Here, we look at five things we learnt from Saturday's World Cup qualifier between England and Malta
Gareth Southgate's
reign as England interim manager started with a 2-0 victory over Malta
at Wembley. Here we look at five things we learnt from Saturday's World
Cup qualifier:
Southgate faces challenges
When
Daniel Sturridge put England ahead midway through the first half,
Gareth Southgate punched the air as if celebrating a last-minute winner
in a cup final.
It was a revealing response from a
man who harbours genuine ambitions of turning his temporary spell at
the England helm into a permanent position following his unexpected
chance to replace Sam Allardyce.
Yet Southgate,
who stepped up from coaching England's Under-21s following Allardyce's
embarrassing exit last week, will have finished his first match in
charge with mixed feelings after a largely lethargic England were jeered
in the closing stages.
On one hand, England
produced patches of entertaining play in the first half to carve open
opponents intent only on keeping the score down, but on the other, his
team completely lost their way in a dismal second half and the former Middlesbrough boss was unable to turn the tide with his tactics or substitutions.
With
few credible alternatives and expectations at an all-time low,
Southgate won't be ruled out yet, but he needs to deliver far more
dynamic displays in the remainder of his audition.
No revival from Rooney
Amid
the constant debate about the best way to accommodate Wayne Rooney, the
England captain was deployed as one of two deep-lying midfielders and
looked a fish out of water.
Rooney had been used in midfield by former Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal last season with minimal success, but his successor Jose Mourinho insists his best position is in attack.
However,
even up front Rooney had been so poor of late that Mourinho dropped the
30-year-old and his failure to dominate midfield against lowly Malta
will hardly convince his club manager to change his mind.
After
more than a decade as England's main man, Rooney is in danger of
becoming a peripheral figure in the twilight of his career.
Alli on the rise
In a nod to Delle Alli's vast potential, Southgate selected the Tottenham playmaker as England's creative lynchpin in the number 10 role behind striker Daniel Sturridge.
That Alli was chosen for the role instead of England captain Rooney was a major feather in the 20-year-old's cap.
Alli
was efficient rather than extravagant but he did enough to suggest he
should be given the chance to make the position his own, especially as
he demonstrated his eye for goal with a close-range finish in the 38th
minute.
Mixed return for Walcott
Theo Walcott was back in the England starting line-up for the first time in 12 months, but the Arsenal winger was unable to transfer his scintillating club form to the international stage.
Walcott
was left out of England's Euro 2016 squad and had made only three
international appearances in the last three years, but five goals for
Arsenal this term convinced Southgate to give him another chance.
Operating
on the right wing, Walcott found it hard to make an impact against
defensive Malta, yet his pace will be a potent counter-attacking weapon
in future matches against more adventurous opponents.
Sturridge fails to convince
Despite
scoring against only second tier Burton in the League Cup this season,
Liverpool striker Daniel Sturridge was given the task of leading
England's attack and responded by doing another spot of flat-track
bullying.
Facing one of the lowest ranked teams in
Europe, Sturridge put England ahead with a 29th minute header from
Jordan Henderson's cross.
Yet the 27-year-old also
missed two other good chances in the first half in an inconsistent
display typical of a career that has promised more than it has actually
delivered
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