Former England striker Gary Lineker has asserted that Hodgson "got it wrong" by opting for a 4-2-3-1 formation that saw Liverpool team-mates Steven Gerrard and Jordan Henderson aligned in central midfield.
Lineker felt that England were outnumbered in midfield as a result and said that Hodgson's side would have been better served by a 4-3-3 system, but the manager stood by his tactical choices.
"In the first game (against Italy) we played with Raheem Sterling in behind Daniel Sturridge and he was quite often in a fairly deep position around Andrea Pirlo and Daniele De Rossi," Hodgson said.
"I didn't get the impression we were overrun in midfield in either game. But the teams were more clinical, their finishing was better than ours, and they took their chances.
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"If we win, people will say that's good and we like what you did. If we don't, people will find things to pick holes in."
- No moping around -
Hodgson admitted that the blow of falling at the first hurdle had been hard to take but said he was determined to boost morale in the camp.
"Certainly I haven't been moping around, staring at the wall," he said when asked how he had spent his time since England's 2-1 loss to Uruguay on Thursday.
"I had a bad night and a bad day following the game. But my job leading the team is to pull myself out of that and make sure the players aren't suffering in the same way, give them some of the qualities I've got.