Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Ibrahimovic Steals Show for Sweden as England are Underwhelming




Picture: FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Sweden 4-2 England Swedbank Arena

Chris O'Keefe

Four goals from Zlatan Ibrahimovic, including three in the last 13 minutes of the game, condemned England to a deserved defeat and leaving English fans perhaps questioning their team’s long term prospects.

The Paris St Germain player was certainly the star of the show and his fourth goal warrants a visit to YouTube, but it may divert attention away from the poor overall performance in which the rare positives arguably came from some of the new England internationals.

Sweden dominated the first 20 minutes with Ibrahimovic showing why he should be considered amongst the very best attacking players in the world - constantly occupying the English defence and bringing the Swedish midfield into more threatening attacking positions.

He opening the scoring in the 20th minute with an instinctual goal after the ball rebounded off Gary Cahill into his path and, with a flick of his right foot, he slotted the ball in the top corner.

England should have equalised when Tom Cleverley failed to make sufficient contact with a sliding effort connecting with a cross cum shot from Glen Johnson and although England shaded possession in the first 30 minutes, they offered little else attacking product in open play beside.

Then a terrific cross field pass from 17-year-old debutant Raheem Sterling in the 35th minute finding Ashley Young with a strong attacking platform and the Manchester United winger duly picked out Danny Welbeck who diverted the ball past Sweden stopper Andreas Isaksson to equalise.

Suddenly the game appear to shift in the visitors direction and England were in front two minutes later as Steven Gerrard curled a free-kick into the box from the right side inviting Steven Caulker, himself earning his first cap, to score.

However, after the break and despite the introductions of debutants Carl Jenkinson and Leon Osman – who made a somewhat impressive cameo – the game was more fragmented and lacked sustained pressure from both teams.

Indeed, it was Ibrahimovic who seemed shake the game into life with some impressive attacking play, which England were unable to repel.

His finish on 77 minutes to level the game came from an exquisite chip from Anders Svensson which dissected England defence and, with a touch on his chest to control, the PSG forward rifled the ball past Joe Hart.

The England keeper may have been at fault for Ibrahimovic’s hat-trick goal from a fizzing low free-kick that nestled in Hart’s bottom left corner but he could be forgiven the speed of shot and the fact his weight was going in the opposite direction initially.

Ibrahimovic’s fourth goal was a tenacious bicycle kick with Hart out his goal and his back four scrambling to regroup, the flight of the ball took it over the despairing Jenkinson.

England manager Roy Hodgson may point to that goal and his performance as the key to defeat but his side seem to approach games against the competitive nations willing to cede play to them and grasp at any attacking opportunities that come their way.

This meant they largely had fewer clear opportunities to hurt Sweden and take a stranglehold on the game – even at 2-1 ahead.

What Hodgson can glean from this night is that his debutants offer new options and most notably Raheem Sterling at 17, who will improve beyond his already considerable attacking talent.

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