HARRY KANE was rated as the worst player during the Euro 2024 final.
The England captain was unable to inspire the Three Lions to victory at the Olympiastadion in Berlin.
Harry Kane was hit was a 3/10 by L’Equipe[/caption]Nico Williams opened the scoring quickly after half-time, but Cole Palmer raised hopes with a brilliant equaliser.
However, the dreams of football coming home were ended as Mikel Oyarzabal netted a late winner.
The views of the match from around Europe have come in, and it makes for tough reading.
Kane was slammed by French outlet L’Equipe as he was given a 3/10.
This was the lowest rating out of any of the starters on both sides in the match.
Kane struggled in the match and only had one touch inside the Spain penalty area before he was subbed for Ollie Watkins.
They wrote: “Clearly tired, the Bayern Munich player made a series of bad choices, missing several passes that annihilated his team’s attacks, picking up a deserved yellow card for an avoidable foul on Fabian Ruiz and being too short on a cross.
“The captain was logically replaced in the 61st minute by Watkins.”
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The paper also gave low ratings of 4/10 to the likes of Kyle Walker, Luke Shaw and Kobbie Mainoo.
The best England players were given 6/10s and they were Jordan Pickford, John Stones, Declan Rice, Bukayo Saka and Jude Bellingham.
Gareth Southgate was also given a 6/10 for his performance on the sidelines.
Gary Neville agreed with the French during his analysis as he claimed that Kane did “not look right physically”.
The Spanish news outlets obviously focused on a different aspect of the match as they celebrated Spain’s achievement.
Both Marca and AS slapped big pictures of Spain’s trophy lift on the front page.
Marca tagged the page wth “The Invincible Armada” while AS went for “Spain is in glory”.
Sport also had a picture of the celebration as well as a big spot for Carlos Alcaraz after his Wimbledon triumph.
The outlet wrote “super champions” as they hailed a famous day in the country’s sporting history.
COLE PALMER came off the bench to be England’s star man – but his heroics were unable to stop heartbreak against Spain, writes Tom Barclay.
Mikel Oyarzabal struck a late dagger through the hearts of the Three Lions to seal a 2-1 Spanish victory.
And that ensured that 58 years of hurt will go on.
Here’s how SunSport’s Tom Barclay rated each England player in the crushing defeat:
Jordan Pickford: 8
Carefully controlled a blast of a backpass from John Stones on his line in the first half. Could do little to stop Williams’ opener but made two terrific stops to deny Yamal, only for Oyarzabal to poke home at the death.
Kyle Walker: 6
Had his hands full with Williams but managed the Spanish livewire pretty well but could not get near his powerful opener.
John Stones: 8
A colossus again as he played every single minute of this Euros, despite lack of Manchester City game-time. Superb block on early Williams shot, was often in the right place at the right time and at one point dribbled all the way up the pitch.
Marc Guehi: 6
Solid alongside Stones and overall it has been a brilliant first tournament for the Crystal Palace star. But Oyarzabal nicked in front of him for the winner.
Bukayo Saka: 7
Most consistent attacker for England across the tournament and had a good battle with pantomime villain Marc Cucurella here. It was his cross that Bellingham laid off for Palmer to work his magic.
Declan Rice: 7
Went past his boss Gareth Southgate’s cap haul by winning his 58th here and he is still only 25. Was in the thick of it in the midfield battle throughout.
Kobbie Mainoo: 5
Just 19 and starting a major final for England in the middle of midfield. Fewer bursts forward though than in recent games as his side struggled for possession and was subbed for Palmer as Southgate searched for a leveller.
Luke Shaw: 7
Looked so sharp for a player making his first start since Luton away on February 10, winning his battle against Lamine Yamal in the first half. But Yamal got the better of him after the break to tee up Williams’ opener.
Phil Foden: 6
Out of possession it was his job to man-mark Manchester City colleague Rodri, until the Spanish maestro went off injured at half-time. Had a half-chance just before the break but could not beat Unai Simon.
Jude Bellingham: 7
Shunted wide left when England did not have the ball – which was a lot of the time. Riskily flew into a few tackles, but it was his clever lay-off that teed up Palmer.
Harry Kane: 4
His lack of involvement was summed up by England fans calling for Ollie Watkins in the 57th minute. They got their wish on the hour.
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Ollie Watkins: 6
Semi-final hero was introduced far earlier here to get some legs in behind, though he did not have too much impact this time.
Cole Palmer: 9
What an impact after emerging with just twenty minutes to go. Yet another of Southgate’s subs paid off handsomely as Palmer curled a peach of an equaliser with 17 minutes remaining, sending most of the Olympiastadion potty.
Ivan Toney: 6
Thrown on right at the end but could not make an impact.
Gareth Southgate: 7
The game was a chess match for the first half and Southgate was never going to go early with his bold moves.
His subs were excellent to be fair, with Palmer brilliantly getting his team back into it.
Critics will say England did not play attacking enough but Spain are one hell of a side – and Southgate’s men pushed them all the way.