Eric Dier’s superb stoppage-time header sealed England’s stunning fightback victory from two goals down to claim a 3-2 win over world champions Germany in Berlin on Saturday.
A fierce Toni Kroos strike had given Germany the lead just before the break, while a pin-point Mario Gomez header put the hosts 2-0 up on 57 minutes, but the tide turned England’s way midway through the second half.
A Harry Kane strike gave England hope, before Leicester City striker Jamie Vardy grabbed the equalizer just three minutes after coming on.
Photo: Reuters
However, it was Dier’s winning header just before the final whistle from a Jordan Henderson corner which stunned the FIFA World Cup holders at Berlin’s Olympiastadion.
“We played brilliant today. I thought we fully deserved the win,” Kane told ITV. “We had a lot of chances that on another day we probably could have scored two more. We’re all buzzing. We never gave in and what a night.”
Gomez said he and his teammates were stunned by England’s fightback.
Photo: Reuters
“It’s difficult to understand. We were playing a very good match, were leading 2-0 against a very strong team and had other chances to score, but then we left too much space for our opponents,” the veteran said.
It was an impressive display from Roy Hodgson’s England to give them plenty of hope ahead of this summer’s Euro 2016 in France and they will be looking to keep up their impressive form tomorrow when they take on the Netherlands at Wembley Stadium in London.
By contrast, Joachim Loew’s Germany have plenty to work on after a poor display ahead of tomorrow’s clash with Italy in Munich.
Both sides were missing their first-choice captains, with Bastian Schweinsteiger and Wayne Rooney out with knee injuries.
Loew started just five of the team which won the 2014 FIFA World Cup final, but still fielded 472 caps worth of experience, which dwarfed inexperienced England’s tally of 161.
Hodgson opted for the Tottenham Hotspur quartet of Kane, Danny Rose, Dier and 19-year-old Dele Alli.
Gomez looked to have given Germany the lead when he fired across Jack Butland into the England net with 27 minutes gone, but the assistant referee flagged for offside.
Replays showed the Besiktas striker, on loan from AS Roma, was onside.
Nevertheless, Germany took the lead on 43 minutes. Real Madrid’s Kroos tried his luck from the edge of the penalty area and beat Jack Butland at his near post.
England were forced into the first change just before the halftime whistle as the injured Butland was replaced by Southampton’s Fraser Forster.
Germany doubled their lead on 57 minutes when captain Sami Khedira’s long-range pass found Gomez and the burly striker headed home.
However, the momentum started to swing England’s way with Kane’s neat turn on 61 minutes giving him the space to drill his shot into the bottom corner.
Hodgson brought on Everton’s Ross Barkley and Vardy for the final 19 minutes.
Vardy produced the desired effect with a superb flick with his instep from Nathaniel Clyne’s low cross from the right to beat Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer.
Alli could have got on the score sheet when the Tottenham midfielder fired over the bar unmarked in the penalty area six minutes from time, but England were not to be denied as Dier headed home to the delight of the traveling fans as the visitors maintained their record of never having lost to Germany in Berlin in nine meetings.
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