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France and England in Euro stalemate

Joleon Lescott scoring for England against France

Joleon Lescott scoring for England against France

France came from behind to force a 1-1 draw with England today as a cagey Euro 2012 opener between the Group D rivals ended in a stalemate.

Manchester City defender Joleon Lescott headed England into a 30th-minute lead to leave Roy Hodgson's men dreaming of the perfect start to their campaign on a sweltering night at the Donbass Arena.

But Lescott's City team-mate Samir Nasri struck back with a 39th-minute equaliser, lashing a low shot from outside the area to give France a share of the points and extend Les Bleus unbeaten run to 22 games.

England coach Roy Hodgson was more than happy to have shared the spoils.

"I think we played well as we we played against a tough team," said Hodgson.

"We were very disciplined and to finish 1-1 and ask the questions of them we did we've got to be happy.

"I'm not frustrated at giving away the equaliser as we kept them at bay really. In fact we had our own chances."

His French counterpart Laurent Blanc believed it was the correct outcome.

"It is a worthy draw for both sides," he said.

"It is not that bad a result. We should have scored the second even if we had only a few opportunities in the second-half."

A cagey opening period saw both sides begin cautiously, and it was 11 minutes before anyone got a shot on goal with Nasri's low shot flying just wide of Manchester City team-mate Joe Hart's post.

Yet England seemed far from cowed by the occasion, and should have taken the lead four minutes later after Ashley Young slipped in James Milner with a lovely through pass that caught France square.

The Manchester City midfielder rounded Hugo Lloris with his first touch but then failed to find the net from a tight angle.

Moments later Yohan Cabaye tested Hart from long range, the City keeper diving to his left to stop his low strike.

Meanwhile Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, a surprise starter on the left side of midfield ahead of Stewart Downing, enjoyed a confident start, dispossessing Adil Rami early on and producing one memorable jinking run.

England's bright opening yielded its reward on 30 minutes with the breakthrough coming from a setpiece.

Captain Steven Gerrard swung in a pinpoint free-kick from the right flank and Lescott took advantage of acres of space afforded him by Alou Diarra to head past Lloris from close range.

Yet the England goal was the cue for a period of dominance from France which lasted until the half-time whistle.

Diarra almost made immediate amends with a header of his own, Hart parrying high after the defensive midfielder met Nasri's pinpoint freekick.

In the ensuing scramble Franck Ribery headed back across goal but Diarra's second effort went wide.

A French equaliser seemed on though and it arrived through Nasri six minutes from half-time, the forward taking advantage of an English side standing too deep to squeeze a ferocious shot just inside Hart's post.

England seemed content to slow the pace of the game in the second half, and passed confidently without ever threatening France.

Gradually however France's superior technique began to tell, and England spent long periods of the closing minutes on the back foot.

Real Madrid's Karim Benzema, well shackled by Scott Parker for much of the match, forced a fine low save from Hart on 65 minutes.

Benzema, who had drawn a booking for Ashley Young on 71 minutes then went close again, curling a shot goalwards which Gerrard headed behind for a corner.

But though England seemed to be tiring rapidly in the final stages, France were unable to find the winner as the match wound down, with Benzema's late strike parried by Hart.

England will face Sweden in Kiev on Friday in their second game while France face Sweden in Donetsk.

FRANCE 1

Nasri 39

ENGLAND 1

Lescott 30

France: Hugo Lloris (capt) - Matthieu Debuchy, Adil Rami, Philippe Mexes, Patrice Evra - Samir Nasri, Yohan Cabaye (Hatem Ben Arfa 84), Alou Diarra, Florent Malouda (Marvin Martin 85), Franck Ribery - Karim Benzema.

England: Joe Hart - Glen Johnson, John Terry, Joleon Lescott, Ashley Cole - James Milner, Steven Gerrard (cap), Ashley Young, Scott Parker (Jordan Henderson 78), Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (Jermain Defoe 77) - Daniel Welbeck (Theo Walcott 90).

Referee: Nicola Rizzoli (ITA)

Attendance: 50,000



 

 

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Joe Bugelli

Jun 13th 2012, 14:45

@ Kyle Podesta : best players in the World ?!?! What would you say then if Xavi, Messi, Iniesta, Schweinsteiger, Pirlo, Buffon, Ronaldo, Aguero etc etc happened to be English. Mind you, I have not the least difficulty saying that Rooney and Gerrard are World class players. Most footballers go to play in England because at the moment that's where there is BIG MONEY ( coming from who knows where !! ). One day they used to go to ITALIA, another day in Spain and to morrow , who knows maybe Russia, France, Dubai. Mr Podesta, you got your satisfaction, enjoying Queen Elizabeth celebrating her 60 years of reign. 60 YEARS OF RAIN would have been more precise. I can understand. So far, your England celebrated a WORLD CUP / EURO victory only ONCE ( and EVERYBODY knows how ) ! Just one honour more than Tuvalu, Palau, Andorra, Togo, Comino etc Keep enjoying your Queen !

Kyle Podesta

Jun 14th 2012, 14:06

No sense in your comment, Xavi is Spanish, Messi is Argentinian, Schweinsteiger is German ,Pirlo Italian and Ronaldo Portugese so 4 you to group up these players from all around the world, like they are all together and try 2 say What if they were English is similar to what a child would do..well done Mr.Bugelli

P. Ciantar

Jun 14th 2012, 21:28

@ Joe Bugelli than with your arguments Italy drew against Croatia the same as Malta did, then Malta is equal to Italy........ veru hmerijiet. Proud to be Maltese and proud to support England win or loose

N. Pace Debono

Jun 12th 2012, 10:58

'France kept their head up and went straight for the kill.' Yes its true...they tried, but they didn't "kill". Actually England scored first! ;) The score was 1-1 at the end so basically although France at the moment have a superior team England walked out proud! If i were you i would be disappointed at just a draw against England whom as YOU say their all might days are now over! :) And if Sweden beat England it also means that Sweden would have done better then your beloved France! Cheers mate! Come on ENGLAND!

Kyle Podesta

Jun 12th 2012, 12:53

Went in for the kill??? You were losing the game? Of course singing God save the Queen helped..England is a proud nation...a great nation and it lifts the players up..Its Not only us who say God save the Queen...1.5 billion watched the Queens Jubilee just to show you how many people admire the Queen...more than you can imagine Mr.Buttigieg, Come on ENGLAND!

P. Ciantar

Jun 12th 2012, 20:27

Mr Storace, may I remind you that this type of football was the praise of the italians for several several several years

Steven Cutajar

Jun 12th 2012, 09:41

It was a very tactical game and none of the 2 teams played with the intention to win, but instead they played with the fear of losing. Very boring game indeed...

A Cardona

Jun 12th 2012, 10:45

could not agree more. Watching paint drying could have been more exciting.

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