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Analysis

San Marino 0-10 England: World Cup qualification secured but can Gareth Southgate's squad take the next step?

England complete World Cup qualification in style with an emphatic 10-0 win over San Marino that included four goals from Harry Kane and a strike by Emile Smith Rowe. Now only one question remains for Gareth Southgate's squad...

San Marino v England - FIFA World Cup 2022 - European Qualifying - Group I - San Marino Stadium
England's Bukayo Saka (second left) celebrates scoring their side's tenth goal of the game during the FIFA World Cup Qualifying match at the San Marino Stadium, Serravalle. Picture date: Monday November 15, 2021.
Image: Bukayo Saka celebrates scoring England's tenth goal against San Marino

Wins do not come more emphatic than that. This was England's biggest competitive victory but competitive was hardly the word. It was total domination as Gareth Southgate showcased the quality of his squad and the depth at his disposal.

Never before have England scored this many goals in a calendar year. No team has scored more goals in World Cup qualifying. The standard of this particular opponent might cause some to temper their enthusiasm but this team are World Cup contenders.

Consider the struggles of others. Italy are heading for the play-offs after finishing below Switzerland in their group. Portugal join them there. Spain had to survive a nervy night in Seville against Sweden. Even Germany lost a game. England did not.

It is a reminder that while Southgate's side have made qualification look straightforward, it can be tricky. Their consistency stands out. Unbeaten in qualifying for a third World Cup in a row, they have only lost once in qualifying for any major tournament in a dozen years.

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Highlights of the World Cup qualifier between San Marino and England

That England are so good at this is a testament to the attitude of the players and the spirit that has been fostered. That was once questioned. Now it is taken for granted. Such a culture is difficult to establish but Southgate has done so and that brings rewards.

It helps to assimilate new players and there were a number here. Conor Gallagher became the 50th player to make his debut under this England manager when he came on for the second half and came ever so close to scoring when his shot hit the foot of the post.

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After a successful World Cup qualifying campaign, we pick out the best goals from England's journey to Qatar 2022, featuring strikes from Harry Kane, Bukayo Saka and more!

Emile Smith Rowe did score on his first start, an already trademark finish as he ghosted into the penalty box. There was an assist for the second of Harry Kane's four goals too on a night that neither man is ever likely to forget. Aaron Ramsdale had rather less to do.

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The emergence of this next wave of talent means that the choices facing Southgate are luxurious ones. He can leave out Manchester City regulars or the wing-backs of the European champions. He can go without a £100m man or the Liverpool captain.

Harry Kane and Emile Smith Rowe celebrate during England's thrashing of San Marino

The in-form Declan Rice was not required against San Marino so there was the pleasure of seeing Jude Bellingham glide across the turf as he delivered yet another mature performance. It deserved a goal but that was denied him by a harsh VAR review.

The question that remains is whether Southgate's England can take the next step. Fourth at the 2018 World Cup, third in the 2019 Nations League and runners-up at Euro 2020, the task is obvious. Is this team building towards that or have they missed their chance?

Harry Kane makes it five for England from the spot against San Marino

There had been some speculations that it might be the latter given the dip in club form of key players such as Kane and Raheem Sterling. Two more heroes of the summer, Harry Maguire and Luke Shaw, have been enduring difficult periods with Manchester United too.

But Southgate is now able to play a role in rehabilitating his most reliable performers. Maguire scored on Friday against Albania and again in San Marino. Kane followed up his first-half hat-trick last time out by going one better this time around.

Players now look happiest in an England shirt. It was not always so.

Harry Kane scores England's fourth against San Marino

Combine that with the sheer volume of young talent still coming through and it is easy to be persuaded that this is a group yet to reach their peak. Rice is 22, Phil Foden only 21. Both seem certain to be important players at the World Cup. Both are still improving.

Kyle Walker is the only man in this latest squad who will be over 30 come Qatar. Given the glut of first-class options at right-back, with Trent Alexander-Arnold delivering a crossing masterclass against San Marino, even that can hardly be considered a concern.

Perhaps the outstanding question is for the coach not his players.

The depth is so impressive that it seems reasonable to believe that the solution to ending England's long wait for World Cup glory lies somewhere within this special squad of players. There is a combination there that can conquer all before them next winter.

Whether Southgate finds it will be dictated by the small decisions in the big moments. It might be a surprise selection in a semi-final or a proactive substitution at the right time on World Cup final night. That is what will define and decide Southgate's 2022.

Until then, 10-0 wins over San Marino will do nicely.

Analysis: This is England's golden generation

Sky Sports News' Rob Dorsett in San Marino:

"Let's start with a reality check: this was San Marino, ranked 210th in the world, who have lost 35 World Cup Qualifiers on the trot with an aggregate score of 146 goals against, seven scored. The defending was more Sunday league than Premier League.

"But England dismissed them emphatically, with a much-changed side, two players making their debut, and Emile Smith Rowe making his first start. The average age of that squad, just under 23, is the youngest we've seen under Gareth Southgate.

"When you look at what's happened to Italy and Portugal, two other big European teams, having to go through the play-offs, England have dismissed these teams emphatically.

"There was an awful lot of discussion over a decade ago about the golden generation of England players - Lampard, Gerrard, Rooney, Terry - but in truth, this now is England's golden generation.

"It feels like a special group of players under a manager that has got them playing incredibly well, and it's a squad people want to be around and want to play for. They play without fear; they play how they play for their clubs."

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