Postpublished at 90 + 2 mins
England 3-0 Wales
Craig Bellamy is having a friendly chat with Thomas Tuchel as play goes on.

Morgan Rogers celebrates after putting England ahead in the friendly against Wales at Wembley
At a glance
Morgan Rogers scores from close range to give England a third-minute lead
Rogers' Aston Villa team-mate Ollie Watkins - in for injured captain Harry Kane - doubles England's lead eight minutes later
Bukayo Saka scores a brilliant third for England with a curling finish after 20 minutes
England delivered another exciting attacking display to outclass an out-of-sorts Wales and stroll to victory in a friendly at Wembley.
Head coach Thomas Tuchel kept faith with the squad that secured the best win of his reign when beating Serbia 5-0 in the World Cup qualifier in Belgrade in September - and they delivered in style once more.
England ran Wales ragged in the opening stages, establishing a three-goal lead inside only 20 minutes.
Aston Villa's Morgan Rogers built on his excellent display in Serbia by turning home the opening goal from Marc Guehi's cross after three minutes, with club team-mate Ollie Watkins making the most of his chance to deputise for injured captain Harry Kane by doubling England's lead from close range eight minutes later.
Bukayo Saka then became Arsenal's highest England goalscorer with a spectacular strike, curled high past Wales keeper Karl Darlow with his left foot. It was his 13th goal for his country.
Rogers also hit the woodwork after the break and, while Wales improved as England's tempo dropped, this was a routine and impressive win for Tuchel's side.
The Three Lions now move on to face Latvia in their next World Cup qualifier in Riga on Tuesday while Wales host Belgium in Cardiff on Monday.
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England's emphatic win must be placed in the context that it came in the face of a desperately poor Wales performance, Craig Bellamy's side giving every impression that their attention was focused on Monday's crucial World Cup qualifier against Belgium.
This was still another resounding victory, however, the platform set by an opening characterised by the intensity and attacking variety that was missing in the early stages of Tuchel's reign.
Much has been made of Tuchel's decision to exclude Real Madrid's Jude Bellingham, despite the player's wish to be included, but in his absence Villa's Rogers justified that choice with another fine performance.
He scored the opener, his first for England, had a hand in Watkins' second, then also hit the woodwork before being substituted after 69 minutes.
Watkins will also have been delighted to get on the scoresheet, although he went off at half-time after colliding with the post after missing another opportunity.
It was also a big night for Everton goalkeeper Jordan Pickford, who beat his and Gordon Banks' record of seven successive clean sheets for England, ensuring he achieved that record with fine second-half saves from David Brooks and Chris Mepham.
Tougher tests lie ahead for England, starting against Latvia in Riga on Tuesday, but this was another very satisfactory night for Tuchel.
Highly anticipated as any meeting between these neighbouring nations might be, the bigger picture for Wales was always the Belgium match.
As preparation for that game and future major tournaments, Bellamy chose England for this friendly because he wanted to expose his players to world-class opposition.
With his team trailing 3-0 after only 20 minutes, he may have been regretting his decision.
Wales were completely overwhelmed by their rampant hosts and, rather than pressing high and attacking as Bellamy demands of his players, they were woefully passive as they were penned back in their own half.
The head coach had actually picked a strong team - a demonstration of how seriously he was taking the game - but friendly or otherwise, the first 45 minutes were the worst of his tenure.
There was a slight improvement in the second half as Bellamy replaced several first-team players to protect them for the Belgium match, and the substitutes injected some much-needed energy and urgency into what had been a listless performance.
But by that stage, with more than an hour gone, the game was well beyond Wales.
That did nothing to deter the 7,000 or so Wales fans at Wembley, who waved their shirts above their heads and created a joyous atmosphere in spite of what they were witnessing on the field.
The real judgement for Wales will come on Monday. Only after their World Cup qualifier against Belgium will they know if this Wembley experiment will have been worth it.
After the opportunity to rate players has closed, the score displayed represents the average from all the submissions by BBC Sport users.
Manager: Thomas Tuchel
Formation: 4 - 2 - 3 - 1
Manager: Craig Bellamy
Formation: 4 - 2 - 3 - 1
Manager: Thomas Tuchel
Formation: 4 - 2 - 3 - 1
Manager: Craig Bellamy
Formation: 4 - 2 - 3 - 1
Friendlies
All competitions
All competitions
All competitions
England have won each of their last seven meetings with Wales across all competitions and the Three Lions are only currently on longer winning streaks against three nations: Luxembourg (9), Andorra (8) and San Marino (8).
Wales have only won one of their 24 away games against England post WW2 (D6 L17), a 1-0 win at old Wembley in May 1977, with Leighton James scoring the winning goal from the penalty spot.
England have scored in each of their last 16 games across all competitions, their joint-longest run this century – they last scored in 17 straight between June 1990 and June 1991.
Wales have lost two of their last three matches (W1), after losing just one of 19 matches beforehand (W9 D9) – they haven’t lost back-to-back games since June 2023 (vs Armenia and Türkiye).
England have lost their last two friendly matches, 0-1 vs Iceland in June 2024 and 1-3 vs Senegal in June 2025, last losing three non-competitive games in a row in 1985 under Sir Bobby Robson.
Wales are winless in each of their last 11 away friendly matches (D1 L10), since a 1-0 win in Denmark thanks to a Craig Bellamy goal in November 2008 – the Dragons have failed to score in each of their last 10 such games, going 938 minutes since last netting vs Montenegro.
Each of the last eight England managers have won their first meeting with a fellow Home Nation (excluding those that didn’t face one), with Don Revie vs Northern Ireland in May 1975 the last to fail to record a victory (0-0 draw).
Across his first two caps last month against Andorra and Serbia, Elliot Anderson led all England players for successful passes (182), possession won (23), tackles (5), forward passes (48) and successful long passes (10).
Kieffer Moore has scored in each of his last two Wales appearances, scoring against Liechtenstein and Kazakhstan – he’s never previously netted in three in a row for his country.