Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 June 2025

England 3-1 Spain, Saturday 21st June 2025

England 3-1 Spain, UEFA Under 21 European Championship, City Arena (Stadion Antona Malatinskeho), att. 8,247
Ever since the disastrous Brexit vote of 2016, my partner has been trying to visit every country in the EU, so here we are in Slovakia. Handily, there’s the Under 21 Euro championship going on so a plan is hatched. The week or so we’re out here it’s the quarter finals and beyond. We fly in Satdy, same day England play Spain in Trnava. Wednesday there’s a semi in Kosice (won’t be England) and next Satdy is the final in Bratislava. Chuck in a couple of days in Zilina and job’s a good un.

We catch a train from Bratislava to Trnava. I’ve been to this ground before and I remember one thing; it was a midweek game and in order to get a train to wherever I was staying (not Trnava) I had to leave at half-time. Not tonite. Tonite we’re staying in possibly Trnava’s only hotel, a building that looks like it’s been converted from a communist block of flats. It’s hard-going getting there too. It’s red hot (30 odd degrees) and it’s a fair walk from the railway station. On the way though we pass the ground. There is absolutely zero sign of a game here tonite, aside from a poster telling people they can’t buy tickets for the game at the ground. It’s the UEFA website or nothing.

After a shower to cool down, we’re off and about. The city centre is small and the ground is adjacent. We park up at a pub in town and enjoy a couple of beers as we’re accosted by a pair of German groundhoppers here for the game. They’re Hansa Rostock fans (renowned for being right wing) and are annoyed when, on discussing the atmosphere at German games, I compliment St. Pauli (renowned left wing). I admit to being a bit of a rascal here, though my opinion stands. But the Germans were good company, before we moved on for food, a typically Slovakian menu (meat, potato pancakes)and more gorgeous (Czech) beer.

It was less than 10 minutes to walk to the ground. Half stadium, half shopping centre, it still looks brand new and spotless. Built in 2015, 3 sides of two tiers are linked together in a horse-shoe. The 4th side is a small single-tier affair, limited in its size by the street behind, though its roof proudly declares ‘CITY ARENA’ in bold lettering. Still, when will Trnava need 18,800 seats? (Ans: when England played here in 2016. But the point is ‘rarely’. Spartak Trnava average around 4,000.)

We enter via turnstiles on the main road having had to walk through the aforementioned shopping centre to get there. Fairly quickly in, and we’re soon in a queue for a drink. The heat is oppressive, not the sort of thing a couple of pasty English types enjoy. In fact, the shade of a concrete concourse offered some relief, before we bought a couple of Radlers (or shandy to you or I). Thirst quenching.

I’d been wondering what sort of attendance it would be all day and as we passed through the vomitory it became apparent certain parts of the ground were closed. Still, it was a healthy 8,000+, with most in the stand we occupied, on the long side opposite the single tier. There was a good mix of fans too, not just England and Spain (though both were few in number), but other participating nations as well. But by far the most number appeared to be locals, out to see the future Harry Kane, or Rodri, perhaps? They were in for a treat.

For those of us whose team’s matches are not interrupted by VAR, we had an early treat; Spain’s 3rd minute opener ruled out after 5 minutes of discussion. And they say VAR is ruining football! (Is it Norway who’ve since got rid of it?) But by the quarter of an hour mark, England were 2 goals up. McAtee’s is Johnny-on-the-spot as a corner isn’t cleared. Then Liverpool’s Quansah intercepts a ball in his own half, drives forward 50 yards. As defenders back off, expecting the pass that never comes, he hits one from outside the box, the keeper spills and Liverpool’s Harvey Elliott is there on the rebound. I’d hoped the Spanish custodian might be called ‘Jesus’ on the offchance I could riff on the old gag ‘Jesus saves...Dalglish scores on the rebound’ graffitied sign outside a Liverpudlian church. Unfortunately, he’s called Alejandro.

Now, I’m not the biggest England fan. Anodyne football, overpaid superstars, etc...but this Young England are a different kettle of fish. Passing and moving at pace, always looking to go FORWARD. What’s all that about? They still look capable of defensive deficiency (fullback Livramento looks weak, and I’m sure he’s one of the ones who’ve got a FULL England cap or 2) but you can’t have everything at Under 21. Hopefully they’ll keep the positive and improve on the negative.

I think it’s McAtee giving the ball away on the edge of his own box, dribbling, and in the panic that follows Quansah chops down a Spaniard as he cuts inside. The stutter does for Beadle in goal and Javi Guerra puts the ball the other way. Half-time isn’t far away and a chance for England to recoup.

At half-time, my partner takes ill. Not quite ill enough to go home (I’ll spare the details) but we go and sit behind the goal as there’s barely anybody there and it offers quick access to the toilet. Spain dominate early, but as the game goes on, I fancy England to hit them on the break. Head Coach Carsley sends on 5 subs in 3 second half bursts and the tide swings England’s way. One of them, Jonathan Rowe (of my partner’s team Norwich, but soon to be Marseilles) bursts forward and nicks it in the corner of the box just before the keeper takes him out. Penalty, and fellow sub Elliott Andersen (Forest) bangs it down the middle. 3-1 and game over.

England:
James Beadle (Brighton & Hove Albion; on loan at Sheffield Wednesday last season)
Jack Hinshelwood (Brighton & Hove Albion)
Quansah (Liverpool)
Charlie Cresswell (Toulouse)
Tino Livramento (Newcastle United)
Tyler Morton (Liverpool)
Alex Scott (Bournemouth)
Omari Hutchinson (Ipswich Town)
McAtee (Manchester City)
Harvey Elliott (Liverpool)
Jay Stansfield (Birmingham City)

The Damage:
€20 ent
€3.70 Radler
€3 deposit on plastic beaker
= €26.70

Monday, 24 July 2017

England Ladies 2-0 Spain Ladies, Sunday 23rd July 2017

England Ladies 2-0 Spain Ladies (Rat Verlegh Stadium, Breda, att. 4,879)


Welcome to .....

At half time I was thoroughly depressed.  My plane had arrived late, the stadium was miles from anywhere, the ‘every quarter of an hour’ free bus had taken over half an hour to arrive, I'd missed kick off and it was p***ing it down. England were winning 1-0 but that was no matter.  I'd missed the goal.  Of more importance was my lack of a bed.  I'd planned to camp but given the nature of the torrential I thought better of it.  Thank goodness for the mobile phone and internet access.  A few minutes later I had a hostel booked in Rotterdam (about 20 minutes train ride away).

That's not fog, it's RAIN.

I'd come to the Women's Euros on a whim.  I can't say I'm the biggest fan of female  football (especially not after this match) but it was an opportunity to visit a few new stadia: Breda, Utrecht, Tilburg and Sparta Rotterdam.  Also, with The Netherlands being so small, travel is easy.  Mind, I’d been looking forward to lazing by a campsite swimming pool for a few days, imagining the weather would be something approaching summer.  This was a misguidance of a biblical nature.

England in the rain wasn't a big draw...

Handily, England was my first match up so that should engender some interest.  Sadly, due to the aforementioned wait, I, along with the Keele University women's team, arrived at the stadium in time to hear the cheer.  One nil England.  Another loud cheer before we got in was a second, apparently disallowed for no reason.  The Rat Verlegh Stadium epitomised the gloom.  From the outside, a depressing block of metal and concrete which hadn’t aged well since whenever it was built. The 1970s?  Good views, but that’s about the best I can say about it.

About as cheerful as it got.

Once inside, I found myself below pitch level in some kind of moat. This didn’tt augur well for my streak later (kidding).  I sat at one end near the corner flag, despite having the pick of the seats.  The stand to my left looked vaguely full, mainly England.  There were a few Spanish at the far end of the same stand, while on the nearside, a couple of middle-aged locals banged drums.  I'm not quite sure why I thought they were local but the constant dull thud with varying levels of audience participation became a trawl very quickly.

This will get the atmosphere going.

Maybe it was the match?  Or the weather? Or both?  More than once came the deluge. I think that was England's excuse for never being able to control a ball.  (I must note here, the first time I'd seen a womens’ match I was very impressed with their skill, so to see our national side fumble and miscontrol the ball endlessly put a more positive slant on my own abilities. Spain dominated possession, nearly 80%, but the same pattern developed.  Spain would go sideways, sideways, forwards, have a (wo)man on, go backwards again, start again.  (BTW, what DO women shout when someone is about to be marked? ‘Man on’?)

At least one side is busy.

More than once Spain had numbers out wide, but when they weren't knocking it back and starting again they were chipping it in for giant England centre halves to head clear.  I couldn't understand why they didn't simply drill some low balls across the box especially given England's penchant for the slice.

Prisoner: Cell Block H.  The away end at Breda.

England's game plan hinged on the opposite, trying to find a killer pass within 2 or 3 touches, whereupon the whole charade would repeat itself.  God it was boring.  Then, LIFE!  Spain whipped a ball in from the left (finally!) and an England player slipped, slicing the ball smack into her palm.  Hurrah!  Penalty!  I need to work on my patriotism.  But no, the players trot to the halfway line and the referee starts with a drop ball to the keeper.  Actually, I couldn't get my head around that.  I think the ref was dropping it for the keeper to take a free kick.  Foul by the rain?

Plenty of England flags

By now I was high up behind the goal, a downpour driving fans higher up into the seats.  It seemed an even mix of locals and English, with occasional chants of ‘NAC, NAC’ (the local team) breaking out to alleviate the England chants and those cardboard things what Leicester City fans whack to make noise.

Match action.

I was still thoroughly bored, but figured I couldn’t leave early as the buses wouldn’t be going back to the station till full-time. I’d not had anything to eat either, as I needed to put money on a card, etc. No thanks.  So I was still a right grumpy sour puss when England sealed it, the ball somehow breaking loose on the edge of the box for the centre forward to dink it into the bottom left.  A cool finish entirely out of keeping with the rest of England’s game. If this is as good as supporting England’s women gets…

The Damage:
€10 ent

The media.

Footnote:  I was slightly cheered up the next day.  Turns out I shared a room in the hostel with the brother of Scotland’s left back (Hi Jake!) and he talked very passionately of women's football, albeit a team who’d lost by 6 to England a few days earlier.  In the evening I also saw Belgium v Holland on the big screen in the Rotterdam fanzone and that really was a game full of skill and excitement, so I'll give the tournament a chance and not do Plan B: InterRail after some Champions League / Europa League qualifiers.  That’s NEXT week!

Rat Verlegh panorama...in a rare moment of sunshine.

Looking towards the main stand.

The Rat Verlegh 'moat'.

The man himself...Rat Verlegh.

The Main Event.







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