'Our performance deserved better': Kane in pain as late penalty miss sees England crash out and France advance

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Usually, the penalty drama comes later than this. England are out and France march through to the semi-finals after Harry Kane’s late miss from the spot saw Les Bleus advance 2-1 at the Al-Bayt Stadium in Qatar.

The ongoing psychodrama that England experience from 12 yards out has historically tended to come after 120 minutes, but the crucial failure here dropped in the 84th, after a VAR-induced penalty gave Kane the opportunity to strike back after Olivier Giroud’s powerful header had given France a second-half lead.

He blasted over the bar, and the 2-1 scoreline would last to the end. Earlier, he had been successful, equalising Aurelien Tchouameni’s excellent opener from range, but few will remember that now.

“Our performance deserved better,” said England manager Gareth Southgate. “Goals are decisive, but I’ve just said to the players, I don’t think they could have given any more. I think they played really well against a top team.

“There are fine margins, things at both ends that have ended up deciding the game, but the way the players have progressed as a group through this tournament has been fantastic. In most of the big moments we were in the right place. We had more shots on goal. But it’s a game of fine margins.”

Kane himself said that he would have to pick himself up after a devastating miss.

“A World Cup is every four years, it’s not like we have another opportunity next year,” he said. “It’s a long time to wait, but as I say, I’m proud of the boys. We had a great camp, a great World Cup but it came down to a small detail – one I’ll take responsibility for.

“I’m not worried about the team and how it will affect them. I know we’ve got some great talent. “I’m sure it will hurt, not just for me but for everyone involved. But that’s football, that’s sport, you have to take it on the chin sometimes.”

France coach Didier Deschamps was proud of the dig that his side showed to overcome a strong England.

“England have a very, very good team,” said the coach, who won as captain in 1998. “We put up a good fight. I regret we gave them a penalty and then gave them another penalty.

“Credit to my team, we showed some very good things and can still be dangerous. We also have great quality, impressive mental strength and great experience.

“England have young players, as well as experience, who play at the top teams. It was always going to come down to small details and luckily tonight it went our way.”

This was a game replete with narratives that went well beyond the simple drama of a World Cup quarter final.

France, for their part, become the first reigning champions to make the semis since Brazil in 1998. They now face Morocco and will be the heaviest of heavy favourites and look a good shot to be the first nation to retain the trophy since Brazil in 1962.

“Few people expected to see Morocco in the semi-final,” said Deschamps. “They have surprised everyone and have deserved to be there. We very much respect our opponents and to get this far they have deserved it. No one can take that away from them. Let’s savour our victory tonight against a very good England team.”

The penalty face-off between Kane and Huge Lloris was the English captain versus his French counterpart, but also the Tottenham vice-captain taking against his club captain and great friend.

On top of that, had Kane scored, he would have overtaken Wayne Rooney as the highest goalscorer in the history of the national team, having already equalled the record earlier in the match.

The redemption of Giroud, cast aside twice by Premier League teams, was another powerful thread. His header was superb and worthy of winning any game.

The wider run of the game had seen the pair, two of the best at this tournament, fight to a standstill. England had nearly double the number of shots as France, but there was a feeling that such a game suited Didier Deschamps’ men perfectly. They are more than comfortable on the break.

Their star, Kylian Mbappe, had dominated the build-up, but did not dominate the game. Instead, Jude Bellingham, the great young hope of English football, and Antoine Griezmann were the best on ground.

England’s preoccupation with Mbappe was obvious early on, with right back Kyle Walker sticking to his man and being helped by teammates whenever the ball went near the PSG forward.

The first goal was perhaps a result of the over-compensation: Mbappe took the ball from his position on the left and dribbled inside, with a despairing tackle from Declan Rice unsuccessful though.

Though he ran out of space, the ball was recycled and the English defence never regained formation, allowing Tchouameni space from which he superbly picked out the bottom corner. There were claims that the ball had been initially won by a foul on Bukayo Saka, but England still allowed the ball to travel the length of the field and could have few complaints.

England responded well, finding their best spell of the match. Kane was denied low by Lloris, Luke Shaw had a free kick saved and, in the most controversial moment of the first half, Dayot Upamecano felled the England captain on the edge of the box. After a lengthy VAR check, nothing was forthcoming.

England could feel slightly aggrieved to be behind – they had perhaps enjoyed the better chances – and set about amending that after the break. Bellingham came close with a powerful shot over the bar, before their chance finally arrived via the referee.

There could be no doubt about this one: Saka was clearly fouled by Tchouameni and, from the spot, Kane finished comprehensively.

France nearly struck back immediately with Adrien Rabiot testing Jordan Pickford, but the better chances continued to fall for England. Harry Maguire should have scored from a free header, but nodded wide, and Saka had a superb chance that he put wide under pressure from Theo Hernandez.

Pickford then denied Giroud from a volley, but was powerless to stop his header after Griezmann put the ball on a plate for him. For Giroud, told that he was no longer suitable for the Premier League with both Chelsea and Arsenal, the catharsis was clear to see.

England were then gifted another massive opportunity. Mason Mount, on from the bench, was barged in the back by Hernandez with the ball well overhead in a seemingly innocuous situation. VAR, however, thought otherwise and ruled that the contact had been too severe. Kane, from the spot, fluffed his lines.

England threw attackers on the field in an attempt to influence proceedings. Raheem Sterling, back in Qatar after returning home to deal with a burglary in his house, proved threatening with several shimmies down the wing, but no clear chance followed.

As added time elapsed, Marcus Rashford was given a chance to repeat his free kick trick against Wales. He hit the roof of the net, and the game never restarted. France were through.

The Crowd Says:

2022-12-11T23:38:26+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


he misses 1 in 6 he is no Matt Le Tissier, or Maradona before the snort.

2022-12-11T19:35:45+00:00

Rugbynutter

Roar Rookie


Lived in England for 6 years so some affinity and hence disappointing England not progressed but if England football fan you are use to that disappointment. Actually wallaby supporter as well means really use to it.

2022-12-11T15:51:46+00:00

WMM

Guest


@brainstrust, yeah right, Mbappe is lazy, his performance had nothing to with Kyle Walker playing brilliantly and containing Mbappe. Thanks for your sharing your infinite wisdom on the beautiful game. Keep up the good work Pep !!!

2022-12-11T15:36:24+00:00

WMM

Guest


AA as much as I agree with most of your comment I disagree in regards to their youth development, England had more than enough quality on the pitch as well as the bench to win this World Cup. Bellingham, Saka, Mount, Grealish, Rashford, Foden and Rice all came through English academies as did their older colleagues, to have that much quality in a national side and say money on youth development is a waste of billions in England is a bit short sighted. As you know statistics can be twisted to suit the narrative one wants to portray when presenting a debate on youth development. You of all people also know that very few make it to the very top of the game in any country let alone the most competitive and money driven league in the world. I think most observers would agree It was team selection and timing of substitutes from a defensive pragmatic coach that was ultimately their downfall, that and Kanes penalty miss lol It was only a few years ago that their u17s and u20 won’t their respective World Cups. In saying that I did enjoy watching them loose, I currently live in the UK and it would’ve been insufferable living here had they gone on to win it

2022-12-11T12:14:48+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


I think we’re still trying to aspire to the deep level of humility and lack of hubris so that so characterises Aussie sport.

2022-12-11T10:03:06+00:00

Will

Guest


I feel sorry for him, even the great players have missed penalties in the past such as Baggio in 1994 and Platini in 1986. Im sure he will bounce back for he's club with Spurs, great player. England were great and looked the better team but France can hurt anyone even when they looked under pressure.

2022-12-11T09:19:09+00:00

Nathan Absalom

Roar Guru


It was very close, in my opinion happy to be given either way. More to the point, France gave the ref ample opportunities to take the game away from them. The two penalties were both stupid challenges, as was the one on Kane whether or not it was in the box. The foul in the lead up to the goal was a silly challenge from behind that almost always gets blown for a foul, and that too would have been a free kick in a dangerous position. Then there were several other instances of players getting shirts pulled in the box or a leaving the leg out to challenge in the box, would have been diabolical with a pedantic ref. I just think that the French were very ill-disciplined at the back, and if they continue like that they'll inevitably concede too many soft goals for their very good attack to peg back.

2022-12-11T06:59:59+00:00

Coastyboi

Guest


Croatia? Sydney United 58 “fans” agree. They were very charming during the Australia Cup.

2022-12-11T05:34:46+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


Yes, and the other main point is that they are team-mates at Tottenham, and the goalkeeper knew his penalties too well. Would've been wise, IMO, to pass it on to someone else.

2022-12-11T04:59:56+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


Kane is considered by many as one of the best penalty takers in the world. He struck the first penalty with conviction, slamming it into the back of the net. He’s the Captain. Apart from hindsight, please give me one good reason why what you said makes a modicum of sense. He had the courage to take the penalty. He missed it. That’s football.

2022-12-11T04:28:21+00:00

Temujin

Guest


Yeah, fair point

2022-12-11T04:07:53+00:00

Aiden

Guest


I agree. Largely due to the romance of the GOAT getting what he deserves* * untrue … I have $150 riding on Argentina

2022-12-11T03:08:51+00:00

System of a Downey Jr

Roar Rookie


It was an entertaining game to watch as a neutral. France dominated the first 20 minutes. The goal from Tchouaméni was world class, and difficult to blame any of the English defenders for that. Similarly Greizman's cross for Giroud was perfection. Two brilliant moments, that England never matched. Bellingham's shot was good and Maguire's header close. Saka played very well, Mbappe was kept quiet by his standards, but I think people saying he was outplayed by Walker need to look at the number of times Mbappe outpaced him, he constantly drew two or three defenders down that left side. France's wide defenders are fragile and both the penalties were mind bending in their stupidity (similar to Argentina's awful concession of the free kick at the end of their game against Netherlands). Many will argue that England were the better team, if that's the case, then they bottled it. That's what a superior side losing to a lesser one usually means doesn't it? Kane's miss was singularly down to folding under pressure. It happens to the best players, there's not shame in it. But it was an opportunity to draw level, not win the game. They still had ET and possibly penalties to navigate. Kane is one of the best penalty takers in the world. All these people saying he should have handed over the penalty to another player is madness. Can you imagine if that had happened and that person had missed?! Southgate and Kane would have been absolutely crucified. I thought Harry Kane was a little anonymous in the box, but he actually did quite a good job in the second half of setting up other players. I think Southgate should have kept Saka on and brought Grealish on a lot earlier. Grealish is one of the most fouled players in the EPL and the sloppy way France were defending he would have definitely drawn a few free kicks if not a penalty. It's another missed opportunity for England. They have a good chance at the next Euros with largely the same squad, but I think they should be brave and get another coach. Southgate has been better in this World Cup than the last two tournaments, but this crop of players is special and with a tactically more adventurous coach they could rip through some teams and perhaps convert those moments like Kane's missed penalty. Before the tournament began I said Argentina would win. But to be honest, they haven't impressed in any game. I'd love to see a Croatia - Morocco final. Overall I think Morocco have a very good chance against a shaky French defence, which is their biggest weakness.

2022-12-11T03:06:41+00:00

Loosey

Roar Rookie


Your Schadenfreude is ugly.

2022-12-11T02:43:24+00:00

Al

Guest


It was a clear foul and should have been a free kick then. Looked inside the box to me on every reply I've seen.

AUTHOR

2022-12-11T02:35:10+00:00

Mike Meehall Wood

Editor


Was ruled outside the box, VAR might think it's a foul but can't intervene if not a pen.

2022-12-11T02:31:17+00:00

Al

Guest


Not sure how that's not a foul and penalty on Kane in the 25th minute.

2022-12-11T01:44:49+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


True. But it wouldn't be viewed that way, esp if the other person missed.

2022-12-11T01:42:18+00:00

Atlas

Roar Rookie


The best are the 'deserved' claims, nothing like a sense of entitlement from the superior race. Meanwhile, back in '66 ...

2022-12-11T01:36:41+00:00

Nathan Absalom

Roar Guru


Think France got away with one there, a little too cynical at the back for my liking.

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