England never able to match Spain
England coach Roy Hodgson admitted his side may never be able to
bridge the gap in technical ability to Spain after losing 2-0 to the
European champions on Friday.
Defeat was England's first in 15 games since a disappointing exit
after just two matches at the World Cup in Brazil.

Roy Hodgson |
However, Hodgson's men failed to cope with Spain's composure on the
ball before a stunning opener from Mario Gaspar and Santi Cazorla's cool
finish handed the hosts victory in the final 20 minutes.
"Most teams that play against Spain there is a gap," said Hodgson.
"The opposing team has less possession of the ball because they are so
good technically and pass the ball so well.
"That gap may always exist, we knew that and knew we had to work very
hard defensively to stop them using that ability to create goal-scoring
opportunities, which we managed to do for the best part of the game.
"If you say are we going to be able to match them in that
unbelievably clever passing way perhaps we can't, but we don't need to
do that.
"We saw they had a disappointing World Cup like ourselves, but they
are a good team and we've got work to do. I hope of course in the months
ahead with a stronger squad to choose from we'll become better."
Hodgson left captain Wayne Rooney on the bench in favour of a
youthful triumvirate of Harry Kane, Ross Barkley and Raheem Sterling in
attack.
However, they failed to overly trouble the Spanish backline as the
visitors only came close to scoring when Rooney clipped the bar and Kane
forced Iker Casillas into a smart save in stoppage time.
"The (opening) goal came at the wrong time and gave Spain a deserved
victory," added Hodgson. "We are left to rue the fact that at the moment
we are short on the ground, especially when it comes to midfield and
forward players.
"We just have to learn our lesson from it and remember that when you
are playing against teams of this quality you can't afford to make any
technical mistakes in the wrong areas because you are going to get
punished".
Hodgson was unable to call on the likes of Theo Walcott, Daniel
Sturridge, Danny Welbeck, James Milner and Jamie Vardy through injury.
And he fears Manchester United midfielder Michael Carrick coud also be
set for a spell on the sidelines after he was carried off in the
second-half.
"It doesn't look good, he's got a severely twisted ankle and that
normally means ligament damage. "We won't know that of course until he's
had an x-ray or a scan, but it doesn't look good"
England are due to face France in a friendly at Wembley on
Tuesday.However, the game is now in doubt after a series of horrific
attacks in Paris on Friday night, including outside the Stade de France
as France beat Germany, killed at least 128 people and left another 180
injured.
A spokesman for the English Football Association said they would
liaise with their French counterparts over the weekend before taking a
decision on whether the game will go ahead. |