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England were red hot - 1966 champions reach World Cup semis for the first time in 28 years

Published:Saturday | July 7, 2018 | 12:00 AM
England's Harry Maguire (second left) celebrates after scoring his team's opening goal during the quarterfinal match between Sweden and England at the 2018 World Cup in the Samara Arena, Russia yesterday. At left is John Stones while at right is captain Harry Kane (9).

SAMARA, Russia (AP):

England achieved something David Beckham's generation never managed: it reached the semi-finals of the World Cup.

Harry Maguire and Dele Alli scored with headers in a 2-0 win over Sweden yesterday, earning England's youthful team a match against Croatia for a place in the final on July 15.

"We looked composed," England captain Harry Kane said. "We looked like we controlled the game."

England's fairly muted celebrations reflected the routine nature of the victory over a hard-working Swedish side that had already gone further than expected in its first major tournament without Zlatan Ibrahimovic.

England's deep run also is a surprise. Not even the England side containing stars like Beckham, Steven Gerrard, and a young Wayne Rooney ever got this far at a major tournament.

The 1966 World Cup champions last reached the semi-finals in 1990, losing the first of a series of haunting penalty shoot-outs. In 2014, the team didn't even make it out of the group stage.

Yet the performances of Gareth Southgate's squad - the second youngest at the tournament - are being celebrated wildly back home. Even at Wimbledon, the home of lawn tennis, updates of England's goals were spread by fans watching or listening to the match on their cell phones.

"I know the fans here are enjoying it," Kane said. "The fans at home, I'm sure we'll see some videos tonight of them enjoying it."

The chant of "On our way, on our way to Moscow, on our way" came from England fans in one corner of the Samara Arena throughout the match, and the team's march to the Russian capital is being fuelled by goals from set pieces.

There was another against Sweden, with Maguire heading in a driven corner from Ashley Young in the 30th minute. It was England's eighth set-piece goal of their 11 in Russia, and the centre back's first in international football.

The standard of England's crossing has particularly stood out this tournament, and Alli added the second goal by meeting a far-post cross from midfielder Jesse Lingard with a powerful header in the 59th. At 22, Alli became the second-youngest scorer for England at a World Cup behind Michael Owen.

"We knew set plays would be key," Maguire said. "And also that little ball that Jesse sent in for Dele, that was great. We worked on that in practice."

It proved to be a match too far for the Swedes, who advanced further than they ever did with Ibrahimovic - the team's star for more than a decade - by being compact and hard to break down. That helped them win a two-leg playoff against Italy to get to the World Cup, top a group containing Germany, and then beat Switzerland in the round of 16.

They began solidly against England in a slow and sloppy start to the game that resembled a preseason friendly at times, only to be outdone by a goal Sweden isn't used to conceding.

"Up until that corner, I felt that we had everything under control," Sweden coach Janne Andersson said. "I felt that we had the match in our hands."

Although Sweden rallied in the final 30 minutes, forcing two good saves from goalkeeper Jordan Pickford, England comfortably held on for their first shutout of the tournament.

 

Semi-finals

 

- Tuesday

1 p.m.: France v Belgium

- Wednesday

1 p.m.: Croatia v England