Captain Harry Kane scored hat-trick, England thrashed Panama by 6-1
Captain Harry Kane led
the way with a hat-trick as England stormed into the knockout stages of the
World Cup with a 6-1 thrashing of Panama.
Gareth Southgate's side
had squeezed past Tunisia in their opening Group G game thanks to a
stoppage-time winner from their skipper, but there was no late drama in a
one-sided clash in Nizhny Novgorod.
Kane and John Stones
both scored twice in the first half, the former converting a pair of penalties
as England netted five before the break against their beleaguered opponents.
However, Jesse Lingard
registered the pick of England's first-half strikes, bending a shot home with
his right foot after being teed up by Raheem Sterling, who – despite media
conjecture in the week – kept his place in the starting XI.
Kane enjoyed a slice of
good fortune to secure his treble, inadvertently deflecting Ruben
Loftus-Cheek's drive beyond goalkeeper Jaime Penedo, for his fifth of the
tournament, moving him clear of Cristiano Ronaldo and Romelu Lukaku in the
battle for the Golden Boot.
Substitute Felipe Baloy
created history with Panama's first goal in the finals, though England's
emphatic win sees them join Belgium - who they face in Kaliningrad on Thursday
- in qualifying from the group.
Panama actually enjoyed
the first good chance - Anibal Godoy slicing a clear sight of goal wide with
his left foot – before they left a canal-sized gap for an unmarked Stones to
thump home a header from Kieran Trippier's corner.
The early goal opened
the floodgates. Kane emphatically converted a penalty to make it 2-0 following
a foul on Lingard, who was next to find the net with a sublime curling finish
with his right foot from the edge of the area.
A clever set-piece move
set up Stones for the next, the centre-back on hand to nod home the rebound
after goalkeeper Penedo had impressively kept out Sterling's close-range
header.
Kane completed the
first-half carnage with a mirror image of his earlier penalty, hammering the
ball into Penedo's top right corner after referee Ghead Grisha had spotted a
foul on the forward by Fidel Escobar, albeit he was not the only offender as
Panama felt holding was their only hope of stemming the English tide.
The Tottenham striker
became just the third Englishman to score a treble at the World Cup finals in
the 62nd minute, his final touch on Loftus-Cheek's attempt seeing him join a
select club that also includes Geoff Hurst and Gary Lineker.
Having enjoyed watching
his team-mates run up the score, Jordan Pickford made a brave block on Murillo.
Yet the Everton goalkeeper was unable to stop veteran Baloy's first-time
attempt from Ricardo Avila's free-kick, sparking huge celebrations on the
field, in the dugout and also in the stands.
Panama rightly enjoyed
their consolation goal, but Kane and England will hog the headlines after a
resounding result that will further raise hopes back home of a repeat of their
1966 triumph.