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25 mins: Czechia win a free kick out wide and the captain, Stepan Chaloupek, is unmarked eight yards out! He heads at goal, but Beadle is alert to turn it over the bar. That was a big chance.
23 mins: After a muddled spell of midfield play, England get a 3-on-3 break, with McAtee’s pass to Elliott getting a deflection that takes the Liverpool man out wide. He crosses low towards McAtee, but the keeper is out to smother it efficiently.
22 mins: Some more interesting insight from Hart on “the pathway”, and how much performing well for the U21s helps players break into the senior squad. “You get the chance to train with the first team, and everyone in the England setup is watching the games,” he adds.
21 mins: Anderson looks for Tino Livramento with a nice ball over the top, but the full-back can’t quite bring it under control.
20 mins: A potential England counter grinds to a halt as Czechia get men behind the ball.
18 mins: Something of a lull in proceedings after an end-to-end start. Which gives us time to let you know that Thomas Frank has officially been appointed as the new Tottenham manager!
16 mins: Quansah, pushing up to join a counter, is penalised for a foul. The crowd is 90% Czech (at least) and are bellowing out a series of chants behind Hornicek’s goal.
14 mins: Stransky goes down under a challenge from Livramento, but is penalised for handling the ball as he went to ground.
13 mins: Charlie Cresswell clears away Fila’s cross. The centre-back is one of two Ligue 1 players in England’s line-up, having moved to Toulouse at the start of the season. The other is Jonathan Rowe, who’s been on loan at Marseille from Norwich.
11 mins: Czechia’s best opening so far, wing-back Suchomel sliding in a cross for Vaclav Sejk, who is a few inches away from connecting with an outstretched boot.
10 mins: Fila fouls Livramento, presenting England with a decent free kick opportunity, but the ball escapes McAtee and trickles away for a goal kick.
8 mins: England’s front three look very fluid, with Hutchinson now popping up on the left, cutting inside and stinging Hornicek’s palms with a decent effort from 12 yards out.
7 mins: Suchomel, one of a core of Sparta and Slavia Prague prospects in this Czech team, has an effort from 25 yards that’s dragged wide of the near post.

6 mins: And another half-chance as Omari Hutchinson cuts back for McAtee, whose shot is a touch rushed, and scuffed wide of the post.
5 mins: Livramento moves down the left and his cross-shot forces the Czech keeper to palm the ball away. England starting strongly …
4 mins: Joe Hart, who’s on Channel 4 co-comms, says former Birmingham teammate Lee Carsley is a “fascinating person” and “top, top player” in his pomp. “I’d love to have been coached by him.”
3 mins: England break through Harvey Elliott and James McAtee, whose cross forces Hadas to head behind. England corner … but Alex Scott’s delivery bends beyond everyone.
2 mins: The free kick curls beyond everyone and behind James Beadle’s goal.
1 min: Elliot Anderson is booked after 17 seconds after treading on Hadas’ toes. This referee clearly not giving anyone an early pass.
First half
Off we go, and there’s a very quick yellow card …
The teams are heading out on to the pitch in Dunajska Streda, a smallish town close to the Slovakian capital, Bratislava. Czech fans have travelled in big numbers to their neighbours, so this might feel like an away game for England.

More from Nick Ames on the England Under-21 conundrum:
Team news
Czech Republic U21 (3-4-1-2): Hornicek; Spacil, Prebsl, Chaloupek; Hadas, Vydra, Stransky, Suchomel; Danek; Sejk, Fila.
Subs: Borek, Koutny, Kozeluh, Kricfalusi, Labik, Paluska, Halinsky, Karabec,
Visinsky, Sojka, Langhamer, Vecheta.
England U21 (4-3-3): Beadle; Livramento, Cresswell, Quansah, Gray; Anderson, Scott, Elliott; McAtee, Hutchinson, Rowe.
Subs: Sharman-Lowe, Simkin, Edwards, Egan-Riley, Norton-Cuffy, Hackney, Morton, Fellows, Hinshelwood, Nwaneri, Stansfield, Iling-Junior.
Preamble
Lee Carsley is back in the day job, aiming to defend the trophy his England side won in Georgia two summers ago. Stability is often in short supply for coaches at youth level, but even by those standards, a lot has changed since the 1-0 win over Spain in the 2023 final.
For one thing, Carsley had his shot at the big job – and while he insisted he was only keeping the seat warm, that may have changed if his interim stint had gone better. His last game in charge of England’s senior team was only seven months ago, even if it feels a lot longer.
During his brief tenure, Carsley promoted the likes of Curtis Jones and Morgan Gibbs-White, and while they would not be eligible for this tournament, seven members of Thomas Tuchel’s latest senior squad would have been – including Jude Bellingham, Levi Colwill and Cole Palmer. Instead, the coach is bringing in a new generation.
Speaking of Bellingham, his younger brother Jobe has dropped out in order to play for Dortmund at the Club World Cup, a decision also taken by new Chelsea recruit Liam Delap. It’s a very different landscape for Carsley this time around, although just as in 2023, they kick off their campaign against the Czech Republic.