England maintain their immaculate 100% record on their travels in
a disciplined, if not spectacular, style in Bulgaria's capital Sofia.Rooney’s double strike, after a first international goal from
rookie centre-back Gary Cahill, helped to make this England’s most
comfortable away day for two years and ensured they remain in the box
seat to win Group G and avoid the play-off lottery.Even more
crucial was the sheer ease with which they turned a potentially tricky
night into an effortless stroll – only the disgraceful racism of the
home fans blighted the evening.It was not, by any stretch of the
imagination, brilliant or thrilling - it didn’t have to be - but it was
utterly professional, clear-cut and, on a gravel-strewn pitch that would
have been deemed dangerous for a Sunday-League side, gave a hint that
things can only get better.Of course, it would be stupid to say this was truly meaningful.There
have been far too many false dawns to make that error and, in truth,
Bulgaria were even more hapless and wide open than they were at Wembley a
year ago.Yet we have been crying out for a new tactical
approach, calmness at the back and a protective shield allowing flexible
attacking prowess.And given the space to exploit, there was a
willingness to do exactly that - Theo Walcott, Ashley Young and Rooney
floating off each other, making the Balkan side look exactly what they
were.Once the initial home flurry – in reality, little more than a
shoot-on-sight policy from Bolton’s Martin Petrov – had been quelled,
there was an inevitability about proceedings.Cahill and skipper
John Terry were twin columns of strength, Scott Parker and Gareth Barry
patrolled with eagerness and while Chris Smalling was nervous, there
were timely interventions and a refreshing desire to venture forward.An
early goal does make a difference and, after Young teed up Ashley Cole –
both received the monkey chants – for a strike deflected wide on 13
minutes, the opener came from the resulting corner.Young’s
delivery was never cleared and when Barry – preferred to the benched
Frank Lampard – clipped a clever, angled ball back into the danger zone,
Cahill collected on his chest before poking home to mark his first
competitive start with a goal.Capello, angrily gesticulating at
any misplaced pass, was far from satisfied, but with Rooney dropping off
and generating panic attacks, more goals always seemed likely.Rooney
had only scored once in his previous 14 England games, going back two
years, yet by the interval he had grabbed a brace to become only the
fourth man – after Michael Owen, Gary Lineker and Alan Shearer – to
score 20 competitive goals for the Three Lions.The first was
simplicity itself, with the only player who could have prevented him
using that new patch of weave on his bonce to power home Stewart
Downing’s in-swinging corner being his own captainAnd nobody was
even within hailing range of Rooney as he stroked home the second just
before the break, after Parker’s brave block – Petrov’s shot smashed him
in the face – saw Walcott race from deep before finding Young on his
outside to roll beautifully across goal.So simple.
Downing, grasping his opportunity as he switched across the front line, was unlucky not to get
his
first England goal in the 55th minute after feeding Walcott, scampering
into the box then getting on the end of a delicious cross with a header
that glanced the post.
Parker and Walcott went close as England picked off Bulgaria at
will and took the sting out of the game, with Rooney inches away from
converting substitute James Milner’s cross.Circumstances are in his favour since the victors in Cardiff will come to
Wembley on Tuesday without Craig Bellamy and David Vaughan who are now
suspended. England will still be convinced that they need no help from
external factors. They may not brag much about felling opponents as
poorly equipped as Lothar Matthäus's squad but it is creditable that no
mercy was shown until the match was far beyond the reach of Bulgaria.It is too soon to assume that the manager has hit upon a formidable team
selection, particularly since this had always been treated as a night
when freewheeling play was feasible. There is work ahead but this win
will enhance England's morale.
Source: PA