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Gareth Southgate changes England XI at last-minute as he makes bold tweak just hours before Euro 2024 final


GARETH SOUTHGATE has made a bold U-turn to his starting XI to face Spain in the Euro 2024 final.

For the first time in the tournament, Luke Shaw will start to replace Kieran Trippier at left wing-back.

Gareth Southgate has made a U-turn in his starting 11 to face Spain in the Euro 2024 finalCredit: Getty

Southgate has faced a dilemma on the left of defence throughout the tournament.

He took Manchester United’s Shaw – despite the defender having not played since February.

Trippier was the one to shift over to his unfavoured side, firstly in a back four and then later a 3-4-3.

Eyebrows were raised when the Newcastle man was even placed as a left wing-back to allow Bukayo Saka to operate on his favoured right side.

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Shaw made brief cameos off the bench against Switzerland in the quarter-finals and then in the semis win over Netherlands.

And he was expected to again start of the bench with Trippier tasked with keeping tabs on 17-year-old sensation Lamine Yamal.

But Shaw’s fitness will now be tested from the off after being probed on whether he would be able to play the full 90 minutes or even longer in the lead-up to the final.

Shaw said: “It’s a case of taking it as it comes.

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England can win it if Gareth Southgate decides to be bolder… and it will add some gloss to a sub-standard Euros

By Phil Thomas

THEY’VE been booed by their own fans, the manager has been pelted with pints and were so dull even Gary “Mr Nice” Lineker branded one of their group games as s**t.

Yet if England upset the odds in Berlin this evening, there’s a good case to argue the Euros will never have had a more fitting winner.

Let’s face it, for all the nation has suddenly gone football-daft and started belting out Sweet Caroline again — thanks for that — this has been a tournament of trash.

The big guns didn’t turn up, the big names may as well not have and, barring the first round of group fixtures, big thrills were harder to find than a sober Scotland fan.

It has been a month of yawning, not fawning. Of exasperation, not animation. Four weeks of booze and boos.

History will look back on it as the sub-standard Euros . . . and when it comes to sub-standard, we are in a league of our own.

Initially thanks to the dross Harry Kane and Co served up in stuttering from the group of bored-to-death.

Yet the three knockout ties weren’t so much about sub standards as the standard of subs. The reason England reached the final — and why they can now win it!

Yes, Spain have been head and shoulders the best team in Germany, and young wingers Nico Williams and Lamine Yamal the stand-out stars.

But for everyone from Yamal, 17 yesterday, to old head Dani Carvajal, 32, the Euros is a gruelling four weeks after a demanding season. Which obviously applies to England as well.

That is why the strength of the bench has been and will be so vital, maybe even more than the strength of the starting XI.

An area where Spain don’t come close to matching the Three Lions. See what I mean about sub standards . . . about where England have a clear and crucial edge?

About why Southgate may well be Sir Gareth before long?

If they stick it up the Senors tonight, the cries for an honour will be even louder than they were for his head. After all, it was Southgate who made the key calls against Slovakia, Switzerland and then Holland. All subs who raised the standard.

Ivan Toney’s dramatic role in the last-16 great escape. Eberechi Eze and Luke Shaw saving the day against the Swiss. Cole Palmer and matchwinner Ollie Watkins’ semi-final heroics.

Southgate has had the golden touch with his replacements and it’s hard to give him a dig in the ribs over that . . . in fact it’s hard to say he didn’t get them spot on.

But I’m going to anyway.

For although England would be on their way home now without their subs — or finishers as they are now, apparently — don’t hail it as the work of a tactical genius.

There has been as much luck as judgment. There has been too much dithering. They have been made too late in the day. They have been reactive, not proactive.

Toney was chucked on in the final minute against Slovakia. What was he supposed to do in that time? Even the player himself asked as much in the post-match conference.

Eze, Shaw and Palmer changed the tone and the tempo in fighting back against the Swiss. But again, only after England had gone behind late in the day.

And although Watkins hit the last-gasp winner to beat the Dutch, from Palmer’s pass, once more Southgate waited too long in turning to his bench.

Time and again he leaves Kane on when he is out on his feet. Time and again he has left Palmer kicking his heels, despite impacting things whenever he appears.

Southgate has got away with it so far but it won’t always be the case. As manager, he has to have the bottle to make changes earlier.

Playing to your strengths isn’t rocket science and for England that is the bench — but only if you know how to exploit it.

So come on Gareth, show us that you do!

Who knows, we might even get to relax for the final few minutes . . . although I won’t be holding my breath.

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“I said before the semis that I was ready to go – and we’ll just have to wait and see what happens.”

Shaw starts three years on from opening the scoring in the Euros final last time out.

Honey the eagle predicts the result of the Euro 2024 final

That night at Wembley it ended in penalty heartache but Shaw & Co get their date with destiny – this time against the Spanish.

Shaw said: “It would mean everything. I think the bond we have here is extremely special. It’s not one I’ve been a part of before.

“I think everyone is so together, everyone is really close and it feels like a big family and for all of us to win it together would be, of course, a very special feeling.”

As a player, Southgate missed a penalty in the semi-final of Euro 96 on home soil against Germany.

As manager, he led England to the 2018 World Cup semis and the final of Euro 2020 – with years of heartbreak waiting to end at the Olympiastadion.

Southgate said: “As a player and an athlete, you view those failures in a different sort of way.

“As a coach, manager, leader, you recognise what you’re doing well.

“Had we gone out in the first knockout round here, I know I’ve managed this period better than I did in Russia (at the 2018 World Cup), but that wouldn’t be how it was viewed and it would sound like nonsense to the man in the street.

“I completely understand that, but I know the job now and I’m really clear on being my own biggest critic, reviewing everything clearly.

“I want to win so much on Sunday it hurts, don’t get me wrong, but I can handle whatever comes and I know it’s not going to change what the dog thinks when I walk back through the door.”

Luke Shaw will start against SpainCredit: AFP
Kieran Trippier will be replaced by ShawCredit: Rex


Source: Soccer - thesun.co.uk


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