Joy, pain for Welbeck as England top group

Joy, pain for Welbeck as England top group

England powered into the home straight of their World Cup qualification campaign on Friday by crushing Moldova 4-0 at Wembley to move top of European qualifying Group H.

England's Jack Wilshere (2nd R) runs with the ball against Moldova during a World Cup 2014 qualifying football match between England and Moldova in London, on September 6, 2013.

After Steven Gerrard opened the scoring with his 20th international goal, a Rickie Lambert header and a Danny Welbeck brace completed a win that saw England overtake former leaders Montenegro on goal difference.

Welbeck's superbly taken double took his tally to six goals in seven international games, but he also picked up a booking that rules him out of Tuesday's key game away to third-place Ukraine, who trail England by a point.

"I was very disappointed to get booked. In a stadium of thousands of fans, you can't always hear the whistle," said Welbeck.

"It was difficult to get my head right after that, but I wanted to play my part for the team and hopefully in Ukraine we will get the right result."

With Wayne Rooney, Daniel Sturridge and Andy Carroll injured, and Jermain Defoe short of fitness, it leaves manager Roy Hodgson with problems ahead of the most taxing of England's three remaining games.

"The booking for Danny Welbeck has overshadowed the night, that's for sure," Hodgson said.

"He's been unbelievably unfortunate. We have already lost Rooney and Sturridge and it makes life difficult for us. It takes the gloss off a good team performance."

England started a game with Gerrard, Frank Lampard and Jack Wilshere together in midfield for the first time, while the injury blight meant Southampton striker Lambert was given his full debut as a lone striker.

The 31-year-old had scored with his first touch in international football in last month's 3-2 friendly win over Scotland, but he spurned an early chance at a two-thirds-full Wembley, thrashing a half-volley wide.

It only took until the 12th minute for England to make the breakthrough, however.

After an incursion down the left, Welbeck cut the ball back for Lampard and he in turn teed up Gerrard for the skipper to plant a beautifully struck shot in the bottom-left corner from 25 yards.

Stanislav Namasco prevented Wilshere from adding a second by parrying from the Arsenal man, who had slalomed past Victor Golovatenco, but the Moldova goalkeeper was rather more generous in the 26th minute.

In attempting to block a rising drive from Theo Walcott, he succeeded only in deflecting the ball across the face of his goal and Lambert ghosted in to nod in his second England goal in two games.

It could not have been a more straightforward first half, but Hodgson was left fuming after Welbeck was shown a yellow card, for shooting after the whistle had gone for offside, that rules him out of Tuesday's game.

He had the good grace to put it to the back of his mind immediately, though, brilliantly gathering Lambert's lofted pass, deftly eluding Namasco, and tucking in England's third in first-half injury time.

Five minutes into the second half, the same combination produced a fourth goal, with Welbeck running onto Lambert's slide-rule pass and calmly dinking the ball over the exposed Namasco with his left foot.

The contest over, Hodgson handed a debut to teenage Everton midfielder Ross Barkley, who replaced Wilshere with half an hour to play.

The 19-year-old almost marked his debut with a goal, drilling wide from outside the box in the 75th minute, and despite late attempts by Welbeck, Lampard, Kyle Walker and substitute James Milner, a fifth goal would not come.

Moldova coach Ion Caras said: "I would like to congratulate the home team for a well-earned victory. There is nothing that would give us an advantage against a team such as England."

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