Jude Bellingham’s last-gasp equaliser salvaged a 2-2 draw for England against Belgium and avoided a second consecutive defeat at Wembley in a matter of days.
Defensive errors came to the fore again for England, who looked to be heading for yet another defeat to a FIFA top 10-ranked opponent, but Bellingham, who had missed two golden opportunities earlier in the match, spared the hosts’ blushes.
Gareth Southgate’s side’s problems started early on with Man City defender John Stones limping off, before Youri Tielemans capitalised on a Jordan Pickford error to give Belgium the lead.
The hosts, missing the likes of Harry Kane, Bukayo Saka and Kyle Walker through injury, responded well to those early setbacks as Ivan Toney won and scored a penalty to bring England level.
Jarrod Bowen had a goal disallowed by VAR for offside and Bellingham missed a sitter before Wembley was left stunned again as Tielemans headed home Romelu Lukaku’s cross to restore Belgium’s lead going into the interval.
England pushed for an equaliser after the break but Bellingham headed another glorious opportunity wide before the impressive Kobbie Mainoo was denied by a smart save from Matz Sels.
Phil Foden then sent a strike wide of the far post as the Three Lions looked to be stuttering towards another defeat, but Bellingham popped up to have the final say on what was a difficult night for England.
Questions still remain for the Euro 2024 favourites. Southgate’s record against top 10 nations now reads seven wins, seven draws, and 11 defeats and with time starting to run out, there is still plenty to be resolved ahead of the tournament in Germany this summer.
How Bellingham rescued England…
England made a slow start to the game and they weren’t helped by yet another injury. Stones raised his hand to the bench after appearing to pick up a knock before limping off to be replaced by Joe Gomez just days ahead of Manchester City’s huge Premier League clash against Arsenal, which is live on Sky Sports.
England’s problems deepened moments later when the normally reliable Pickford gifted the visitors a goal. The Everton goalkeeper’s clearance was easily intercepted before Tielemans placed his long-range strike into the bottom corner with Pickford scrambling back into position.
The hosts weren’t behind for long, however, with Toney doing his hopes of securing a place in Southgate’s Euro 2024 squad no harm. The Brentford striker latched onto Bellingham’s pass inside the penalty area before being brought down by Jan Vertonghen, and he made no mistake from the spot to bring England level.
Pickford then had to be alert to deny Jeremy Doku with a smart save before England got a grip of the game. Bowen saw his first England goal chalked off by VAR for offside before the West Ham forward curled an effort over from the corner of the penalty area.
Then came a moment that stunned Wembley. Bellingham proved he is human after all as England won the ball back high up the pitch before the Real Madrid star, who had a clear sight on goal, blazed high over the bar from eight yards.
All England’s good work going forward was undone in the 36th minute as Romelu Lukaku’s cross teed up an unmarked Tielemans for his second of the night to send Belgium in at the break in front after a manic 45 minutes.
England, who came out for the second half without names on their shirts to highlight memory loss as one of the symptoms of dementia, pushed for an equaliser as Foden teed up Toney, but the striker’s effort was turned behind by Matz Sels at his near post.
Bellingham was again guilty of wastefulness in front of goal as he headed Gomez’s cross wide from a glorious position before the impressive Mainoo was denied by a smart save by Sels at his near post.
Foden then fired wide as England looked set to fall short until Bellingham’s stoppage-time strike brought some smiles back to England faces.
Bellingham pleased to spare England from any ‘rubbish’ from critics
Speaking after the game, England goalscorer Bellingham was pleased to spare his side any “rubbish” from their critics after snatching the 2-2 draw.
He said: “Yeah I liked it because I know the rubbish we would have got if we lost two games on the bounce.
“These are two games that are going to stand us in good stead going into the Euros. I know people will be negative but you have to take these games for what they are.
“You’ve got to keep perspective. We had a lot of lads making debuts (this week) and a lot of lads I’ve never played with. We created a lot of chances. I should have scored (previously). I was happy I could make it up to the team.”
Bellingham also spoke up for Southgate, who has been working with a severely-depleted squad and saw Stones join a lengthy injury list early in the match.
“Of course it’s hard for the gaffer, people need to realise how hard it is. You come into these games expecting a fully-fit team and expect to give it a really good crack,” added the midfielder.
“It’s a really difficult one for us, but I’m sure he’s glad with the players he got to see over the two games.
“I’m never happy to lose or draw but we’ve got to be happy with how they’ve played.”
Tedesco: England were really strong
Belgium manager Domenico Tedesco:
“I’m disappointed, with five seconds to go you can win at Wembley and it would be of course something very special.
“If we have a look at the game, I think England were really strong, created many chances and you had a feeling from the beginning they wanted to win the second game here.
“The result is okay in the end.”
What’s next for England?
Gareth Southgate is set to name a preliminary England squad for Euro 2024 on Tuesday May 21 – two days after the Premier League season ends.
England then play two more international friendlies against Bosnia and Herzegovina at St James’ Park on June 3 and Iceland at Wembley on June 7 before Southgate’s final 23-player squad has to be confirmed by Sunday June 8.
The tournament starts on Friday June 14 with England’s first game in Germany against Serbia on Saturday June 15.