Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Trent Alexander-Arnold’s three-word messages speak volumes after England U-turn

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Trent Alexander-Arnold struck the decisive penalty in England’s shootout victory over Switzerland to book a place in the semi-finals of Euro 2024 – little more than two weeks after the moment his tournament looked all but over

Trent Alexander-Arnold celebrates following the team’s victory in the penalty shootout(UEFA via Getty Images)

“Not tonight lads”.

Three simple words, but they told the story.




They were the words of Trent Alexander-Arnold, little more than half an hour after full time after he had been hauled off during England’s draw with Denmark, as he walked through the mixed zone in the Frankfurt Arena. You could hardly blame him.

Gareth Southgate’s midfield experiment, starting in the tournament opener against Serbia and continued into that meeting with the Danes, simply hadn’t worked. The Liverpool man had looked like a fish out of water, struggling at a time when those around him were similarly far from their best and struggling to breathe in the heat of a major tournament.

Southgate’s decision to substitute him so abruptly early in the second half – something very unlike the Three Lions boss, a manager who is reactive by nature, a reputation which this tournament has only further crystallised – was telling, perhaps even shocking.

Alexander-Arnold hadn’t been happy to come off. Others could easily have been hooked too. But they weren’t. Those who the England boss trusts remained.

However, his experiment was written off with a very public admission that he and his coaching staff had been wrong about the man whom they had handed the No.8 shirt in Germany.

Trent Alexander-Arnold after being hauled off by Gareth Southgate vs Denmark(Getty Images)

As he walked out towards the exit, his head down, his hood up, past over 100 TV reporters, journalists, camera operators and UEFA staff in the bowels of the stadium, Alexander-Arnold’s words weren’t spoken with any malice. There was no anger. Instead, it seemed, there was acceptance.

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