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Gomes is the runaway success of Carsley era but Palmer is anonymous

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Gomes is the runaway success of Carsley era but Palmer is anonymous

ANGEL GOMES was the star of the show as England sealed a 3-1 win over Finland.

Lee Carsley‘s side put in a solid performance as they bounced back from the defeat to Greece.

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Angel Gomes shone against FinlandCredit: AP

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Jack Grealish opened the scoring after a brilliant pass from GomesCredit: Getty
Cole Palmer struggled in the match

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Cole Palmer struggled in the matchCredit: Getty

Grealish made his mark on the game in the first half by slotting home after being found by a brilliant through ball by Angel Gomes.

The Manchester City star marked the celebration with a touching gesture to Sasha Attwood just days after the birth of their child.

Trent Alexander-Arnold also impressed as he filled in at left-back and even bagged himself his first international goal with a brilliant free-kick.

Declan Rice also grabbed himself a goal as he wrapped up the result for England before Arttu Hoskonen grabbed a consolation for the hosts.

But it was Gomes who ran the show for the Three Lions with his composed performance in the midfield.

Cole Palmer, however, struggled on the other flank to create much for England before he was hooked off in the second half.

SunSports’ Tom Barclay has given his ratings for the Three Lions…

Dean Henderson – 6

Only his second cap after long-time No1 Jordan Pickford was dropped. Not a lot to do, but pretty assured when he was called into action, including a smart, first-half stop to repel a Benjamin Kallman strike – even if the Finn was later flagged offside. Could do little to prevent Finland‘s goal.

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Kyle Walker – 6

After the calamity against Greece, it was no surprise to see Lee Carsley turn to his most experienced defender. Now just nine caps shy of a century, Walker was solid. Could have had an assist late on but his cushioned down header was poor.

John Stones – 6

England’s more conventional system meant the defence was far less exposed – though Carsley’s attacking approach did still see the Finns create chances. Stones made a good early block to deny Kallman after Angel Gomes gave the ball away.

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Trent Alexander-Arnold scored a stunning free-kick

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Trent Alexander-Arnold scored a stunning free-kickCredit: Getty

Marc Guehi – 6

Our best defender in the Euros group stages, Guehi was back in here with Levi Colwill dropping out. Pretty assured for a player who by his own admission has not started the season particularly well for his club.

Trent Alexander-Arnold – 7

We saw him in midfield at the Euros, and here the Liverpool right-back was shunted to left-back. Looked vulnerable defensively at times but who cares when he produces such quality on the ball – epitomised by his terrific free-kick to kill off this game.

Angel Gomes – 8

The big success story of the Carsley era, however long it lasts, has been bringing Gomes into the fold. He created Jack Grealish’s opener with a beautiful, flicked-pass round the corner and was excellent in possession – barring one sloppy early pass.

Declan Rice – 7

Declan Rice bagged England's third

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Declan Rice bagged England’s thirdCredit: Getty

Looked far more comfortable with Gomes playing in behind him, as opposed to the one-man defensive operation he was forced to put up against the Greeks. Looked proud as punch after stroking home England’s third from Watkins’ cross.

Cole Palmer – 5

Played in a more familiar wide right position compared to his central-midfield experiment against Greece. Yet it reduced him to a peripheral figure, adding more questions than answers as to where best to deploy him, Jude Bellingham and Phil Foden.

Jude Bellingham – 6

The Real Madrid superstar played off Harry Kane and had the occasional, exciting link-up with Grealish, but this was not one of his more memorable games overall.

Jack Grealish – 8

No doubt will be hoping Carsley does get the job full-time as his fellow Brummie seems to appreciate his talents. His composed finish was his second goal in three games under Carsley – doubling his overall haul from 39 caps.

Harry Kane – 6

Harry Kane made his 101st appearance for England

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Harry Kane made his 101st appearance for EnglandCredit: Getty

Cap 101 for the captain but not one he will remember particularly fondly. He offered the presence the team lacked against Greece when they played with no striker, but did not get much of a sniff in front of goal.

Subs

Noni Madueke (for Palmer, 69): 7

This game was made for him to make an impact off the bench and he almost teed up Watkins after one fine run but the Finns cleared.

Ollie Watkins (for Kane, 69): 7

Low cross for Rice’s third was right on the money.

Rico Lewis (for Gomes, 80): 6

Slotted in at centre midfield when coming on and looked busy.

Phil Foden (for Bellingham, 80): 5

Embraced the post ruefully after Madueke opted to shoot instead of crossing to him for a tap-in seconds after Finland’s goal. Was marking Arttu Hoskonen when the Finn headed home a consolatio.

Conor Gallagher (for Rice, 89): 6

His first appearance under Carsley but too late to make an impact.

Lee Carsley: 7

His tactical gamble backfired against Greece but he held his hands up and went more conventional here.

It paid off as England were relatively comfortable – although his teams have looked defensively vulnerable at times in all four of his games and this was no different.

But the three best players, Gomes, Grealish and Alexander-Arnold, were all given starring roles by Carsley when used sparingly or not at all by predecessor Gareth Southgate – and for that, the interim boss should take credit.

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Source link – thesun.co.uk

Tags: England, Section: Sport:Football, UEFA Nations League

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