Rooney-inspired England progress

Croatia 2 England 4

Croatia 2 England 4

Wayne Rooney was again the inspiration for England as his second two-goal performance of Euro 2004 secured their place in the quarter-finals at the expense of Croatia.

The Everton starlet is now the tournament’s leading marksman with four goals and equally importantly he avoided the yellow card which would have kept him out of the last eight meeting with Portugal.

Croatia had taken a shock lead through Niko Kovac but the game turned on its head with Paul Scholes, netting his first international goal for three years - and Rooney striking twice in five minutes before the interval.

Igor Tudor gave Croatia a ray of hope before Frank Lampard put the icing on the cake for England.

There were several thousand seats left unfilled with the Football Association having bought up an allocation unused by Croatia to ensure segregation arrangements were not compromised.

But England fans still filled more than three quarters of the 65,000 capacity stadium with Croatia having a support of around 9,000.

England would also have been relieved to find a pitch bathed in shadow at kick-off time after the sweltering conditions in Coimbra against Switzerland.

Coach Sven-Goran Eriksson had pledged to attack despite only needing a point to qualify and Michael Owen made an early break down the right flank.

It required Niko Kovac at full stretch to head clear with Paul Scholes having taken up a dangerous position on the far side of the penalty area.

But then England were stunned when Croatia went ahead through Kovac after only five minutes.

A free-kick from the left flank by Milan Rapaic found Boris Zivkovic, whose effort was parried away by James – but Kovac was first to react and buried the rebound via a deflection off Terry.

England tried to retaliate instantly and a throughball from Rooney picked out Scholes – but his shot cannoned off the legs of Tomislav Butina.

Frank Lampard found himself in a yard of space just outside the Croatian box only for his shot on the turn to be a weak effort easily collected by Butina.

Gerrard won England’s first corner after 24 minutes and, after Sol Campbell’s header from a Beckham cross had been cleared, Terry sent in a goalbound shot from 25 yards out which Butina had his body behind.

England were now enjoying most of the possession but they were served warning of the danger of being caught on the break when Prso played in Tomislav Sokota, whose shot on the turn was held onto by James.

Beckham had the chance to show his free-kick prowess when Rooney was brought down by Tudor 20 yards out in the ’D’ – but the captain’s curling shot was blocked by the defensive wall.

Croatia were dealing comfortably with what England had to offer but then the game turned round completely with Eriksson’s side scoring twice in five minutes leading up to half-time.

After 40 minutes Paul Scholes scored his first goal for England in three years - a run spanning 30 internationals – when he stooped to head home at the far post.

Lampard had set up the opportunity with a chip over the Croatian defence, Owen had an effort blocked and Rooney headed across goal for the Manchester United midfielder got the final decisive touch.

Then in first-half injury-time Rooney gave another example of his blossoming talent when he picked the ball up 25 yards out and sent an unstoppable shot past the despairing dive of Butina although the Croatian keeper did manage to get a fingertip to the ball.

Croatia brought on striker Ivica Olic, who had escaped punishment from UEFA after testing positive for a banned substance, in place of Rapaic.

The onus was now on Croatia to force the issue with England having the players capable of exploiting them on the break.

James held onto a low drive from Dovani Rosso, who had plenty of time to line up his shot from 25 yards out.

Simic became the first player to be booked after 62 minutes for a challenge in the centre of the park on Rooney.

Croatia’s final substitution with 23 minutes remaining saw Darijo Srna come on for Simic – but within 60 seconds Rooney had struck again.

The Everton starlet raced onto Owen’s pass and kept his composure as he slid his shot wide of Butina.

With the game now apparently safe, Eriksson took off Scholes and Rooney in quick succession and replaced them with Ledley King and Darius Vassell.

But after 74 minutes Tudor gave Croatia a ray of hope when he headed home a right wing free-kick from substitute Srna.

It was only a temporary setback for England and Butina saved well from Gerrard before Lampard restored a two goal cushion.

The Chelsea midfielder collected a pass from Beckham and had time to steady himself before driving a left footed effort into the corner of the net.

It was Lampard’s last contribution to the game before he was also withdrawn and replaced by Phil Neville.

More in this section

Sport

Newsletter

Sign up to our daily sports bulletin, delivered straight to your inbox at 5pm. Subscribers also receive an exclusive email from our sports desk editors every Friday evening looking forward to the weekend's sporting action.

Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited