The Independant
Shearer the peerless poacher
8th June 1997, by Ian Ridley in
Montpellier

France 0
England 1
Shearer 86
Attendance: 25,000
EXPERT and expansive earlier in
the week against Poland and Italy, England were expedient last night against
France here. At times rough and too ready to resort to the long ball, they
nevertheless recorded another notable achievement against next year's World
Cup hosts as they maintained a 100 per cent record to top the table at Le
Tournoi.
A third victory in eight days came courtesy of Alan Shearer's 11th goal in his
last 11 international matches and extended England's away record under Glenn
Hoddle to played five, won five, with no goals conceded. After a first win in
Poland for 31 years, a first over Italy for 20, this was England's first
success in France for 48 years. The French had previously lost only one game
in 35 matches since 1994 under their coach Aime Jacquet.
How Jacquet must yearn for a striker such as Shearer. The French, no shrinking
blues themselves, endured some tough early tackling by England to assemble
some good attacking movements, but even the muscular presence of the recalled,
whole-hearted Christophe Dugarry could not bring them a goal.
At the other end, France confirmed themselves solid once more in defence, but
how Shearer is blessed with the knack of finding the right place at the right
time. The England captain is now close to averaging a goal every other game,
with 16 from 34 appearances. Only 10 minutes remained when Hoddle recreated
the old pals' act by substitute Teddy Sheringham for the wasteful Ian Wright.
Seven minutes later Shearer played the ball wide on the right to Sheringham
and from the low cross, deflected and consequently forcing the French
goalkeeper Fabien Barthez to let it slip, Shearer was on hand to touch
gleefully home.
"With Alan Shearer in the team, you've always got a chance," said Hoddle. "It
was a good, professsional performance of the sort we will need next year if we
get here. Winning breeds confidence. It is a question of finding that balance
between clean sheets and creating. It's coming together, but we have got to
keep our feet on the ground."
For much of the time England had to absorb French pressure, David Seaman
rescuing them with some fine saves when a back three in which Gary Neville was
mis-matched with Dugarry was breached. Rarely was there the quality, save now
and then, from David Beckham, that Paul Scholes had shown against Italy. Too
often possession was surrendered.
Hoddle had made six changes from the mid-week side, recalling Paul Gascoigne
for his 50th cap. He was mostly anonymous, if tidy, but at least escaped
uninjured this time. He was also fortunate not to be punished for a snipe at
Patrick Vieira's shins.
Jacquet was even more swingeing in his changes - eight of them - after the 1-1
draw with Brazil and his search for a striking partnership brought together
Nicolas Ouedec, rendered ineffectual by Sol Campbell, and Dugarry for the
first time.
At least Dugarry provided a more physical presence, shown early on when he
headed over the bar Youri Djorkaeff's free kick. It came from one of many
fouls England committed in the early stages and they were fortunate to survive
as long as the ninth minute without a yellow card. David Batty opened the
innings. A caution for Beckham was somewhat more bizarre. Injured by a late
tackle from Vieira, he hobbled to the sideline to continue being treated. As
he did the referee Said Belquola brandished the card for ignoring instructions
to climb on to a stretcher. It meant that Beckham, who was counselled by
Gareth Southgate against retaliating when he returned to the field, will be
suspended from Tuesday's match against Brazil in Paris.
Dugarry at this stage was proving a handful. First he robbed Southgate,
sending in a low shot which Seaman held comfortably, then headed down Laurent
Blanc's chip forward only for a fortunate and momentarily bemused England
goalkeeper to save with his legs.
It took England 34 minutes to fashion a chance of their own, Barthez saving
Shearer's header from Graeme Le Saux's cross. Five minutes later they should
have scored. Beckham, his head now back in the game after being disturbed by
the earlier incident, played a good through ball to Shearer, just on side, and
from his low cross from the left the unmarked Wright seemed certain to score
until Barthez diverted the ball over the bar.
With Paul Ince now introduced to pin back the previouslyu influential Didier
Deschamps in midfield, England gradually grew and Sheringham's favourite
near-post shot from Gascoigne's low corner was deflected just wide. Then came
Shearer's coup de grace. Rather than hope, England is beginning to expect for
this time next year.
France (4-4-2): Barthez (Monaco); Thuram (Parma), Blanc (Barcelona), N'Gotty
(Paris St-Germain), Laigle (Sampdoria); Vieira (Arsenal), Djorkaeff (Internazionale),
Deschamps (Juventus), Keller (Karlsruhe); Dugarry (Milan), Ouedec (Espanyol).
Subs: Loko (Paris St-Germain) for Ouedec, 63; Zidane (Juventus) for Dugarry,
76; Lizarazu (Athletic Bilbao) for Laigle, 84.
England (3-5-2): Seaman (Arsenal); G Neville (Manchester Utd), Southgate
(Aston Villa), Campbell (Tottenham); P Neville (Manchester Utd), Beckham
(Manchester Utd), Gascoigne (Rangers), Batty (Newcastle), Le Saux (Blackburn);
Shearer (Newcastle), Wright (Arsenal). Subs: Ince (Internazionale) for Batty,
h-t; Lee (Newcastle) for Beckham, 76; Sheringham (Tottenham) for Wright, 80.
Referee: M Said Belqola (Morocco).