Point made for Hodgson
The Three Lions left Warsaw grateful for a point after a 1-1 draw yesterday.
Wayne Rooney put the visitors in front and missed a glorious chance to double that lead, but Poland were good value for their draw in the end and could easily have had more to show for their efforts than a Kamil Glik equaliser that came after a mistake from Joe Hart.
Hodgson accepted neither side benefited from the postponement caused by Tuesdayâs deluge.
But he certainly felt it affected his players.
âOn Monday, after the training session on the pitch, the players were looking very sharp and lively,â he said. âI didnât get that impression today.
âI donât want to give the impression we were hard done by and our opponents werenât.
âBut if a game is postponed it is a little bit easier if you are on home soil.
âWe had that extra day and night in the hotel.â
Hodgson labelled the pitch as âdeadâ, which may have contributed to some uncharacteristically sloppy passing, with Michael Carrick among those most affected.
âThere was no question the pitch was playable but it wasnât suited to quick passing,â he said.
âBoth teams made quite a few passing mistakes. At half-time we were quite surprised how many passes we had sent astray.â
The positive, which cannot be dismissed, is England did not lose and, that Euro 2012 penalty shoot-out defeat to Italy excepted, remain unbeaten during Hodgsonâs 11 games in charge.
Their advantage in Group H is almost certain to have disappeared by the time they next play again in March as second-placed Montenegro, who are just a point behind, face minnows San Marino next month.
However, Englandâs durability is something Hodgson is convinced will stand them in good stead.
âWhen you are in a qualifying group, or you are with a league club, there are days when things donât always go your way,â he said.
âOn those days it is very important you still come away with a result.â
So many of Englandâs players failed to perform. Rooney was the most obvious example, despite his 32nd England goal, and following his failure to snaffle a chance provided by Manchester United team-mate Danny Welbeck, it was no surprise he was replaced by Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain.
âA bit of both,â was Hodgsonâs response when asked whether the reasoning behind his decision was physical or tactical.
âThere was an element of physicality because it looked as though he was tiring. He couldnât reproduce his excellent performance against San Marino and we wanted to get a little bit more life and energy into the central area, which (Tom) Cleverley was capable of giving us alongside (Steven) Gerrard and Carrick, so Wayne moved wider.
âThen, when we thought he was tiring we felt it was the right moment to bring on Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, who gave us some fresh legs.â
Hodgson believed the move worked, although Poland looked equally likely to snatch a win at the death. âWe showed a lot of character to come back,â said Poland coach Waldemar Fornalik. âI donât agree that it was simple for my players to recover from last night and get ready to go again. And I donât think you can say England were weak because that would take away from our success.â
POLAND: Tyton, Piszczek, Wasilewski, Wawrzyniak, Glik, Polanski, Krychowiak, Wszolek (Mierzejewski 63), Grosicki (Milik 82), Obraniak (Borysiuk 90), Lewandowski.
ENGLAND: Hart, Johnson, Jagielka, Lescott, Cole, Milner, Carrick, Gerrard, Cleverley, Rooney (Oxlade-Chamberlain 73), Defoe (Welbeck 67).
Referee: Gianluca Rocchi (Italy).





