The story of the first half was not of things going Mexico’s way though, and England took the lead when Peter Crouch’s back post header off a Steven Gerrard corner found King to nod the ball home with 20 minutes gone. That goal was notable as Crouch’s first significant contribution and Steven Gerrard’s first useful pass. Their second came fifteen minutes later when Gerrard’s cross was met by Rooney, parried onto the bar by Perez in the Mexico goal, and handled in by Crouch.
Two goals down going into half time and Mexico could have felt extremly hard done by: Robert Green had made two excellent saves following each of England’s goals and they always looked a potent attacking threat. But that situation never arose as the ever dangerous Franco managed to capitalise on uncertainty in the England defence following a corner and tapped into an empty net right at the ned of first half stoppage time.
Capello, as expected, made changes at half time: Joe Hart, Jamie Carragher and Jermain Defoe replaced Robert Green, Rio Ferdinand and Peter Crouch. That signalled a subtle shift to 4-4-2, with Rooney moving up front with Defoe, Gerrard moving back into midfield with Carrick, and Milner moving to the left.
That shift can have had little impact on Glen Johnsen’s game-killing, spectacular left-footed goal, scored almost immediately after half time, but it did facilitate England’s improved control of posession. Gerrard in particular looked much more assured in a deeper position and, somewhat dissapointingly, Milner looked much improved playing as a straightforward wideman.
Major second half incidents were hard to come by but Aaron Lennon and Adam son’s seven minute cameos briefly lit up the game. Lennon’s burst past four Mexican defenders should have created a goal, but instead it bought a foul on the edge of the penalty area. Theo Walcott, the man Lennon had come on for, could but watch. Joe Cole should be worried.
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