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British media brand Iceland defeat as England's worst

A selection of Tuesday's newspaper back pages which roundly condemn England's 2-1 defeat to Iceland in Euro 2016
Image: A selection of Tuesday's newspaper back pages after England's defeat to Iceland

British newspapers left their readers under no illusions on Tuesday after England's Euro 2016 hopes were crushed by Iceland, describing the 2-1 loss as the worst in their history.

Goals from Ragnar Sigurdsson and Kolbeinn Sigthorsson were enough to lead the tiny nation to a quarter-final clash with hosts France, with the loss costing England manager Roy Hodgson his job.

The British media held nothing back after Monday night's defeat, with the headlines proclaiming the loss as not only "embarrassing" but also "the ultimate humiliation."

Roy Hodgson
Image: Roy Hodgson stood down after four years in charge following the 2-1 defeat to Iceland

Many referred to England's shock 1-0 loss to the United States in the 1950 World Cup in Brazil in their post-match reports, though they felt the result in Nice would now surpass that as their worst in international soccer.

"This was England's most humiliating night in international football: far worse than the 1950 World Cup defeat to the USA in Belo Horizonte," Paul Hayward wrote in The Daily Telegraph.

"Defeat here in Nice was always going to be a deeper trauma. This one came in the era of the Premier League as global industry."

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Former England striker Alan Smith claims England's performance at Euro 2016 was a disaster for English football.

The Guardian's Daniel Taylor also compared Monday's result to the 1950 loss in Belo Horizonte and suggested England's allusions to being one of the powerhouses of world soccer now needed to be questioned.

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"Hodgson's reign will be defined by a result comparable to losing to the United States in the 1950 World Cup," Taylor wrote. "The now-familiar inquest will begin again in a country that likes to see itself as football royalty."

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There were contrasting emotions between the England and Iceland fans after the match

The Daily Mail's Martin Samuel described the loss as a "seismic wave" for English soccer and felt that Hodgson probably should have been sacked after the side's group phase exit at the 2014 World Cup.

"What a waste the last two years have been," Samuel wrote. "Hodgson should have gone in 2014, when England lasted two matches at the World Cup. He wasn't the man then, he isn't the man now.

"There has been much talk of progress, promise and a strong culture of responsibility, but under pressure, that all evaporated."

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Former manager Steve McClaren blamed England's lack of tactics and technique in the final third

While Hodgson was blamed for having a seemingly incoherent plan for the tournament with no clear idea on his strongest side or how to play the game, the players and the culture of the English Premier League were also criticised.

"The reason why the nation struggles to feel empathy or connections with many of these players is the ego," Ian Herbert wrote in The Independent. "Too famous, too important, too rich, too high and mighty... that is this England."

The Guardian's Dominic Fifield also criticised the more experienced players in the squad, who had not shown any leadership or stepped up to help their younger team members.

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Jamie Carragher reacts to England's shock exit from Euro 2016 after a 2-1 defeat to Iceland in Nice

"Hodgson had needed his most established players to excel if the team were going to make an impression," Fifield wrote. "In the end, they simply wilted like the rest."

BBC Sport's chief football writer Phil McNulty also felt the players would need to take a look at themselves under a new manager.

"The ultimate responsibility lies with the manager but, make no mistake, he was badly let down by players capable of so much better," McNulty wrote.

"Hodgson will take the blame and has paid the price but these highly-paid Premier League players should not escape criticism."

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