England's leading players closed ranks on Sunday to defend goalkeeper Robert Green and take inspiration from a chequered World Cup history following their 1-1 draw with the United States.
Green, pilloried afterwards by the English media, allowed a routine straight shot from 25 metres to slip from his grasp and roll over the line.
"It was a bad moment for Rob Green, a freak goal, and he owned up to his mistake in the dressing room," said Gerrard.
"That goes to show what kind of man he is - and he made a fantastic save in the second half, which shows he has the character to bounce back. He'll be very important for us."
He denied the result had put the team under extra pressure.
"We played some nice stuff after scoring our goal, but there is room for improvement. It was important not to lose - in the first game there's always a lot of nerves," he added.
Green's catastrophe was a schoolboy error, but it was not the only reason England failed to win and in heaping blame on the goalkeeper, most critics papered over gaping cracks in a pedestrian performance.
LIMITED AND INFLEXIBLE
As in many recent World Cup tournaments, England were exposed as a team of limited technical abilities, inflexible tactics and little imagination - and manager Fabio Capello's risky policy of late and, arguably, controversial team selection did them no favours.
At times, England looked as uncomfortable on the field, in possession and without, as they had in the tight-fitting three-piece suits they all wore for the short grim-faced bus journey from their hotel to the stadium.
His rigid adherence to a 4-4-2 system with two wingers and a pair of strikers left central midfielders Gerrard and Frank Lampard exposed in vast areas of space, often outmanoeuvred when the Americans had the ball.
Both US wide players, Dempsey and Landon Donovan, drifted infield to support Ricardo Clark and Michael Bradley, weaving good moves and retaining possession, during spells when a stretched England looked like a punch-drunk boxer on the ropes.
The lack of pace in defence was one of the most evident problems, particularly after Ledley King, already suffering chronic knee problems, picked up a groin injury and was replaced by Jamie Carragher. King will miss Friday's game against Algeria in Cape Town.
With the defence playing so deep to avoid being embarrassed by pace, England made it easy for the Americans' to condense and control midfield, leaving strikers Emile Heskey and Wayne Rooney frustrated and both wingers reduced to fleeting moments of threatening possession.
Rooney has now failed to score in any of England's last seven games.
To seasoned observers of England at World Cups, however, there are consoling memories of the 1966, 1986 and 1990 campaigns when, often inspired by player-power to change tactics, they respectively won the trophy and reached the quarter and semi-finals.
Coach Alf Ramsey's triumphant 1966 team started with a drab 0-0 against Uruguay, while Bobby Robson's 1986 team, in Mexico, lost their opening game 1-0 to Portugal. His 1990 team also started badly with two draws.
In each tournament, changes brought success. Ramsey decided to omit top goal-scorer Jimmy Greaves and bring in Geoff Hurst, who went on to score a hat-trick in the final, while Robson was forced by injury and players' opinions to overhaul the team, rejuvenating its shape and penetration.
However, those teams all had fine goalkeepers in Gordon Banks (1966) and Peter Shilton (1986 and 1990), a factor that should not be overlooked as the 2010 vintage struggles to find a shape and identity under Capello.
On the eve of the US match, Capello had said England would reach the final.
But on Saturday's display his prediction looked as awry as the selections of Green, King, midfielder James Milner, withdrawn after 30 minutes, and Heskey, who has scored just seven gaols in 59 appearances as a striker.