Former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson is backing his native country Sweden to give Gareth Southgate’s men a seriously tough test when they meet in the World Cup quarter-finals on Saturday.
READ: England should not underestimate Sweden, says Eriksson
Eriksson ― who became England’s first foreign manager when he took over in 2001 ― led the Three Lions to the 2002 and 2006 World Cup, as well as Euro 2004.
England went knocked out by Brazil in the 2002 quarter-finals, while the latter two tournaments ended in penalty shootout defeats to Portugal.
Although Eriksson thinks England have a ‘great chance’ of progressing to the semi-finals, he believes Sweden could prove an even harder test than the Seleção – who the Three Lions could have faced in the quarterfinals had they topped Group G.
Eriksson’s home nation progressed to the last eight with three tournament clean sheets under their belt, and the 70-year-old thinks they will cause big problems in Samara.
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‘It would be easier for England to beat Brazil than to beat Sweden in my opinion,’ Eriksson told Paddy Power News.
‘Sweden today are a very hard team to break down. Their strikers are defenders when it’s time to defend and they can defend in their own box as well. Their running, their commitment, their physical work is incredible.
‘England have a great chance to make a World Cup semi-final. But if anyone in the squad thinks they have an easy game on Saturday, they’re wrong. It’ll be the most difficult game they’ll have played so far, they can bet on that.’