England were "killed by their own impatience" in their 4-1 World Cup defeat by Germany, according to Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger.
Wenger believes England should have used their experience to stop Germany's counter-attacking threat.
England pulled the score back to 2-1 and had a goal disallowed but were hit on the break when hunting an equaliser.
"England had taken over the game and I think they were killed by their impatience," he told Arsenal's website.
"They came back in the second half to 2-1 and they controlled the game.
"What made me sad was that, with the experience they had, they were caught. It was free-kick for England, goal for Germany.
"You do what they did with five minutes to go OK but not with 25 minutes left."
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England's disappointing performances in the tournament in South Africa has led to criticism of manager Fabio Capello, the players, the structure of the Premier League as well as increasing calls for a winter break.
However, Wenger believes the levels of expectation weighed heavily on the England camp.
"Many teams start slow in the group stage," he said.
"I remember in 2006, France were horrible in the group stage but they found momentum in the quarter-final and semi-final because they had no pressure any more.
"England suffered under pressure. They did not look sharp.
"Also England did not seem to be at the level to use their main strength - the huge pace they put in the game.
"Was that physical fatigue or a mental reason? I do not know but you never found the sense of English football in there."
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