The England captain and record goalscorer roared in celebration as his thunderbolt of an opener flew in off the underside of the bar just before the hour mark and he swept in a classy second for his 68th strike for his country with around 15 minutes left to play.
It was a fitting way for Kane to mark the occasion and underline the importance he has had for England and the impact he can continue to have, despite criticisms of the 31-year-old’s performances at Euro 2024. “It was the perfect night,” Kane said afterwards.
Up until the breakthrough, Finland goalkeeper Lukas Hradecky had frustrated Kane with a string of fine stops. But England’s main man – who also had a header ruled out for a narrow offside in the first half – wasn’t to be denied on a night which saw him presented with a special golden cap to mark his landmark appearance. He is just the 10th player to hit that total for England’s men’s team.
They were big goals for Lee Carsley, too, whose interim spell in charge has now delivered two wins from two, with England second in Nations League Group B2 behind Greece on goal difference. This was another positive performance, with Angel Gomes tidy on his first senior start, although Finland – resolute in defence and a threat on the break in the first half – made England work.
The last time these sides met, Eriksson, who passed away last month, was in charge. England edged that World Cup qualifier in 2001 with the help of another fierce strike from a Three Lions captain, David Beckham.
This contest wasn’t expected to be so close as that 2-1 victory but the Finns – beaten 3-0 in their Group B2 opener by Greece – frustrated Carsley’s side, with centre-back Arttu Hoskonen twice sliding in during the first half to deny Kane tap-ins after his ruled out header, while Hradecky recovered to keep out Bukayo Saka’s deflected shot and Trent Alexander-Arnold fizzed two efforts wide just before the interval.
At times England were worryingly open. Aberdeen’s Topi Keskinen was rapid on the counter but wasteful in the final third, shooting off target from two swift charges up the pitch which saw England’s defence exposed by an absent midfield. And that was all after Rico Lewis had to block former Norwich City ace Teemu Pukki’s shot from inside the box after a sharp throw-in routine from the visitors.
But England were more secure in the second half and, after Hradecky kept out a Kane free-kick and overhead, the opener eased any concerns of an upset. Substitute Noni Madueke came up with the assist for the skipper’s second, Eberechi Eze was lively and Rico Lewis looked comfortable throughout, with Alexander-Arnold again impressing at right-back.
But Kane’s double and the ovation for Eriksson will be the lasting memories of another successful outing as interim boss for Carsley, whose audition for the permanent post has gone well so far.