Stuart Pearce claims his young lions (England 23/10 in Match Betting) are fully prepared and confident ahead of their opening Group B clash with tournament favourites Spain (Evens) in the European Under-21 Championships tomorrow.
The coach is without full internationals Jack Wilshere, Andy Carroll and Kieran Gibbs, but still believes he has enough talent at his disposal to trouble the Spanish who, like England, didn’t win their qualifying group.
England defeated Spain 2-0 at the same stage two years ago in Sweden but, although they made the final of that tournament, lost 4-0 to a Mesut Ozil-inspired Germany which provided several members of the World Cup semi-finalists’ senior squad a year later.
Without Gibbs, who picked up an injury in the final warm-up match against Norway this week, Pearce must promote his only other left-back Ryan Bertrand into a back four which may also include captain Michael Mancienne and future Manchester United pairing Phil Jones and Chris Smalling.
England are arguably more potent in attack than two years ago with both Danny Sturridge and Danny Welbeck having scored goals while on loan at Premier League clubs last season, but Spain look classier in midfield with Barcelona’s highly-rated Thiago Alcantara the star of their 1-1 friendly draw with Russia on the eve of the finals.
However, Spain’s failure to beat both Belarus and Russia in their warm-up matches will give England confidence as Pearce sets up to play on the counter-attack with the pace of Sturridge and Welbeck.
And England (9/4 in Group B Outright Winner), despite last winning the Under-21 tournament back in 1984, have had the better of Spain (5/4) in five of their eight previous meetings, drawing once and losing twice.
In Group B’s other fixture on Sunday Ukraine face the Czech Republic in a match which will evoke memories of these nations’ meetiing at the Euro Under-17 finals four years ago, with a lot of the same players involved.
Lukas Marecek put the Czechs 1-0 up in Italy but Ukraine responded with four Dmytro Korkishko goals, including a 12-minute hat-trick before half-time. Miroslav Stepanek pulled one back before Serhiy Shevchuk made it 5-2 before the final whistle.
The Czechs were the only team to remain undefeated through qualifying – winning nine games and drawing one. Top scorer Tomas Pekhart grabbed nine goals in qualifying while Libor Kozak scored three.
They also have plenty of creative midfield options – Liberec’s Borek Dockal and Sigma’s Tomas Horava will be on many scouts’ lists while Kaiserslautern’s Jan Moravek may be the best of those already playing outside the country (Czech Republic 7/2 in Group B Outright Winner).
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