Southgate booed as disjointed England relegated with defeat in Italy

England were relegated to League B of the Nations League with a worrying 1-0 defeat away to Italy which ramps up concerns about the prospects of Gareth Southgate’s side two months out from the World Cup.

The England boss will be left in no doubt about the feelings of the fans as he was again booed after the game, just as he was following the defeat to Hungary in June. His side are now without a win in five – their worst run in eight years – and have major problems to address before they go to Qatar.

After an uninspiring first half in Milan, where England’s 3-4-3 system and Bukayo Saka’s role at left wing-back didn’t look right, they were undone on 68 minutes when Napoli’s Giacomo Raspadori was allowed to bring down a long ball in the box and bend into the far corner after Kyle Walker stepped off.

Italy have been badly out of sorts since they beat England at Wembley last summer to win the Euros, failing to qualify for the World Cup, but they could have scored several more on Friday night. Gianluca Scamacca’s header was tipped onto the bar by Nick Pope early on after the striker out-jumped under-pressure Harry Maguire, and Giovanni Di Lorenzo slid in to shoot against a post in the final minutes.

It wasn’t just the Three Lions’ well-documented problems in defence on show here, though. Five games into this Nations League campaign England are yet to score from open play. San Marino are the only other side without a non-penalty goal in this edition of the competition.

A double save from Gianluigi Donnarumma to deny captain Harry Kane from a tight angle was close as they came to a breakthrough in Milan.

England’s goal drought

It is 22 years since England last went three consecutive internationals without a goal – November 2000.

Those chances came after Southgate belatedly switched to a back four but, from formation to personnel, the England boss appears to have plenty of questions to answer and dilemmas to solve if he is going to find a formula for this group to repeat or better their major tournament performances under him.

England's Jude Bellingham, right, controls the ball during the UEFA Nations League soccer match between Italy and England at the San Siro stadium, in Milan, Italy, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
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England’s Jude Bellingham impressed but couldn’t inspire a goal in Milan

Nineteen-year-old Jude Bellingham may have impressed and Phil Foden fleetingly showed glimpses of his skill but the warning signs from four poor Nations League displays in June have now gone up a level with Qatar fast approaching. A response against Germany at Wembley on Monday is now essential.

MILAN, ITALY - SEPTEMBER 23: during the UEFA Nations League League A Group 3 match between Italy and England at San Siro on September 23, 2022 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Chris Ricco - The FA/The FA via Getty Images )
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Eric Dier tries to clear up a defensive mis-understanding

In search of some solidity before the World Cup, Southgate stuck by his regular defensive leader Maguire in Milan but that move nearly backfired five minutes in when the struggling Man Utd centre-back was beaten in the air by Scamacca.

A tame header at the other end was at least a reminder of Maguire’s threat on the front foot but while he grew into the game his team-mates struggled to click in a 3-4-3 system which left them packed at the back but short in attack.

Player ratings

Italy: Donnarumma (7), Di Lorenzo (7), Bonucci (7), Acerbi (7), Toloi (7), Cristante (6), Jorginho (7), Dimarco (7), Raspadori (9), Scamacca (7), Barella (7).

Subs: Pobega (6), Gnonto (7), Gabbiadini (6), Frattesi (N/A)

England: Pope (7), Walker (6), Dier (7), Maguire (6), James (6), Rice (7), Bellingham (8), Saka (5), Foden (8), Sterling (5), Kane (6).

Subs: Grealish (5), Shaw (5)

Another key Southgate call – Saka at left wing-back – was also almost exposed in the first half, with the Arsenal man, more accustomed to playing right wing, caught out of position several times, leaving Maguire vulnerable.

A Reece James deflected drive and Kane blast over the bar was all the visitors had to show for their efforts in attack in the first half and while there was enthusiasm after the restart, with Raheem Sterling forcing Leonardo Bonucci into a yellow-card foul on the edge of the box before Kane was shutdown by the veteran defender, there was still no cut-through or creativity in the final third.

England's coach Gareth Southgate looks out during the UEFA Nations League soccer match between Italy and England at the San Siro stadium, in Milan, Italy, Friday, Sept. 23, 2022. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
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The pressure is ramping up on England boss Gareth Southgate

Rafael Toloi turning a Kane cross past his own post was one of the better moments England managed to carve out but at the other end Walker’s generosity to Raspodori – who brought the ball down and finished well – left the visitors in trouble.

With Southgate throwing on Jack Grealish and switching formation, the game opened up but while Kane was twice denied by Donnarumma the better chances came Italy’s way, with Manolo Gabbiadini denied by Pope and Di Lorenzo denied by the upright.

As Southgate went to applaud the travelling England support there were audible boos – and another bad result and performance against Germany at Wembley on Monday would now be extremely damaging.

What’s next?

England host Germany at Wembley on Monday at 7.45pm in their final Nations League game of their Group A3 campaign. It will also be the Three Lions’ last competitive match before this winter’s World Cup.

Gareth Southgate is expected to name his 26-man squad for Qatar 2022 on October 20, which will be well before FIFA’s deadline of Sunday November 13.

England face Iran in their opening World Cup group game on November 21 at the Khalifa International Stadium, Doha.

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