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Malta 0-4 England: Kane & Wilson score penalty goal as TAA makes stunner

  /  R47

England maintained their unblemished UEFA EURO 2024 qualifying record with ease on Friday night as Gareth Southgate’s side eased to a 4-0 victory over hosts Malta at the Ta’ Qali National Stadium. And Trent Alexander-Arnold is absolutely the star that shines in this match.

2024 EURO qualification

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Match Events

0' The match is about to start!

6' Kane's shot stopped

8' OWN GOAL! Malta 0-1 England

23' Maddison's free kick stopped

28' GOAL! Malta 0-2 England (Alexander-Arnold)

31' Penalty Goal! Malta 0-3 England (Kane)

45' Saka's shot stopped

58' Kane's shot wide out

82' Penalty Goal! Malta 0-4 England (Wilson)

Match Report

As England coasted past one of Europe's weakest international teams at half pace, Alexander-Arnold was Gareth Southgate's most impressive player by a distance.

Playing in the midfield position many feel will become his permanent home for Liverpool, Alexander-Arnold sprinkled quality and audacity over every yard of the National Stadium here in Ta' Qali. The contributions he made to England's first three goals were the highlights but there was more besides.

Yes, this was only Malta and that fact should encourage perspective. There will be some who view the 24-year-old's performance as proof that he should never be left out of a Southgate team again. This was not that. Against such meagre opposition, it could never possibly be an argument-closing display.

Nevertheless, it was a terrific performance from a gifted player and one that will ensure Southgate faces another stream of questions about a footballer he has not always been convinced by between now and Monday's game against North Macedonia at Old Trafford.

The national manager's reservations are about Alexander-Arnold's defending. He is not alone in having those. This is why he had fallen so far down the right-back queue with England that he arguably would not have gone to the World Cup at all had Chelsea's Reece James not been injured. Whilst there he played just 33 minutes as a substitute.

In this new and developing position he does not have to defend as much. Here, he didn't have to do it at all. Against better, sharper and more savvy opposition, it would be different. Can we really see him in a midfield three in a big game ahead of Real Madrid's Jude Bellingham – injured for this one – Declan Rice or Kalvin Phillips? That is where the conversation grows ever more complicated.

Here he made his point during a first half he wrote his name all over. A sublime pass over and down the line released Bukayo Saka early and England led through an own goal. Then, in the 28th minute, he scored his own goal from distance, absolute ripper. It was possible to hear the sweetness of the contact from the Press box. Soon after Alexander-Arnold was to the fore again, driving down the left to start a move from which England won and scored a penalty.

This was a victory secured in the first half They were not terribly impressive thereafter and needed another penalty, unjustly awarded for handball, late on to further decorate the scoreline.

England's domination of the ball was absolute, however. Malta – ranked 172nd in the world - were unable to command possession or territory. In truth they were not actually trying to. The plan was to sit deep and limit the damage For a while it worked. As we approached the half hour, England were only a goal ahead. But the two that arrived in the space of three minutes at this juncture ensured the home team's time as a competitive presence in this game was over.

Southgate's England were pretty much what he would have wished them to be. Energetic, eager and able to use the spaces presented to them to move the ball quickly and with penetration. And it was from their first truly incisive move of the night that they took the lead in the ninth minute.

Stationed on the right of England's midfield three Alexander-Arnold was able to look for Saka down that side or switch play to James Maddison on the other. Here it was Saka who benefited from the Liverpool player's vision and ability to execute what his mind tells him is possible as a reverse pass over the Malta left-back set the Arsenal player away and his low cross was turned in by home defender Ferdinando Apap under pressure from Kane.

Having suffered at the hands of their travelling fans the last time they were here in 2017, England's early goal was useful. Always in control and always in the Malta half, there was never any doubt about the outcome but you need goals on nights like this and for the next twenty minutes England only threatened from distance, Saka curling a shot over and Maddison driving a free-kick at goalkeeper Henry Bonello.

It seemed as though Alexander-Arnold may have been a better candidate for that set piece but within five minutes he had scored anyway. A neat Maddison dummy set the Leicester player free and when the ball was half cleared, Alexander-Arnold applied one of those whipped right foot shots that was so perfect from 25 yards that Bonello had not a prayer as it sped across and away from him in to the right hand corner of his goal.

It was the purity and sheer certainty of that shot that stood out. It was, in its way, quite beautiful.

It would have hurt Malta, too, as until that point they would have been satisfied. Soon two became three, though. Alexander-Arnold seized a loose ball to reach the by line on the left and that set in motion a series of events that led to the penalty. The ball was again half cleared and this time Declan Rice drove low. Bonello should have held the ball but couldn't and as Kane closed in Matthew Guillaumier brought him down. Kane's penalty, his 56th goal for England, was emphatically struck.

England were less impressive from that point on. Saka succumbed to a knock and was replaced by Phil Foden, presumably after the Manchester City player had passed a breath test. Later in the half Crystal Palace's Eberechi Eze came on for a debut.

By the time we reached the final quarter hour, the England end of the stadium was emptying fast. There was, it was thought, a bar out the back. But those remaining saw one of those dreadful VAR penalties awarded when a Callum Wilson shot struck Malta captain Steve Borg on the arm. With Kane off the field, Wilson placed the kick to Bonello's left.

Line-ups

Malta XI: Henry Bonello, Steve Borg, Zach Muscat, Bjorn Kristensen, Cain Attard, Teddy Teuma, Ferdinando Apap, Kyrian Nwoko, Matthew Guillaumier, Joseph Mbong, Jodi Jones

Subs: Ryan Camenzuli, Jurgen Degabriele, Juan Corbalan, Matthew Grech, Jean Borg, Jake Grech, Kurt Shaw, Yannick Yankam, Shaun Dimech, Nicky Muscat, Alexander Satariano, Matthias Debono

England XI: Henderson, Trippier, Kane, Pickford, Maguire, Shaw, Maddison, Alexander-Arnold, Rice, Guehi, Saka

Subs: Walker, Callum Wilson, Stones, Sam Johnstone, Grealish, Mings, Kalvin Phillips, Rashford, Ramsdale, Foden, Eberechi Eze, Conor Gallagher