Wembley
Stadium, London
Admission:
Complimentary ticket
Programme:
£6.00
Attendance:
61,607
Match
Rating: 4
This was
very much a bonus match for me, one that I would not have attended had I had to
buy a ticket. However, after attending the England v Scotland match last month,
I tagged myself on 360 degree panoramic photo that the FA posted, and I was
notified that I was one of ten persons drawn at random to win a pair of tickets
for this evening’s game.
The
qualifying campaign for next year’s World Cup in Brazil has now really reached
the business end, with England having four games left to play, three at home,
to ensure qualification by winning the group.
That is still very much in England’s hands, second in the group, two
points behind leaders Montenegro having played a game less, and with Montenegro
traveling to Wembley next month in England’s penultimate game. Having played
the same amount of games, England are on point ahead of Ukraine – with Tuesday’s
away game in Ukraine potentially being as pivotal as the home match against
Montenegro – and three points ahead of Poland. Moldova are a distant fifth out
of the six teams in the group, having won one of their seven games so far,
which came against San Marino, and their two draws came at home to Poland and
Ukraine. Right at the start of the campaign, almost exactly a year ago, England
won convincingly 0-5 in Chisinau. Apart from that, England’s game has been
unspectacular – their two other wins coming against San Marino, away draws
against Poland and Montenegro and a home draw against Ukraine.
On a dry but
rather chilly September evening, this match went pretty much as one would
expect, with England dominant and although Moldova battled gamely, and were
surprisingly adventurous occasionally and certainly didn’t “park the bus”, were
completely outclassed. After a fairly slow start with a couple of sloppy
touches giving the Moldovans heart, England took the lead on 12 minutes. Frank
Lampard played a low pass across to Steven Gerrard just outside the box, who
drove in a perfectly judged low shot just inside the post. England doubled
their lead on 36 minutes. Theo Walcott’s powerful shot was parried gently
across goal by the keeper, allowing Rickie Lambert to head home for a couple of
yards for his second goal in his two England appearances – not a bad ratio for
the Southampton striker. Deep into the
one minute of injury time at the end of the first half, England killed the game
off with a third goal, when Danny Welbeck just managed to get a touch on
Lambert’s ball forward before the keeper who could only faintly parry the ball
and Welbeck walked the ball in.
Video highlights at http://www.itv.com/sport/football/article/2013-09-06/world-cup-qualifying-highlights-england-4-0-moldova/
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