Euro 2016: England v Wales preview

Crowd trouble throughout the opening weekend in Marseille may have overshadowed events on the pitch but Group B is intriguingly poised after the opening two games.

An injury-time equaliser from Vasili Berezutski denied England a deserved win in their opener against Russia after Eric Dier’s direct free-kick had given them an early lead.

And with Wales beating Slovakia 2-1 thanks to Hal Robson-Kanu’s own late goal, the pressure on the England squad is significant.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

A defeat to their nearest neighbours would be unthinkable for many English fans as they look to battle back into Group B contention.

Teams:

England’s strong performance against Russia has led many to believe that Roy Hodgson will keep the same starting XI against Wales.

That means Jamie Vardy will remain on the bench as Harry Kane leads a front three with Adam Lallana and Raheem Sterling out wide.

Captain Wayne Rooney also looks set to be retained in midfield with England struggling after he was substituted for Jack Wilshere.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Chris Coleman has a few selection decisions to make with goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey now fit and available having missed the Slovakia game as Danny Ward started instead.

Wales’ hero in their opening fixture Robson-Kanu is also pushing for a start up front alongside Gareth Bale but Coleman could stick with the triumvirate of Bale, Aaron Ramsey and Jonny Williams who started against Slovakia.

Ones to Watch:

England: Wayne Rooney

After just a handful of games in midfield for Manchester United, Rooney was one of England’s best players against Russia in his new deeper role.

England’s all-time leading goalscorer will be looking to pull the strings again versus Wales to ensure good supply to his side’s trio of attacking options.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Rooney’s performance against Russia in the opener drew special praise from the man he’s keeping out the team, Jack Wilshere.

Wilshere said: “I’ve said it before: he’s our best player. He’s got that range of passing, he understands the game.

“He was our best player against Russia. Everything went through him. I just love watching him, I love playing with him.”

Wales: Gareth Bale

A trademark dipping free-kick from the Real Madrid star gave Wales the perfect start to the tournament after just ten minutes.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Bale is likely to prove a big test for England’s shaky defence and would have been watching with interest at how softly they conceded against Russia.

“We know we’re a good team and know we can beat them on our day,” said Bale.

“I’m not saying England don’t have pride or passion, I’m sure they do. I just feel that we have more. I’m sure they have their opinion that they have more also.

“I just feel, whether it’s football, rugby or whatever sport it is, in Wales we seem to have that next level.”

Head-to-head record:

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

England last met Wales in Group G of the 2012 European Championship qualifying group with England winning both fixtures.

A rare clash these days, the two countries have met 101 times since 1879 with England winning on 66 occasions, with 21 draws and 14 Welsh victories.

Did you know?

The last time that Wales scored against England was 1984 when Mark Hughes beat Peter Shilton at Wrexham’s Racecourse Ground in the British Home Championships.

Venue: Stade Felix Bollaert-Delelis, Lens

Date: Thursday 16 June

Kick-off: 15:00 local (14:00 BST)

TV coverage: BBC One & S4C