logo
‘Just smash into them' – England U21s star Charlie Cresswell reveals his plan to bring pain to Spain in Euros showdown

‘Just smash into them' – England U21s star Charlie Cresswell reveals his plan to bring pain to Spain in Euros showdown

The Suna day ago

CHARLIE CRESSWELL says England have nothing Tou-Louse and vowed to bring the pain to Spain and 'smash' straight into them.
The Young Lions went down 2-1 to Germany on Wednesday in Slovakia to finish runners-up in Group B.
3
3
Lee Carsley 's side are now on a collision course with the much-fancied La Roja, the team they beat to win the U21 Euros in 2023, in Trnava on Saturday.
The boss revealed that he let his players have it as they trailed 2-0 to the Germans at the break but was pleased by the response as Alex Scott almost sparked a late rally.
And Cresswell, 22, insists that there won't be a repeat of the 'lack of fight' they started with when they go to battle with star-studded Spanish Armada.
The honest defender, who has starred for Toulouse in Ligue 1 since joining from Leeds last summer, said: 'It wasn't good enough from everyone, myself included, it was a collective thing. We just needed more fight, more determination. We can go press them high and get the ball back. We needed more of that and you saw that in the second half.'
On the content of Carsley's dressing down, he continued: 'Show some fight, you're playing for England, let's run harder than them, work harder than them. I was saying to the lads 'just smash into them', 'I don't know you're there' and 'let them know they're in a game'.
'We showed that in the second half, but we've got to take that into the next game.
'You can't give Germany that, otherwise look what they did. That's the thing with European competitions, you get punished and you've got to be at your best game.'
Cresswell, whose father is a former Leeds star, acknowledged that many will have England down as the underdogs.
But he, along with Harvey Elliott, were part of the squad that toppled them in Georgia two years ago and he's relishing another fierce battle.
He added: 'We go into each game wanting to win. We respect every team. It's going to be a different group from two years ago and they'll be a good side and we've got to be at our game.
Lee Carsley hailed for 'best football England have ever played' as fans say 'can we rip up Tuchel's contract-'
3
'Of course Spain are a top side. The first team as well, it runs through their system. You know when you play against Spain what they're going to be like. They're going to pass it around and try to make you move. But we've got to stand strong and take the game to them. 'We've got quality in that dressing-room. We know we can beat them.
'Everyone has their weaknesses, you know. We've got to make sure we're at our A game.
'It was good [in 2023], I know it got a bit fiery at some points and I'm pretty sure it'll be a fiery game. I enjoy that stuff though.
I was saying to the lads 'just smash into them', 'I don't know you're there' and 'let them know they're in a game'.
Charlie Cresswell
'I said to the lads, it doesn't get better than this. You're playing for England Under-21s, against Germany and next will be against Spain. It doesn't get better than this. We'll look back on this time and want to live this point again so it's important we stay right here right now and enjoy every moment.'
Ipswich winger Omari Hutchinson, whose trickery produced the assist for Scott, added: 'They're very good on the ball, so we want to be dominant. We're gonna have to try to take that away from them. We can be physically better than them. We've just got to physically outrun them and take them to the final whistle.
'Cars is big on that. He said last time they played each other it was a tough game. We just want to be able to dominate and win by two goals really.
'It's my biggest game for England so I'm looking forward to it.'
England's Under-21 Euros squad in FULL
ENGLAND are looking to retain their status as Under-21 European champions this summer in Slovakia.
Here is Lee Carsley's full squad for the blockbuster tournament:
Goalkeepers: James Beadle (Brighton and Hove Albion), Teddy Sharman-Lowe (Chelsea), Tommy Simkin (Stoke City)
Defenders: Charlie Cresswell (FC Toulouse), Ronnie Edwards (Southampton), CJ Egan-Riley (Burnley), Tino Livramento (Newcastle United), Brooke Norton Cuffy (Genoa), Jarell Quansah (Liverpool)
Midfielders: Elliot Anderson (Nottingham Forest), Archie Gray (Tottenham Hotspur), Hayden Hackney (Middlesbrough), Jack Hinshelwood (Brighton and Hove Albion), Tyler Morton (Liverpool), Alex Scott (AFC Bournemouth)
Forwards: Harvey Elliott (Liverpool), Omari Hutchinson (Ipswich Town), Sam Iling Jnr (Aston Villa), James McAtee (Manchester City), Ethan Nwaneri (Arsenal), Jonathan Rowe (Marseille), Jay Stansfield (Birmingham City)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A grand design — the watch that captures the spirit of Ferrari
A grand design — the watch that captures the spirit of Ferrari

Times

time39 minutes ago

  • Times

A grand design — the watch that captures the spirit of Ferrari

'And this is Alain,' says Amanda Mille, the brand and partnerships director at the company her father, Richard, founded. We are in Paris at the Palais de Tokyo to see the unveiling of Richard Mille's new collaboration with Ferrari. And the Alain who has just been so insouciantly introduced is none other than Alain Prost, racing legend and winner of four Formula 1 world championships. Between 1990 and 1991 the Frenchman was a Ferrari driver, and this is why he is here today, along with a more recent alumnus of the team's school, the Brazilian Felipe Massa, who raced for Scuderia Ferrari from 2006 to 2013. Massa also has the distinction of being the first brand partner to sign up with Richard Mille, back in 2004 when the company was a fledgling business making only about 300 watches a year. He talks fondly of how he agreed to wear a watch as a test driver at a time before Richard Mille had any formal budget for such things. The relationship has endured, and Massa always raced wearing a Richard Mille. The RM 43-01 Tourbillon Split-Seconds Chronograph Ferrari, POA, The luxury Swiss watchmaker launched in 2001 with the aim of crafting thoroughly modern timepieces. A fan of motors and motor racing, Mille described his supertechnical lightweight designs as being like 'a racing machine on the wrist'. His son Alexandre, the company's commercial director, says, 'For my father, this partnership with Ferrari is a dream come true.' Beyond the synergies of quality, technology and innovation that connect the two firms, both are also clearly about passion. Massa puts it well: 'It is a great pleasure to be part of [Richard Mille] history, being part of the family. It is like when you enter Ferrari — you are always a Ferrari driver from the beginning and part of the 'religion'.' The Monegasque Charles Leclerc, who now drives for the team, would surely agree. He has been supported by Richard Mille since 2009, when he was karting. Flavio Manzoni, Ferrari's chief design officer, sees the two brands as natural partners. 'A collaboration like this is as much predicated on similarities in values as it is on the visual similarities between a Ferrari engine or component and the elements in a watch.' The first Richard Mille and Ferrari joint effort, 2022's RM UP-01 Ferrari, is a 1.75mm-thin timepiece, a curious and distinctive design that references dials on a dashboard. But the new launch is more recognisably Richard Mille. The RM 43-01 has the firm's signature barrel shape and skeleton construction. But it is not a piece that has simply been badged with a Ferrari logo: the watchmaker worked closely with Ferrari's Centro Stile in Maranello, near Modena, for three years to express the spirit of the cars in the form of a timepiece. It is the beauty of the RM 43-01 as much as its performance that captures the attention. The oscillating tourbillon compensates for the impact of gravity and the chronograph can measure split times with its two seconds hands, but it is the crafted look and feel — and the echoes of the driving machines — that really set it apart. The clutch wheel of a Ferrari V8 engine inspired the barrel jewel setting, while x-shaped supports combined with screws in gold with hexagonal socket heads reference details on Ferrari crankcases and engine blocks. The pushers, case and indices take styling cues from the geometry of the bodies of Ferrari's SF90 Stradale, Daytona SP3 and 488 Challenge Evo models, while a titanium plate shaped to recall the rear wing of the 499P hypercar is engraved with the firm's famous prancing horse motif. 'In terms of performance, anything that has a technical purpose can also be beautiful,' Manzoni says. 'The concept of functional beauty is something that we really love.' And clearly Richard Mille loves it too.

England stay patient after decision to ask India to bat backfires as bowling coach Tim Southee puts his faith in new ball and 'X-factor' Ben Stokes
England stay patient after decision to ask India to bat backfires as bowling coach Tim Southee puts his faith in new ball and 'X-factor' Ben Stokes

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

England stay patient after decision to ask India to bat backfires as bowling coach Tim Southee puts his faith in new ball and 'X-factor' Ben Stokes

England bowling coach Tim Southee invited judgment to be reserved until both teams have batted after a 'tough' opening day against India at Headingley. Not since Nasser Hussain inserted Australia in the 2002-03 Ashes has a toss decision at the start of a five-match series been scrutinised as heavily as that of Ben Stokes. Just as in Brisbane, when the hosts piled up 364 for two, the opening hours featured two centurions in Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal as England did not make use of what moisture there was in the pitch. 'It was a tough day, but we will get our opportunity to bat soon,' said Southee after India hit 359 for three. 'When you win the toss and bowl you expect to make early inroads, but the Indian openers negotiated the first hour pretty well. Once the wicket flattened, it was a pretty good surface. 'We have a job to do with the second new ball and then there are a few batters who will be keen to get out there.' Only nine balls Gill faced would have gone on to hit the stumps, but Southee highlighted how the favoured mode of dismissal of Chris Woakes and Brydon Carse is caught behind, leading to them operating outside off-stump. With others offering little threat, it was left to Stokes to provide two breakthroughs, striking in each of two spells that made up figures of two for 43. After two hamstring tears in 2024, the 34-year-old is back as an all-rounder, but England fans will not want him to overdo things in an Ashes year. 'There's always a question around that with the injuries he's had, but he's a player that makes things happen, a real X-factor player, and we saw that,' added Southee. 'When he's doing that it's tough to get the ball out of his hand. He's out there making the calls, so if he's feeling like he's threatening he's going to bowl. It's as well as I have seen him bowl for a while.'

Blair Kinghorn Lions arrival further delayed as Scotland full-back helps Toulouse into Top 14 final
Blair Kinghorn Lions arrival further delayed as Scotland full-back helps Toulouse into Top 14 final

Scotsman

timean hour ago

  • Scotsman

Blair Kinghorn Lions arrival further delayed as Scotland full-back helps Toulouse into Top 14 final

Kinghorn returns from injury in semi-final victory Sign up to our Rugby Union newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Blair Kinghorn's Lions arrival has been further delayed after he helped Toulouse reach the Top 14 final with a 32-25 victory over Bayonne in Friday night's semi-final. The Scotland full-back was playing for the first time since recovering from a knee injury which had kept him out since April and lasted 60 minutes of the clash in Lyon before being replaced. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The defending champions were made to work for their place in the final by a surprise package Bayonne side who finished fourth in the regular season but prevailed thanks to the boot of Thomas Ramos, who kicked 22 points including two conversions on tries scored by Romain Ntamack and Paul Graou. Blair Kinghorn will miss Lions first match in Australia next weekend. | AFP via Getty Images Toulouse are bidding for a hat-trick of consecutive French titles, with Kinghorn having been part of the winning side last season following his move from Edinburgh. The 28-year-old is the only player in Andy Farrell's touring party who did not join up with the squad in Dublin prior to Friday's 24-28 defeat to Argentina. While Kinghorn's return from injury is good news for the Lions he will now miss the first game in Australia against Western Force next weekend and most likely the following match against Queensland Reds on July 2. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad That is because Toulouse will meet either Bordeaux or Toulon in the Top 14 final next Saturday at the Stade de France in Paris with Kinghorn expected to start.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store