Followers

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

EURO 2012: Hodgson's men will get tougher

GRUELLING: Players survived the heat


Euro 2012
England’s Jordan Henderson (left) and France’s Franck Ribery fight for the ball in Donetsk on Monday. AP pic

DONETSK: ENGLAND manager Roy Hodgson  believes his side will emerge a stronger team after opening their Euro 2012  campaign with a gruelling 1-1 draw against France on Monday.   

Hodgson's team emerged with a valuable point from a Group D encounter  played in furnace like conditions at the Donbass Arena after Samir Nasri's  strike cancelled out Joleon Lescott's opener.

   England appeared to have suffered from the heat more than France, who  finished the game on top but were unable to find a winner.

   Hodgson believes the result will act as a springboard for a successful  first round campaign however, with England facing Sweden in Kiev on Friday  before taking on Ukraine in their last Group D match.

   "I hope this gives us a good platform. We'll get fitter as well -- match  fitter," Hodgson said.

   Quite a few of our players didn't play the last few games at the end of the  season and didn't come into this tournament with the same match fitness they  might have done.

   "The more we train and play, the fitter they'll become. It was tough in  those last 15 or 20 minutes.

   "It was fortunate I had some players to put on to give them a break. But Laurent (Blanc the France coach) will also say that both teams were tired. It  wasn't one-sided. The French were also feeling the effects of the heat."

   Hodgson meanwhile stressed that while his team would grow in confidence  they still had plenty of room for improvement after what was only the England  boss' third match in charge.

   "I hope we've established ourselves (as hard to beat), but I've had three  games," Hodgson said. "Am I satisfied with those three games, and have the players done what's asked of them? Then yes.

   "But let's wait and see. You don't become  a really good team in three matches and 10 training sessions.

   "The French have gone 22 games unbeaten and they've not done that overnight. It's been people playing together, getting to know each other's  games. The longer we play together, the better we'll become too."

    Steven Gerrard hailed England's defence as "unbreakable".

    The England captain led from the front with a tireless performance in sweltering conditions.

   "I thought we defended really well and were resolute. When we turned over  possession, we looked really dangerous so I'm satisfied," Gerrard said.

   "Considering we haven't been together so long, I think the lads have taken  the tactics on board really quickly.

   "We're happy with the point but it only becomes a good point if we go and  build on it now and try and we'll try to take the three points against Sweden." AFP

No comments:

Post a Comment