Football: Lallana bails out England with last-gasp winner against Slovaks

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Football: Lallana bails out England with last-gasp winner against Slovaks
England's forward Wayne Rooney (centre) is tackled by Slovakia's midfielder Marek Hamsik (left) and Jan Gregus during the World Cup 2018 football qualification in Trnava on Sunday.

Published: Sun 4 Sep 2016, 10:34 PM

Last updated: Mon 5 Sep 2016, 12:44 AM

Adam Lallana scored with the last kick of the match as England edged 10-man Slovakia 1-0 in Sam Allardyce's first game as manager in World Cup qualifying on Sunday.
Despite Slovakia having Martin Skrtel sent off in the 57th minute, Allardyce looked destined to become the first England manager since Bobby Robson in 1982 not to win his first game in charge.
But in the fifth minute of stoppage time at Trnava's City Arena, Lallana squeezed a shot between Slovakia goalkeeper Matus Kozacik's legs to get England up and running in Group F.
Allardyce, nicknamed 'Big Sam', succeeded Roy Hodgson after England's humiliating Euro 2016 elimination by Iceland.
Kozacik's gaffe enabled him to become the ninth England manager to start his tenure with a win.
Lallana's goal spared England from a repeat of the result from their group-stage encounter with Slovakia at Euro 2016.
It also meant that captain Wayne Rooney finished as a winner on a night when he won his 116th cap to become England's most-capped outfield player.
Allardyce had vowed that Rooney would no longer play as a number 10 on his watch, but the captain nonetheless lined up in midfield beside Jordan Henderson in a 4-1-4-1 system.
With Raheem Sterling hugging the touchline on the right and Lallana flitting infield from the left, it left lone striker Harry Kane isolated.
It took England until mid-way through the first half to present Kane with anything approaching a shooting chance and when Kyle Walker picked him out at the near post, the number nine missed his kick.
Slovakia gave England a scare when Michal Duris robbed Danny Rose and flashed the ball across the six-yard box that narrowly eluded Dusan Svento.
The first half ended with Sterling flashing a shot wide, but England were toiling.
Allardyce shuffled his pack at half-time, switching Sterling and Lallana and pushing Rooney upfield, but it took the dismissal of Skrtel for the visitors to take the upper hand.
Booked in the first half for catching Kane with a flailing arm, the former Liverpool centre-back saw red after crudely stamping on the same opponent's calf as he knelt on the pitch.
Rooney registered England's first shot on target in the 65th minute, a weak curler that Kozacik pushed away uncertainly, before Sterling almost caught the Slovakia goalkeeper out with an improvised chip.
Allardyce sent on Dele Alli and Theo Walcott for Henderson and Sterling, while Daniel Sturridge replaced Kane late on.
But the visitors came no closer than a left-foot snapshot from Lallana that hit the left-hand post and bounced across goal.
The Liverpool midfielder continued to look like England's best chance of a goal, with one shot parried by Kozacik and another fizzing wide.
Walcott found the net in the 90th minute, tucking the ball away after Sturridge's shot was blocked, only for his celebrations to be cut short by an offside flag.
But just as it looked as if victory would elude England, Lallana gathered Rose's cross and unleashed a hopeful shot that crept between Kozacik's legs and dribbed into the net.
In Copenhage, Christian Eriksen scored a first-half goal but missed a second-half penalty as wasteful Denmark began their World Cup qualifying campaign with 1-0 win over Armenia in European Group E on Sunday.
With the visitors missing captain and record goal-scorer Henrikh Mkhitaryan due to a thigh injury, Eriksen rifled home Viktor Fischer's backheeled pass in the 17th minute of coach Age Hareide's first competitive international in charge.
In driving rain, Fischer saw his powerful first-half shot from distance come cannoning back off the crossbar and Eriksen had a second-half penalty saved by Armenia goalkeeper Arsen Beglaryan as the Danes struggled to convert their dominance into goals.
Armenia, who have never qualified for the World Cup as an independent nation, managed just one shot on target and Denmark, who themselves missed out on Brazil on 2014, held out comfortably.

By Agencies

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