By the time Danny Ings scored with a spectacular overhead kick, everyone was in agreement: this had developed into a very good night for Gareth Southgate and another young England team.
Conor Coady had twice as many shots at goal in one match as he had in 156 appearances for Wolves in all competitions – and had scored with half of them. Dominic Calvert-Lewin had become the first Evertonian to score on his debut for England since Fred Pickering in 1964, and only the eighth in history. As that list also includes Dixie Dean and Tommy Lawton, it’s very reasonable company.
England managers hate the term meaningless friendly because, they will argue, every match is an important learning experience. Yet in an over-crowded season many had challenged the wisdom of this fixture, and not just club bosses with tired legs and vested interests.
For Southgate, however, this was valuable – and for the participants, too. Certainly, there have been few scorers as obviously delighted as Coady, whose celebration seemed to involve him hugging each team-mate individually. And yes, it’s still legal, in a covid secure environment.
Those deserving the biggest thanks were Jack Grealish and Kieran Trippier. Grealish for getting kicked with the same regularity he does for Aston Villa, resulting in the second-half free-kick. Trippier for delivering it so perfectly, a reminder of his peak with England at the 2018 World Cup, when there were few better dead ball experts in the game. It helped that Wales’ defence, in particular Chris Mepham, went to sleep, allowing the ball to drop for Coady on the half volley at the far post, finishing it so smartly it was possible to imagine he got into that position for Wolves all the time. Possible, but wrong.
England’s third came after 63 minutes, a corner from Kalvin Phillips met by Tyrone Mings, rising higher than anyone else in the area, and nodding it down to Ings, whose magnificent finish deserved a full house, not this echoing arena. A brilliant save from Wayne Hennessey denied him a second, after 82 minutes.
This was the least experienced England side since 1976 but they grew into the game. There will no doubt be many changes for the visit of Belgium on Sunday, but Southgate has superior knowledge, and this group are better for the experience. Grealish, for instance, was outstanding. It certainly wasn’t meaningless for him.
It was a match that raised many questions. Is there nobody in this England team that can carry a tune? Weren’t the Welsh supposed to be good at singing? And: how hard must Nick Pope’s head be.
But leaving aside some frankly dreadful versions of the national anthems, that would usually be drowned out by fans, and the injury to Wales striker Kieffer Moore’s knee that appeared to be caused by Pope’s skull, it was a positive opening 45 minutes for Gareth Southgate.
The England manager has never been scared to pick and play the men in form and it paid off for him here. Dominic Calvert-Lewin scored the goal from an excellent cross by Jack Grealish, two players who have been in excellent nick for their clubs. Pope impressed too, given a rare opportunity to challenge Jordan Pickford for the goalkeeper’s jersey. And if England’s initial superiority was hardly a surprise – Wales’ team included Jonny Williams, who plays his football in League One for Charlton, plus a fair sprinkling of Championship talent – it was a raw England team, selected as much from necessity as merit.
There were five players absent due to breaches of covid protocol – from domestic parties to foreign trysts – making it all the more surprising that Southgate entrusted the captaincy to Kieran Trippier. The defender is still being investigated for suspicious betting activity around his recent departure from Tottenham, and if found guilty, faces a significant ban. Of course, ‘if’ is a powerful word in this context – even so, in a week when Southgate has been keen to emphasise the moral code around the national team, it seemed a contrary stance.
Trippier is a good player, mind, and was part of the opening goal, holding the ball up on the right before feeding it to Grealish, who had drifted into space and made full use of it. It was the simplest cross, but also the best, put sweetly in the space between two Welsh defenders at the perfect height for an enterprising striker.
Fortunately, England have one in the absence of Harry Kane – rightly rested by Southgate and, as if proving a point to Tottenham manager Jose Mourinho, not even on the bench for use in an emergency – and his headers have driven Everton to the top of the table. Here was another that might have carried a Goodison Park patent, anticipating Grealish’s delivery, getting in between his men and directing it from short range, with power, past a helpess Wayne Hennessey.
It made up for a moment after 13 minutes when Calvert-Lewin was put through one on one, only to be forced wide before delivering a tame finish. England went to sleep a little after that and Wales could have got a goal, with better finishing from Moore. He pounced on a poor clearing header from Bukayo Saka, given more defensive responsibility than he is saddled with at Arsenal, which fell at the feet of the striker. He snatched at it, however, the ball came off his shin, and bobbled wide. Within four minutes, England took the lead.
With a player of Moore’s size Wales will always carry danger at set pieces, but it was defender Chris Mepham who met a corner from Jonny Williams after 28 minutes, plucked out of the air confidently by Pope. Within two minutes, Moore was put through and it took an act of supreme bravery for Pope to come out and save at his feet. In doing so, Moore’s knee appeared to catch Pope’s head, the type of collision that once caused a life-threatening injury to Petr Cech. This time, there was no harm done. At least not to Pope. Soon after, Moore went down, and received treatment. Soon after, he slumped to the turf again. This time it was over. He limped down the tunnel, replaced by Neco Williams.
England, meanwhile, were growing in confidence. In the 38th minute, Saka recycled the ball from a cleared corner, Michael Keane crossed and Conor Coady shot over from a good position. He wouldn’t make that mistake second time of asking.