Kane available to face Latvia as England aim to book World Cup place

England's striker #09 Harry Kane reacts during the UEFA Nations League, League B - Group 2, football match between England and the Republic of Ireland at Wembley Stadium in London on November 17, 2024. (Photo by Ben STANSALL / AFP)

Audio By Vocalize
Harry Kane is fit to feature for England as they aim to
qualify for the World Cup with a win against
Latvia on Tuesday.
England captain Kane missed the 3-0 friendly win over Wales
on Thursday with an ankle problem sustained while playing for Bayern Munich
recently.
But the Three Lions' record goalscorer, who has netted 74
times for his country, returned to training at the weekend and boss Thomas
Tuchel expects Kane to start the qualifier in Riga.
"It's very easy with Harry, he can play, he is fit. We
did the right thing. Top in training and ready to go," Tuchel told
reporters on Monday.
"And I don't see why he should not be able to play 90
minutes. The pause was just a short pause for him. He played all matches before
with Bayern, so I don't see any obstacles there."
Kane's return means Tuchel will have no reason to rue the
injury to Aston Villa striker Ollie Watkins, who was forced to withdraw from
the squad after colliding with a post while trying to score against Wales.
"Ollie left camp, unfortunately. It was too painful,"
Tuchel said.
"He could not train with us, so he is in treatment with
his club and tries to get ready for the weekend. Everyone else is with
us."
Group K leaders England can seal their World Cup berth with
two games to spare if they beat Latvia.
They have won all five group matches without conceding a
goal, giving them a four-point lead over second-placed Albania with a game in
hand.
England beat Latvia 3-0 at Wembley in March in Tuchel's
second game in charge.
But they have improved significantly since then, routing
Serbia 5-0 in September before producing an impressive first half display to
swat aside Wales.
Having been criticised following the slow start to his
reign, Tuchel sees signs that England are developing into a cohesive unit
capable of playing the attacking style he promised when he took over in
January.
"I feel that we are building something, and we are
going in the right direction. As always in sports, tomorrow is the most
difficult game," he said.
"We have to show respect to our opponent, respect the
circumstances. It's an away match in a World Cup qualifier, and, with the
result from Albania and Serbia, we can qualify tomorrow. And we want to do it
with a win with extra motivation."
Tuchel had made it his goal to create a club style
atmosphere among his England squad, calling for a Premier League level of intensity
in their performances.
England's last two matches have fulfilled the former Chelsea
manager's wish and he expects them to continue in the same vein against Latvia.
"The spirit and the momentum is clearly there. The
players are fully focused. They train with an awareness," he said.
"They train with joy. They train with a lot of quality.
You can sense it. So everyone made an impact.
"The focus is on building a strong team, starting a
strong team, starting also a team that is used to playing with each
other."
Leave a Comment