Mig

Roar Rookie


Agree matth, but unfortunately it's a business, lots of competing (powerful) interests. Reality.

2021-07-09T01:49:32+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Everything is not a conspiracy.

2021-07-09T00:51:31+00:00

chris

Guest


But you follow AFL? No more needs to be said.

2021-07-09T00:49:04+00:00

chris

Guest


Ch 10 don't hate it anymore : ) Loving all the exposure they are giving to football and its personalities.

2021-07-09T00:47:39+00:00

chris

Guest


Rubbish

2021-07-08T13:25:59+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


In football, that is a feature of every major country. In most it is much worse than in England. Particularly, in places like Italy.

2021-07-08T13:23:27+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


'the English Media would be screaming ‘cheat’ and ‘diver’ if anyone else but as he’s English they describe it as a soft penalty!! Hypocrites!' Whereas, the Aussie media, globally famous for their fair-minded, balanced, Corinthian approach to international sport, would be calling for Australia to be removed from the tournament out of solidarity with the Danes.

2021-07-08T11:48:02+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


his work leading into it was very nice

2021-07-08T11:46:34+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


I'm more concerned about our domestic leaguer than I am the world game which thrives. We've got to be honest and outlaw simulation and ban divers if we want our game to become big in Aust

2021-07-08T10:43:05+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


Watched the highlights back so saw the penalty for the first time tonight. I don’t see all the fuss tbh – there is contact (it’s hip on hip) and the fast moving players goes down. They get waved away sometimes, they get given sometimes. If you take the “advantage goes to the attacking side” that’s a penalty. Looking at it, I’m wondering if the AR gave that because the refs not in a position to call that imo

2021-07-08T10:01:23+00:00

Abel Seaman

Guest


So that justifies cheating in your eyes???? Strange...

2021-07-08T10:00:35+00:00

Big Mig

Roar Rookie


Agree – should be a great but tight and tactical match, not too many errors – both sides have some exciting and experienced players. and have both have played some very good football during the tournament.

2021-07-08T09:56:18+00:00

Big Mig

Roar Rookie


I am anticipating a low scoring game given the strong defensive set ups of the Italians and the English it may be just 1 goal to decide the championship. For EVERYONE's sake let's hope it is not from a dubious penalty or bad refereeing decision. I don't think anyone wants that.

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