England v Netherlands: European Under-21 Championship semi-final – live

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23 min: The Dutch are struggling to play through the lines. Maatsen ushers his teammates forward, but is forced to pass sideways and then back.

21 min: Dutch keeper Roefs is having a fine game. Thrice he has claimed dangerous crosses or corners into the box and now he comes out of his goal intelligently to shut down McAtee on the right side of the Netherlands box. The City playmaker tried a backheel, but Roefs was wise to it.

19 min: A lovely little ball from McAtee releases Stansfield, again down the left, but the Birmingham striker sees his cross blocked by Van den Berg. It was a good position for England, although there didn’t seem to be anyone in the box, once Stansfield had peeled wide. Carsley would surely like a few more runners from midfield to gamble.

17 min: Netherlands are set up defensively in a low block and seem happy to counter-attack. England are probing with the ball and waiting for an opening.

15 min: A clumsy/nasty (delete as appropriate) looking elbow from Anderson catches Valente in the throat and Netherlands have an excellent opportunity to swing in a set piece. Maatsen over the ball, and he overcooks the cross, straight out for a goal kick. What a waste.

Another huge save from Roefs with his feet!

12 min: England are really on top, and so nearly prize open the Dutch. This time it is Stansfield that gets to the byline on the left and he finds Elliott on the penalty area, who takes a glorious touch to earn half a yard and fires fiercely at the far post. But Roefs spreads himself beautifully, and this time his left shin diverts the ball behind!

9 min: The best player on the pitch so far is Hutchinson, who nips past Kasanwirjo on England’s left flank. The Ipswich winger has twice outsmarted his opposite number and looks bang up for it.

7 min: Valente, who appeared for Italy’s youth teams as a teenager owing to his Italian father, sets Netherlands off on a brilliant counter-attack, skipping through a couple of challenges on the edge of his own box and releasing Poku expertly down the left. Poku, who scored the winner against Portugal, is frighteningly quick and beats Quansah for pace before another low cross into the box, but it is just behind Van Bergen.

Huge save from Roefs!

4 min: England go close! Hutchinson, playing down the left, does a nifty stepover and gets to the byline. It’s a hopeful low cross but into a good area, which comes all the way across to Elliott at the far post … the Liverpool midfielder is all alone and shoot to the near post but Roefs flies across his goal, sticks out a left boot and clears the ball off the line!

“That’s an unconventional save”, says former England keeper Joe Hart on co-commentary. “Sometimes you have to make your mind early whether to go with your hands or with your feet, and Roefs did well.”

Robin Roefs gets down well to save from Harvey Ellliott.
Robin Roefs gets down well to save from Harvey Ellliott. Photograph: Petr David Josek/AP

2 min: A slow start as England ping it around without any real threat. Van Bergen crashes into Cresswell and it’s an England free-kick!

Peeeeeeeeep!

And we’re off in Slovakia!

The teams are out! England in their white shirts, navy shorts and white socks. Netherlands in their famous all-orange number. It is 33°C in Bratislava, and probably is even hotter on the pitch.

Fair play to Jay Stansfield. The Birmingham striker has scored 23 goals in League One after his £15m move and was excellent against Spain with his pressing and composure as the focal point of England’s attack, justifying Carsley’s decision to start him. The England manager has some serious options on the bench: Marseille striker Jonathan Rowe, Arsenal wonderkid Ethan Nwaneri, and Aston Villa’s Iling-Junior are all waiting in the wings.

These are the highlights from England’s win over Spain in the last round. It really was a complete performance against the pre-tournament favourites.

Here is Ed Aarons’s preview of the match, with England manager Lee Carsley reflecting on the under-21 European success two years ago, and midfielder Alex Scott also remembering his own European title wit England at under-19 level three years ago. Scott scored the winning goal in that semi-final against Italy, and here’s what he had to say this week:

It’s one of my proudest moments of my career so far. Any time I’ve been to ­England [is a proud moment] but to win a tournament in England was really special. I think that brings experience as well. A few of the lads have been there and done it. I know what it takes to win a major tournament. Hopefully we can take that experience we have and take it into [the Netherlands match].

The teams!

England: Beadle, Livramento, Quansah, Cresswell, Hinshelwood, Hutchinson, McAtee, Anderson, Stansfield, Elliott, Scott.
Subs: Sharman-Lowe, Simkin, Edwards, Egan-Riley, Norton-Cuffy, Hackney, Fellows, Gray, Nwaneri, Rowe, Iling-Junior.

Netherlands: Roefs, Kasanwirjo, Maatsen, van den Berg, Hato, Flamingo, Valente, Milambo, van Bergen, Manhoef, Poku.
Subs: Raatsie, van den Heuvel, Saleh-Eddine, Meijer, Goes, Regeer, Banzuzi, van Brederode, Ohio.

Preamble

Here we are again, England in the latter stages of a European Championship.

Both teams here have had similar tournaments, starting slow in the group stage, finishing second, but starting to warm up in the knockout round. England defeated pre-tournament favourites Spain in the quarter-finals while Netherlands played for 70 minutes for 10 men but managed to sneak a late goal against Portugal to win 1-0.

England make just one change from the starting XI that beat Spain, Elliot Anderson coming in for Tyler Morton in midfield.

That red for for Ruben van Bommel means the son of the former Barcelona and Bayern Munich midfielder, Mark van Bommel, is suspended for this semi-final, a huge miss for the Dutch. The Netherlands also had a man sent off in their final group game, a 2-0 win over Ukraine, after substitute Youri Regeer was dismissed for a wild tackle nine minutes after coming on. Regeer returns to the bench for this one.

Those familiar with British football will recognise some of the Dutch names: Ian Maatsan is probably the biggest star, and the Aston Villa left back was the player of the match in the last round against Portugal. Neraysho Kasanwirjo played at Rangers this season but struggled to break into the first XI, while Rav van den Berg was a consistent performer for Middlesbrough and Million Manhoef has shone for Stoke City.

Kenneth Taylor, another player suspended for the Dutch, is a huge star in central midfield and was voted as Ajax’s player of the year last season – he has been linked with moves to Villa, Arsenal and Newcastle in the recent past.

It should be a cracker: 5pm BST kick-off.

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