England's midfielder David Beckham (L) jumps for the
ball with Trinidad and Tobago's midfielder Aurtis Whitley during the World Cup
2006 Group B Round 2 match at the Frankenstadion in Nuremberg, Germany, June 15,
2006. -Xinhua
England qualified for the knockout stage of the World Cup after laboring to
beat Trinidad & Tobago 2-0 thanks to two late goals from Peter Crouch and
Steven Gerrard at their Group B match at the Franken Stadion in
Nuremberg on Thursday.
Crouch, a Liverpool striker who stands 1.98 meters, broke the deadlock in the
83rd minute, jumping high above Trinidad & Tobago defender Brent Sancho to
head home David Beckham's cross from the right in the 83rd minute.
Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard made it 2-0 in the final minute when Frank
Lampard won a free-kick and took it quickly to put England on the attack.
Gerrard unleashed an unstoppable left-foot shot from outside the area on the
right that left Shaka Hislop with no chance.
With a group game to spare against Sweden, and following Ecuador's win over
Costa Rica earlier in the day in Group A, England will face either hosts Germany
or the Ecuadorians in the knockout stage.
England got more and more frustrated as they found it hard to put the ball in
the back of the Trinidad & Tobago net. They just missed several good chances
though they dominated the match from the start.
Their best chance came in the 44th minute, when Beckham sent a perfect cross
for the unmarked 1.98-meter Liverpool striker. But he volleyed the cross well
wide with nobody near him.
England survived a scare in the injury time of the first half, with Chelsea
skipper John Terry scooping a volley off the line after Carlos Edwards had beat
England skipper Paul Robinson to a cross and Stern John races in looking to
bundle the ball over the line.
Wayne Rooney, who missed the first game due to a foot injury, was finally
sent on in the place of Michael Owen in the 58th minute.
England coach Sven Eriksson praised the rival's defense and added that
England deserved the win.
"We had a lot of chances in the first 80 minutes and we were unlucky not to
take them. Trinidad and Tobago defended with eight, nine or ten men behind the
ball and made things very difficult forus.
"We showed great patience too. We fully deserved the win. Both goals that we
scored were excellent.
The Swede breathed a sign of relief after seeing Rooney played 30 minutes in
the second after.
"I have to say too, that although he didn't score, I was delighted to see
Wayne Rooney on the pitch. I am very happy that he is fit. Of course, he is not
100 per cent in form, but he hasn't played football for six weeks, so how can he
be? This 30 minutes will have been very important for him and I hope to see him
getting stronger in each game that we play."
Beenhakker was disappointed that his team failed to bring a better results.
"I am proud of the effort of my players today, but of course we are
disappointed. They played with a lot of courage and a lot of passion. That's the
only way we can play. Before the match we knew that we could organise the
players to frustrate England for a long period of the game and we did that to
good effect.
"It was very hard to see the first goal go in. As the minutes tick by and the
game goes on, your hopes build and you get more and more excited. Our heads
dropped after that and I wasn't surprised to see England score the second.
But he also said that England deserved the win because they dominated the
match. "They deserved to win. I wish them luck for the rest of the competition."
England captain, named Man of the Match afterward, said: "It would be fair to
say that you haven't seen the best of us yet, but we put ourselves in a good
position. We know we can play better," Beckham said.
"It was so much work. England got so much position on the ball," said
Trinidad striker Dwight Yorke, Beckham's former Manchester United teammate. "It
was a special moment because I have so many friends, so many memories of playing
in England."
"People expected us to walk through this game," Beckham said. "We knew they
were going to play 11 men behind the ball. They made it hard for us all game. We
knew if we kept to our game plan that we'd break them down."