Skip to main content

Mistakes were exposed by Germany, claims England star

But Aluko feels there is more to come

Eniola Aluko said on Sunday that England must humbly accept their deficiencies were exposed at Wembley.

Striker Aluko was Europe’s leading scorer in World Cup qualifying, plundering 13 goals as the Three Lionesses earned their place at Canada 2015 with 10 straight wins.

They conceded just once in that campaign but were 2-0 behind to Germany after 12 minutes of Sunday’s big showdown, which marked the team’s first appearance at Wembley since the stadium was rebuilt.

A crowd of more than 45,000 saw England eventually beaten 3-0, and for Aluko, it was a critical stepping stone on the path to next summer’s tournament.

The 27-year-old said: “We played the best team in the world and that’s the benchmark and when you play the benchmark side you’ve got to take as many lessons from that as possible and be humble about it and say: ‘Where could we have been better as players collectively and individually?’

“Next time, hopefully when we play Germany, we’ll be able to rectify some of the mistakes we made.

“The purpose of this all is for us to go into a World Cup and compete. Hopefully there’s more to come from this team.

“The German players were very composed and knew what they were doing.

“We have a huge respect for Germany because for many years they’ve been doing what we aspire to do.”

Next summer’s World Cup will be played on synthetic pitches, which has caused complaints to escalate to the point of a legal objection being filed by a number of players.

The aggrieved players — none of them yet from the England camp — have complained that men would not be expected to play a World Cup on anything other than grass.

Aluko offered some sympathy to those arguing the case against 3G surfaces.

“It’s up to them what they argue, I can kind of understand some of their arguments,” she said. “It’s not something we can control and to be honest it might suit our style of play.”

Sunday’s match was an international perhaps like no other Wembley has known, the sort where an England team could trail by three goals at half-time and be still applauded off the pitch, and where Germany’s national anthem, the Deutschlandlied, was afforded a level of respect sadly often lacking at the stadium.

Rather than dwelling on old scores and old wars, England’s supporters, many too young in any case to have more than passing cognisance of such matters, were out to enjoy themselves on a day those in the women’s game have longed for.

OWNED BY OUR READERS

We're a reader-owned co-operative, which means you can become part of the paper too by buying shares in the People’s Press Printing Society.

 

 

Become a supporter

Fighting fund

You've Raised:£ 9,899
We need:£ 8,101
12 Days remaining
Donate today