In the 12th minute of the match, Slovakia suddenly launched a fierce counterattack, and Haraslin saw the goal in sight, but Gueye darted back like a ghost and blocked the ball out of the goal line. England's Trippier followed him to the goal and cleared the ball from the line, and England escaped again.
As the clock ticked down to the 25th minute, Strelec cleverly sent a direct shot from outside the box, Slovakia's Schranz burst into the box like a cheetah and calmly pushed the ball into the net, giving Slovakia a 1-0 lead as the next city witnessed the historic moment.
The stats show that the goal was Slovakia's first effective shot on goal in the entire match, thus earning them the lead. It is worth mentioning that the goal scorer, Schranz, has scored three goals at this year's Euros and leads the scorers' table.
According to Der Spin data, the 30-year-old Schranz is worth just €2 million, while the England team as a whole is worth €1.52 billion. Despite this, every player in the England squad is worth more than Schranz, but he has only contributed two goals.
In the second half, Slovakia's backline was under heavy pressure, and England were unlucky when England's Foden was ruled offside at one point and Rice's long-range shot bounced off the post. However, in the 95th minute of regular time, Bellingham struck a reverse kick to help England equalize 1-1 as the game went into the final minute. In the first minute of extra time, Kane's header broke the deadlock again, and England was leading 2-1. From hell to heaven, the game became incredibly gripping. In the end, England successfully reversed Slovakia and thrillingly advanced to the last eight.