England got back to winning ways in the Women’s Nations League with a dominant performance in a 1-0 win over Belgium on Friday night.
The Lionesses made a strong start at Leicester’s King Power Stadium and took the lead after 13 minutes when Lauren Hemp pounced after Millie Bright’s header from a corner had cannoned off the inside of the right-hand post.
Sarina Wiegman’s side continued to control possession throughout and mustered 19 shots, but while they held off the visitors – who grew in confidence after initially sitting back – they could not find a second to put the game beyond doubt.
The game saw the long-awaited return of Fran Kirby, who played the final half-hour to earn her 66th England cap more than 13 months after the last.
A second victory in three games in Group A1 lifts England back up to second, level on points with, but with an inferior goal difference to the Netherlands, who beat Scotland 4-0 in Nijmegen.
How the Lionesses got back on track
England had beaten Scotland and lost to the Netherlands in September, with an understandable hangover following the heart-breaking World Cup final defeat to Spain the month prior hanging over them. With Team GB able to qualify for next year’s Olympics if the Lionesses reach the final, bouncing back at the King Power was imperative.
Sarina Wiegman’s side understood their assignment. With Belgium happy to sit back and invite pressure, the hosts made such a strong stand and, inside three minutes, Niamh Charles had shot just over, with an Ella Toone header bouncing just past the post.
Before the 15-minute mark, they took the lead their intense pressing deserved. Bright – often playing so high it looked as though she was part of the midfield – headed a corner onto the woodwork, with Hemp on hand to lash in the follow-up and delight the sell-out crowd.
Toone, Alex Greenwood and Alessia Russo had chances to extend England’s lead before the break, but Belgium fired several warning shots to show they were not to be counted out. Justine Vanhaevermaet’s powerful header forced Mary Earps into a good double save, while Bright was given a run for her money by Tessa Wullaert on a number of occasions.
Fourteen shots had been taken by the hosts with an hour gone, but without a second goal, Wiegman introduced Rachel Daly and Kirby to try and inject energy and add comfort going into the closing stages.
It was Hemp who came closest to doubling the lead when she beat Yana Daniels and moved one-on-one with Nicky Evrard, but her shot let her down, with her effort from an angle straight at the Belgian stopper.
There was certainly an air of anxiety around the ground as the minutes ticked down, but England held on for an important, if narrow, win that keeps their hopes of winning the group very much intact.
What’s next?
The Lionesses’ Nations League double-header concludes with a trip to face Belgium again at the Den Dreef Stadion in Leuven at 7.30pm on Tuesday October 31.
They will then face the Netherlands at Wembley on Friday December 1, before travelling to Hampden Park to face Scotland on Tuesday December 5.