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21st June 2016
12:10am BST

Chances were created, but not as many as might have been had Wayne Rooney and Dele Alli started instead of Jack Wilshere and Jordan Henderson - neither of whom enjoyed evenings to remember as Hodgson's tinkering was used as a rod with which to beat him.
Pleasing all the people all the time is a difficult task, for the England football manager it is an exercise in futility akin to trying to explain how Ryan Bertrand was not booked for any of his three nasty elbow assaults against Slovakia.
While the Wales game was the first time Hodgson had chosen an unchanged XI in two years, he has gained a reputation for conservatism.
There was a rapturous reception to him throwing Rashford, Vardy, Sturridge and the kitchen sink at Wales but his half-dozen changes for Slovakia was picked apart long before this game ground to its torturous, inevitable goalless conclusion.
Hodgson will be criticised, as sure as night follows day, until he breaks the habit of a half-century and wins a major tournament.
He can expect criticism then because this England team are not going to win Euro 2016. That is the opinion of most right-minded people who watched Henderson hit the first defender with almost every cross, who saw Chris Smalling and Joe Hart play like perfect strangers, not team-mates, and who saw the Slovakian goal besieged so half-heartedly, to so little effect.
Unfortunately, when watching Hodgson speak, you always get the impression he knows this to be the truth in his heart of hearts. The England manager is already resigned to not winning this tournament and already knows that a semi-final exit, or the right kind of quarter-final defeat, will see him keep the position of most-criticised man in Britain for another two years.
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FA Chairman Greg Dyke did not do Hodgson any favours speaking so candidly about his contract on the eve of this game but at least everyone now knows what is required. Beat whichever of Iceland, Portugal, Austria and Hungary finish second in Group H and that penalty shootout defeat to France in Stade de France should keep him on the road to Russia.
Of course the subject of penalties came up in the post-match press conference. "Roy, two draws in three matches - how are the penalties coming along?" was the cheeky enquiry,
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