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England 2-2 Belgium: Jude Bellingham rescues last-gasp draw for Three Lions after Youri Tielemans double threatened to condemn Gareth Southgate’s men to successive defeats

There are four numbers – 11:59 – tattooed on the back of Ivan Toney’s neck. Look closely and you see the numbers are made up of tiny letters that spell out a message. ‘Even the longest of days,’ the message says, ‘will eventually come to an end.’

As the clock ticked down to what looked as if it was going to be a second England defeat in four days at Wembley, Gareth Southgate’s side trailed 2-1 to Belgium and it felt as if England, despite Toney’s penalty on his first start for his country, were marooned in their own version of that longest day.

And then, two moments of brilliance from two players who have become beacons of light for England, provided blessed relief for Southgate, who had started to look beleaguered as he stood in the pouring rain on the touchline.

As the ball bobbled around the Belgium penalty area, substitute James Maddison, controlled it near the goalline and improvised a clever scooped pass to Jude Bellingham, England’s talisman, who was lurking ten yards out.

This is Bellingham’s England team now. The kid is only 20 but he runs this side. He demands responsibility and now he stepped up. He took a touch and as Belgium defenders desperately tried to scrabble in his direction, Bellingham rolled the ball calmly past Matz Sels in the visitors’ goal for the equaliser in the fifth minute of time added on.

Jude Bellingham scored in the final minute of added time to earn a draw for England 

Youri Tielemans scored twice in the first half as he capitalised on England's mistakes

Youri Tielemans scored twice in the first half as he capitalised on England’s mistakes

Brentford star Ivan Toney converted a first-half penalty to score his first goal for his country

Brentford star Ivan Toney converted a first-half penalty to score his first goal for his country

England may not have quite deserved the equaliser. In fact, Dodi Lukebakio should have put the game out of reach for Belgium a couple of minutes earlier but he snatched at his shot and sent it high and wide. And so England took what they got. The game will boost their morale even if it will not erase wider concerns about their defence.

Having lost John Stones early in the game, they were often alarmingly porous and vulnerable at the back. The truth is that without Stones and Harry Maguire, England look exposed. Lewis Dunk is struggling at this level and was partly at fault for both Belgium goals, both scored by Aston Villa’s Youri Tielemans, who was the best player on the pitch. Joe Gomez had a torrid night against Jeremy Doku and Ben Chilwell is desperately struggling for form.

MATCH FACTS

England (4-2-3-1): Pickford; Konsa, Stones (Gomez 10), Dunk, Chilwell; Rice, Mainoo (Maddison 74); Bowen (Gordon 80), Bellingham, Foden; Toney (Watkins 80)

Goals: Toney, Bellingham

Booked: Gomez, Maddison

Manager: Gareth Southgate

Belgium (4-3-3): Sels; Castagne, Debast (Faes 82), Vertonghen, Theate (Vranckx 71); Mangala (Openda 82), Onana, Tielemans (Meunier 71); Trossard (Lukebakio 60), Doku, Lukaku (Batshuayi 82)

Goals: Tielemans (2)

Booked: Batshuayi

Manager: Domenico Tedesco 

Even if Bowen, Bellingham and Phil Foden gave glimpses of their class moving forward and Toney’s performance moved him ahead of Ollie Watkins in the race to make the plane for Germany, England will not even get close to winning the tournament if they cannot fix their glaring defensive issues. Their reliance on Stones and Maguire is a major worry.

Belgium are not to be under-estimated, of course. They won their qualifying group without losing a game and on this evidence, Tielemans, Lukaku and Doku have the ability to unsettle any defence. But England were supposed to have moved beyond Belgium by now.

England had made a bright start. In fact, they nearly added to the recent trend set by Austria and Germany of scoring in the opening seconds. Bowen burst down the right and crossed for Toney, who twisted his body and hooked the ball goalwards from six yards out only for it to hit his own hand.

But then England – and Manchester City – suffered a blow when John Stones stretched to control a pass and signalled immediately to the bench that he had injured his groin. He played on for a couple of minutes before he was replaced by Joe Gomez.

The sight of Stones making his way slowly down the tunnel was the last thing Pep Guardiola would have wanted to see. City’s right back, Kyle Walker, was injured in the defeat to Brazil at the weekend and now this. City play Arsenal on Sunday before travelling to play Real Madrid in the first leg of their Champions League quarter final next Tuesday.

Jordan Pickford made a rare error in the first half to allow Tielemans to give Belgium the lead

Jordan Pickford made a rare error in the first half to allow Tielemans to give Belgium the lead

This came just minutes after John Stones hobbled off with an injury as England endured a nightmare start

This came just minutes after John Stones hobbled off with an injury as England endured a nightmare start

Lewis Dunk then slid in unnecessarily and allowed Romelu Lukaku to cross for Tielemans to put Belgium back in front in the first half

Lewis Dunk then slid in unnecessarily and allowed Romelu Lukaku to cross for Tielemans to put Belgium back in front in the first half

England were still adjusting to Stones’ departure when they conceded a comically calamitous opening goal in the 11th minute. Pickford took his time to clear the ball but when he tried to pass it to Jude Bellingham, it was easily intercepted by Amadou Onana.

Onana played the ball to Tielemans and as both Pickford and Lewis Dunk rushed to try to cover the right hand side of the England goal, Tielemans simply stroked it into the opposite corner. England had looked vulnerable at the back against Brazil but this was like a Laurel and Hardy sketch.

Southgate urged calm from the touchline. ‘Settle down, settle down,’ he told his players. And England hit back inside six minutes with their next attack. Bellingham slipped a perfectly-weighted pass inside Jan Vertonghen to Toney and as Toney ran on to it, Vertonghen brought him down.

Vertonghen pleaded his innocence, of course, but to no avail. One of the many reasons Toney is a beguiling choice for Southgate’s squad is his expertise from the spot. He had scored 29 times from 31 attempts before this game so it made sense for him to step up.

He did not stray from his usual routine. He took one slow step forward to address the ball, his eyes fixed on Belgium goalkeeper Matz Sels. He waited for Sels to commit himself, moving slightly to his left, before striking the ball to the keeper’s right. Now it was 30 out of 32 and Toney had his first international goal.

It was a thrillingly open game. Soon Belgium were on the attack again. Tielemans turned beautifully away from Bellingham in the centre circle and fed the ball into the path of Jeremy Doku, who turned Gomez inside out, before lashing his shot towards the corner and bringing a fine save out of Pickford.

Kobbie Mainoo impressed on his first start for England and received a warm embrace from Gareth Southgate when he was substituted in the second half

Kobbie Mainoo impressed on his first start for England and received a warm embrace from Gareth Southgate when he was substituted in the second half

England pushed for an equaliser in the second half, with Jarrod Bowen looking lively

England pushed for an equaliser in the second half, with Jarrod Bowen looking lively

A few minutes after that, Bowen, who was playing superbly on the right, attacking with pace and purpose, thought he had scored his first England goal, too, when he nodded home a back post header across goal from Dunk. His effort was ruled out by VAR.

There was a chaotic feel to the match. If Saturday’s game against Brazil had felt flat, this had a manic edge. So when Sels tried to play the ball out short to Onana, Mainoo dispossessed him in a flash, the ball ran to Bellingham and just when it seemed England’s gifted midfielder must score, he lifted his shot over Sels and over the crossbar, too.

The game offered no respite. Ten minutes before half time, Tielemans found space inside the Belgium half and lofted a fine pass out to the right for Romelu Lukaku to chase. Lukaku, still a Chelsea player but on loan at Roma, looked as if he would be beaten to it by Dunk but Dunk’s attempt at a tackle was weak and Lukaku won possession.

Lukaku looked up and saw Tielemans racing to the back post. He curled the ball over Gomez with the outside of his left foot so that it fell perfectly into the path of Tielemans and the Aston Villa midfielder dived full length to head it into the back of the net. It was a beautifully fashioned goal.

Bellingham was frustrated as he missed a couple of big chances in either half at Wembley

Bellingham was frustrated as he missed a couple of big chances in either half at Wembley

But he finally got it right in the 95th minute to ensure England did not lose again

It was also more shocking defending from England. Dunk is struggling at this level and he was at least partly at fault for both Belgium’s goals in the first half. Those who condemn Southgate for caution when he shields England’s defence with two holding midfielders may be starting to realise why he does it.

Sels saved well from Toney early in the second half and then, ten minutes after the interval, Gomez floated a ball into the box and Bellingham rose to meet it unmarked ten yards out. His leap was majestic but he mistimed his header and it rolled limply wide. Bellingham stared at the ground in disgust.

England pushed and pushed for an equaliser and Foden dragged a shot wide after more fine work by Bowen but it seemed the breakthrough would not come. Then Lukebakio blew his chance and Maddison and Bellingham stepped up. Even the longest of days will eventually come to an end.

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