BRAVE Harry Kane had to fight back the tears after England crashed out of the World Cup against France.
Gareth Southgate’s side were defeated 2-1 as Les Bleus clinched their place in the semi-final.
Heroic captain Kane blazed his second spot-kick over the bar – blowing the chance to draw England level and send the game to extra-time.
That was after he had scored an earlier penalty to equal Wayne Rooney’s record as the country’s all-time top scorer.
And after the whistle he slumped to the turf in a crouched position and brought a hand over his face as he struggled to get to grips with England’s exit.
A number of his heartbroken colleagues raced over to him while manager Southgate, who famously missed a penalty at Euro ‘96, also gave him a hug and offered some words to his talisman.
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France goalie Hugo Lloris, a team-mate of Kane’s at Tottenham, also went to console the striker before the Three Lions skipper trudged off towards the dressing-room.
England keeper Jordan Pickford was also spotted ushering a cameraman away as they tried to get close and film Kane in his moment of despair.
Elsewhere, teenage midfield sensation Jude Bellingham was in tears and his new pal Jordan Henderson was forced to put an arm around his shoulder to comfort him.
The Borussia Dortmund man was then spotted still crying as he too headed down the tunnel.
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Henderson was the first star to brave the cameras, telling ITV: “It is hard now to sum it up, it is hard to find the right words.
“I thought we gave everything in the game, we were disappointed to go 1-0 down but we showed the character and mentality to keep going and find the equaliser.
“We gave it everything and unfortunately it wasn’t our night.”
And on Kane’s penalty miss, he added: “We know how many penalties Harry has scored for us, how many goals he has contributed to even get us here.
“He will be stronger for this in the future. He is a world-class striker and our captain, he will bounce back.”
Southgate about Kane: “He’s been incredible for us and so reliable in these situations. And we wouldn’t be here without him.
“In the end goals are decisive but I’ve said to the players that I don’t think they could have given anymore.
Match report
By David Kidd
EVERYTHING was on the line – a World Cup semi-final against Morocco, the chance to dethrone champions France, and England’s all-time goalscoring record.
Harry Kane, who had roused England after an early French opener, and already thumped home one spot-kick to equal Wayne Rooney’s 53 goals, took a deep breath, stepped up and ballooned it over the bar.
After a World Cup semi-final in Russia in 2018, and a Euros final loss to Italy last year, this cruel quarter-final was technically a step backwards.
But England have been excellent in four of their five games in Qatar – including this one, where they outplayed France for long periods.
After Aurelien Tchouameni’s early opener, they went for the French jugular and dominated until Kane’s spot-kick equaliser.
Then, a desperate late double blow – a headed winner from Olivier Giroud, followed Kane’s sky-high penalty.
It was agony for Southgate and his team – especially with such an inviting semi-final opponent.
Yet this, like most elite games, was one of those ‘fine margins’ – first Harry Maguire allowing Giroud his close-range header, then Kane fluffing the biggest moment of his career.
Southgate had decided as early as last Monday to name an unchanged team – there was no thought about applying that infamous Southgate handbrake.
And Kyle Walker, the man who would mark Mbappe, was adamant that they wouldn’t ‘roll out the red carpet’ and allow France ‘a night at the theatre’.
The pre-match atmosphere was subdued – as it so often is at this weird tournament where there have been so relatively few partisan travelling supporters from all but a handful of nations.
Yet despite plenty of bravado in the build-up England began tentatively – both full-backs, Walker and Luke Shaw, looking especially vulnerable.
And then Mbappe – speak of the devil, as we’d been doing all week got to work.
He turned Declan Rice, darted infield and when Antoine Griezmann laid it back, Tchouameni steered a low shot into the far corner from 20 yards.
Jordan Pickford probably should have saved it, any number of England players might have prevented but the champions were swaggering and France were ahead.
It was the first time England had been behind this tournament but it jolted them into action – Kane in particular.
After the break, Southgate’s men were straight back at it.
Bellingham, who had just been the victim of a horrible lunge from Ousmane Dembele, fizzed a shot from 20 yards which Lloris tipped over.
The equaliser had been well signposted and it was England’s two youngest starters who engineered it – Saka playing a one-two with Bellingham drawing the foul from Tchouameni.
The ref did not hesitate and after Kane had re-spotted the ball, he thudded into the corner, sending Lloris the wrong way.
But just as England has responded aggressively to France’s goal, the reverse was true now.
Saka was causing more mischief to France than Mbappe was to England. When the Arsenal man won a free-kick, Henderson delivered and Harry Maguire’s header brushed against the post.
But when Shaw lost Dembele, he nodded down for Giroud to unleash a close-range volley which forced Pickford into a fine save.
England never fully cleared the resulting corner and when Griezmann delivered a wicked cross, Giroud got in front of Maguire to thud home a header which gave Pickford no chance.
Mason Mount arrived and almost immediately was barged over in the box by Theo Hernandez, the VAR sent Sampaio to his monitor.
But Kane stepped up and blazed it into the Gods.
“Congratulations to France, they know that they’ve been in a hell of a game.”
There was also a huge swell of support for Kane following the game on social media, led by our columnist and Talk TV host Piers Morgan.
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The Arsenal-mad star tweeted: “You won’t meet a more decent honest footballer or person than @HKane – or a better leader of the England team. Absolutely heart-breaking for him.”
Chelsea defender Ben Chilwell, who missed the tournament through injury, also wrote: “So gutted for the boys.”
Source: Soccer - thesun.co.uk