Soccer-England surge past Senegal 3-0 to set up France quarter-final

England took a long time to impose themselves on the African champions, a team they had never faced before, and survived a couple of scares before two goals late in the first half changed the feel of the night and it was no contest after the break. The impressive victory extended England's all-time unbeaten run against African teams to 21 games, including eight in World Cups.


Reuters | Updated: 05-12-2022 03:06 IST | Created: 05-12-2022 03:02 IST
Soccer-England surge past Senegal 3-0 to set up France quarter-final

England overcame a pedestrian start to surge to a comfortable 3-0 victory over Senegal on Sunday as goals by Jordan Henderson, Harry Kane and Bukayo Saka swept them into a mouth-watering World Cup quarter-final clash with holders France. England took a long time to impose themselves on the African champions, a team they had never faced before, and survived a couple of scares before two goals late in the first half changed the feel of the night and it was no contest after the break.

The impressive victory extended England's all-time unbeaten run against African teams to 21 games, including eight in World Cups. Morocco, who face Spain on Tuesday, are now the only African team left in the tournament. "Really tough. Knockout games are never easy," said man of the match Kane. "We've shown great maturity through the tournament... 3-0 here against a really good side. Mentality was top from the beginning and we took our chances when they came.

"We feel good, we've got good players getting forward and we're solid at the back. A really good day for us." It was always going to be a stiff challenge for Senegal in the absence of the suspended Idrissa Gueye and injured fellow midfielder Cheikhou Kouyate.

With Sadio Mane missing the tournament through injury the Africans also lacked a cutting edge to trouble an England defence that kept a third successive World Cup clean sheet for the first time in 20 years. Although it was eventually a convincing victory, England will need to have a look at how and why they took so long to impose themselves.

For most of the first half they were slow and static and a series of misplaced passes gifted Senegal chances. The best of them fell to Boulaye Dia and only the strong left arm of keeper Jordan Pickford prevented the Africans taking the lead. QUICK BREAK

England finally injected some pace after 38 minutes, breaking down the left through Phil Foden and Jude Bellingham, who crossed for the late-arriving Henderson to stroke home the opener. Kane had an almost identical chance soon after and though he sidefooted over, his goal drought at this tournament came to an end in emphatic style in first-half stoppage time.

Bellingham again drove from his own box and fed Foden, who rolled the ball into the path of the captain to smash in an unstoppable shot and become England’s eighth scorer in Qatar. It also took Kane to within one goal of Wayne Rooney's national record of 53.

The goals knocked the stuffing out of Senegal and with England looking full of confidence after the break it no longer felt like a contest. Saka, recalled by coach Gareth Southgate in his only change from the win over Wales, cleverly lifted in the third after 57 minutes following a penetrating run and low cross by Foden.

It was England's 12th goal of the tournament, the most by any team in Qatar and matching their all-time record set four years ago when they went all the way to the semi-finals. From then on England were able to go through the motions and keep out of trouble as they have yet to receive a yellow card and seem to have avoided any major injuries going into the France showdown.

Their only setback seems to be the absence of Raheem Sterling, who was not available for selection on Sunday for what the FA said was a family issue. They know they will be unlikely to get away with a similarly slow start next Saturday against a French team who dispatched Poland 3-0 earlier on Sunday, but the holders will also be aware that their old rivals have the weapons to do real damage.

"We all want to play in the biggest games and no better game than playing France," said Foden. "On our best game we can create chances and score, were looking forward to what's going to be a big challenge."

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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