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England v Panama
2018 World Cup
England v Panama (2018 World Cup)
FIFA Report
BBC Report
Event2018 FIFA World Cup
Date24 June 2018
VenueNizhny Novgorod Stadium, Nizhny Novgorod
Player of the MatchHarry Kane (England)
RefereeGehad Grisha (Egypt)
Attendance43,319
Weather32 °C (89 °F)
England - Tunisia
Panama - Belgium
England - Belgium
Panama - Tunisia

England v Panama was a match which took place at the Nizhny Novgorod Stadium on Sunday 24 June 2018.

Preview and teams's preparation[]

Midfielder Dele Alli returned to training with England, but is likely to miss Sunday's World Cup Group G game against Panama.

The Tottenham player, 22, suffered a thigh injury during Monday's 2-1 win over Tunisia.

Pictures of assistant manager Steve Holland's training notes seemed to indicate Ruben Loftus-Cheek would replace him in England's starting XI.

Alli has trained alone for the past three days and manager Gareth Southgate said the player was "unlikely" to be fit for England's second group game.

He started training with the main group on Saturday but was withdrawn after warm-ups to work individually.

Harry Kane's last-minute intervention got England off to a flying start and gave them a win in their opening game of a major tournament for the first time since the 2006 World Cup, when they beat Paraguay. At times against Tunisia it wasn't pretty, or perfect, but with a bit more luck, composure and favourable decisions they would have won with ease.

The Panamanians played to type in their opening game with Belgium. Los Canaleros (The Canal Men) were aggressive, robust, but ultimately hugely outclassed. The Belgians knew they had been in a game, though, and complained afterwards about some of the tackles that were flying in.

"I don't know what people are complaining about," captain Roman Torres said. "Football is like that - you always have to impose yourself, you have to mark out your territory."

Their coach Hernan Dario Gomez was in charge of Colombia when they lost 2-0 to England at France 1998. His opposite number in Nizhny Novgorod on Sunday, Gareth Southgate, was on the bench.

Head to head[]

This will be the first meeting between England and Panama.

Panama are the 38th different nation England have faced at a World Cup.

England have only lost their first meeting against a nation at the World Cup in five of their previous 37 matches (v USA, Spain, Uruguay, Hungary and Italy).

Match[]

England recorded their biggest win at a World Cup to overwhelm Panama and secure a place in the last 16 before their final Group G game with Belgium.

Harry Kane played a captain's role once more with a hat-trick to become the tournament's leading scorer, as England built on their opening victory against Tunisia with an impressive show of ruthlessness and quality.

John Stones opened the scoring with an early header before Kane added the second with a thunderous penalty after Jesse Lingard had been fouled.

Lingard added the third in the 36th minute with a brilliant curling effort from 25 yards and, as Panama crumbled, Stones crowned a slick set-piece routine by heading his second and Kane made it 5-0 before half-time with another penalty after he was wrestled to the ground.

Kane completed his treble with a fortunate deflection from Ruben Loftus-Cheek's shot after the break, before Panama's noisy supporters were able to celebrate their first goal at a World Cup through Felipe Baloy.

The margin of victory for England topped 3-0 wins over Poland and Paraguay in Mexico in 1986, and against Denmark in 2002.

England top Group G as they have fewer yellow cards than Belgium. If they draw the final game it will go down to disciplinary records to decide who finishes first - and if that is level lots will be drawn.

England's opening win over Tunisia contained one serious flaw that needed correcting - namely a lack of ruthlessness and clinical edge in front of goal.

As Panama were totally dismantled, the failing was addressed and then some as a place in the last-16 stage was secured in quick-fire fashion.

Strangely, England had actually made a subdued and sloppy start before Stones powered in Kieran Trippier's corner to put them ahead. It was plain sailing from then on.

Southgate's side sparkled in Nizhny Novgorod, pace and movement mixed with flashes of individual brilliance such as Lingard's goal to reduce Panama to an ill-disciplined shambles.

When they get it right, England have the firepower to trouble any team, with captain Kane a spearhead approaching world class.

They also showed commendable first-half discipline to avoid getting involved in Panama's ham-fisted physical approach, simply letting the inevitable take its course in the hands of Egyptian referee Ghead Grisha, who was determined to punish penalty-area transgressions.

England inevitably eased off with the game and that place in the last 16 no longer in doubt, and of course greater tests lie ahead. But this was the sort of commanding performance that will do wonders for confidence as the World Cup reaches the knockout stage.

The piece of paper in assistant manager Steve Holland's hand that ended up not revealing England's starting XI was the main talking point from their Zelenogorsk training base this week.

There can be more talk from the training ground now - about England's hard work behind closed doors on set-pieces that has reaped a rich reward in Volgograd and now here in Nizhny Novgorod.

England's players have clearly been made aware of the potential of set-piece strength at this World Cup, particularly in the context of the video assistant referee (VAR) and the potential for physical defending to be punished.

It brought two goals from corners for Kane against Tunisia and another superb Tripper delivery led to Stones' first goal, Panama's defenders too interested in dragging Harry Maguire around than keeping an eye on the Manchester City defender.

The crowning glory, however, was Stones' second - another header that capped a perfectly worked routine that had almost brought a goal for Raheem Sterling first and was implemented after lengthy discussions between several England players.

Southgate's men are playing to their strengths and defences will find it hard to cope with the physical presence and threat the manager can employ.

World Cup debutants Panama stubbornly resisted Belgium until the early stages of the second half before slumping to a 3-0 defeat in their first game.

This Group G game was over as a contest once Stones gave England that early lead as Panama's ill-discipline and lack of organisation was brutally exposed.

However, they did score their first World Cup goal through Baloy to spark great celebrations from their supporters, who can at least return home with that treasured memory.

For England's part, they can only make the best of the opposition in front of them - and they delivered an outstanding result.

Details[]

24 June 2018
15:00 MSK (UTC+3)
England Flag of England 6–1 Flag of Panama Panama Nizhny Novgorod Stadium, Nizhny Novgorod
Attendance: 43,319
Referee: Gehad Grisha (Egypt)
Stones Goal 8'40'
Kane Goal 22' (Pen.)45+1' (Pen.)62'
Lingard Goal 36'
FIFA Report
BBC Report
Baloy Goal 78'
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England
Kit left arm thinwhiteborder
Kit left arm.svg
Kit body pana18h
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Kit right arm thinwhiteborder
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Panama
GK 01 Jordan Pickford
CB 02 Kyle Walker
CB 05 John Stones
CB 06 Harry Maguire
DM 08 Jordan Henderson
CM 21 Ruben Loftus-Cheek Booked
CM 07 Jesse Lingard Substituted off in the 63rd minute 63'
RM 12 Kieran Trippier Substituted off in the 70th minute 70'
LM 18 Ashley Young
CF 10 Raheem Sterling
CF 09 Harry Kane (c) Substituted off in the 63rd minute 63'
Substitutes:
DF 03 Danny Rose Substituted on in the 70th minute 70'
MF 04 Eric Dier
FW 11 Jamie Vardy Substituted on in the 63rd minute 63'
GK 13 Jack Butland
FW 14 Danny Welbeck
DF 15 Gary Cahill
DF 16 Phil Jones
DF 17 Fabian Delph Substituted on in the 63rd minute 63'
FW 19 Marcus Rashford
MF 20 Dele Alli
DF 22 Trent Alexander-Arnold
GK 23 Nick Pope
Manager:
Flag of England Gareth Southgate
England v Panama World Cup 2018
GK 1 Jaime Penedo
RB 2 Michael Amir Murillo Booked
CB 5 Román Torres (c)
CB 4 Fidel Escobar Booked
LB 15 Erick Davis
DM 6 Gabriel Gómez Substituted off in the 69th minute 69'
CM 11 Armando Cooper Booked
CM 20 Aníbal Godoy Substituted off in the 63rd minute 63'
RW 8 Édgar Bárcenas Substituted off in the 69th minute 69'
LW 21 José Luis Rodríguez
CF 7 Blas Pérez
Substitutes:
DF 03 Harold Cummings
FW 09 Gabriel Torres
FW 10 Ismael Díaz
GK 12 José Calderón
DF 13 Adolfo Machado
MF 14 Valentín Pimentel
FW 16 Abdiel Arroyo Substituted on in the 69th minute 69'
DF 17 Luis Ovalle
FW 18 Luis Tejada
MF 19 Ricardo Ávila Substituted on in the 63rd minute 63'
GK 22 Álex Rodríguez
DF 23 Felipe Baloy Substituted on in the 69th minute 69'
Manager:
Flag of Colombia Hernán Darío Gómez

Man of the Match:
Harry Kane (England)

Assistant referees:
Redouane Achik (Morocco)
Waleed Ahmed (Sudan)
Fourth official:
Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)
Fifth official:
Bertrand Brial (New Caledonia)
Video assistant referee:
Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Paweł Gil (Poland)
Sander van Roekel (Netherlands)
Mark Geiger (United States)

Group G Table[]

Team Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Notes
Belgium Belgium (A) 2 2 0 0 8 2 +6 6 Advance to knockout phase
England England (A) 2 2 0 0 8 2 +6 6
Flag of Tunisia Tunisia (E) 2 0 0 2 2 7 −5 0
Panama Panama (E) 2 0 0 2 1 9 −8 0

Overall England Panama
Goals scored 6 1
Total shots 11 8
Shots on target 7 2
Ball possession 59% 41%
Corner kicks 3 2
Fouls committed 13 13

See also[]

External links[]

England – 2018 FIFA World Cup Matches

Qualifying matches
Slovakia · Malta · Slovenia · Scotland · Lithuania · Scotland · Malta · Slovakia · Slovenia · Lithuania
Group Stage
Tunisia · Panama · Belgium
Knockout Stage
Colombia · Sweden · Croatia · Belgium

Panama – 2018 FIFA World Cup Matches

Group Stage
BelgiumEnglandTunisia


2018 FIFA World Cup Matches vte
14 June 2018 Russia v Saudi Arabia
15 June 2018 Egypt v UruguayMorocco v IranPortugal v Spain
16 June 2018 France v AustraliaArgentina v IcelandPeru v DenmarkCroatia v Nigeria
17 June 2018 Costa Rica v SerbiaGermany v MexicoBrazil v Switzerland
18 June 2018 Sweden v South KoreaBelgium v PanamaTunisia v England
19 June 2018 Colombia v JapanPoland v SenegalRussia v Egypt
20 June 2018 Uruguay v Saudi ArabiaPortugal v MoroccoIran v Spain
21 June 2018 Denmark v AustraliaFrance v PeruArgentina v Croatia
22 June 2018 Nigeria v IcelandBrazil v Costa RicaSerbia v Switzerland
23 June 2018 Belgium v TunisiaSouth Korea v MexicoGermany v Sweden
24 June 2018 England v PanamaJapan v SenegalPoland v Colombia
25 June 2018 Uruguay v RussiaSaudi Arabia v EgyptIran v PortugalSpain v Morocco
26 June 2018 Denmark v FranceAustralia v PeruNigeria v ArgentinaIceland v Croatia
27 June 2018 South Korea v GermanyMexico v SwedenSerbia v BrazilSwitzerland v Costa Rica
28 June 2018 Japan v PolandSenegal v ColombiaEngland v BelgiumPanama v Tunisia

30 June 2018 France v ArgentinaUruguay v Portugal
1 July 2018 Spain v RussiaCroatia v Denmark
2 July 2018 Brazil v MexicoBelgium v Japan
3 July 2018 Sweden v SwitzerlandColombia v England

6 July 2018 Uruguay v FranceBrazil v Belgium
7 July 2018 Sweden v EnglandRussia v Croatia

10 July 2018 France v Belgium
11 July 2018 Croatia v England

14 July 2018 Belgium v England

15 July 2018 France v Croatia
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