Gareth Southgate was able to take
heart from a positive display despite his first defeat as England manager, 1-0
to Germany in Dortmund on Wednesday.
Southgate, 46, had been
undefeated in four games as interim manager following Sam Allardyce’s abrupt
departure last year.
“I take a lot of encouragement
from that despite the result,” said Southgate.
“It’s never nice to lose,
but I have to be pleased with the way the players played and how our tactical
system worked.”
Southgate hailed Lukas Podolski’s second-half thunderbolt goal on
his final appearance for Germany, but noted that England outplayed the world
champions for long spells.
“It was an incredible strike, but from (goalkeeper) Joe Hart’s
point of view it was pretty unstoppable,” admitted Southgate.
Gary Cahill captained England as part of back-three alongside
Michael Keane, who was making his debut, and Chris Smalling.
Southampton’s James Ward-Prowse and Nathan Redmond also won their
first England caps.
Adam Lallana hit the post and Dele Alli saw a shot blocked at
point-blank range as England ruled the first half in a creative, threatening
and energetic display.
“I thought we were the better side up until their winning goal,
that was a good learning experience for our young players who made their
debuts,” said Southgate.
“All that was missing was the finish to get the winning goal which
I felt we deserved.”
Southgate saw plenty of plus points to take forward into Sunday’s
World Cup qualifier against Lithuania at Wembley.
“We walked through the three-man defence a few times and only had
limited chances to prepare it,” said Southgate.
“Michael Keane had an excellent debut and the system is perfect
for Lallana and Dele Alli.
“I have seen Germany pin teams back with the system we have played
in the past, I didn’t want us to be on the back foot and we created the good
chances we had.
“It’s a great option for us to have. We have to play specific
systems for specific games, but we need to be flexible. I decided on the system
six weeks ago after watching Germany.
“I was delighted with the way the team implemented it, but we
won’t necessarily do that for every game. It’s very exciting for what we can do
moving forward.”
One negative note for England was the crude anti-German World War
II song sung by travelling fans in the first-half.
“I didn’t hear what was sung, but it was mentioned to me, we would
encourage the fans to support the team in the right way,” said Southgate.
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