Another Rant about England

By: Matthew | November 16th, 2007

Owen and CrouchWhen England is barely capable of beating Austria in a friendly, at a time when the team should be at the peak of its form, you know something is seriously wrong. After an embarassing performance, in which only Micah Richards distinguished himself in any small way, England won a meaningless 1-0 victory which contained more meaningful commentary on the state of the English game than any of those in the past few months.

First, the positives: Micah Richards is excellent, and hopefully under a good manager like Sven-Gorran Eriksson, he will only get better.

Alright, now that’s out of the way, let’s move on to the bad.

Scott Carson took over from Paul Robinson in goal, and while that’s certainly a welcome development given Robinson’s current confusion over the role of the goalkeeper in a game of football, Austria’s blistering challenge for the title of “worst footballing nation in Europe” meant he had very little to do.

In defence, Wayne Bridge, Sol Campbell, Joleon Lescott, and Micah Richards demonstrated … well … very little, given that the entire Austrian team generated as many attacking chances as Scott Carson. It’s hard to evaluate their performance when their primary function - preventing goals - was taken up by the opposition’s attacking players. Wes Brown replaced Sol Campbell towards the end of the game, and wasn’t very good.

And now! To the time machine! Rewind to the last World Cup! Joe Cole, Steven Gerrard, Frank Lampard, and David Beckham. And lo! It didn’t work any better than it did under Sven; it was worse, if that’s possible. Joe Cole was at least visible. If anyone has the faintest idea how Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard spent their game, let me know: I’ll be damned if a single one of Gerrard’s passes actually reached anyone (apart from a number of surprised spectators), and Lampard, on fire for Chelsea, looked like he’d been drugged. Surely someone, somewhere in the FA, has cottoned on that STEVEN GERRARD AND FRANK LAMPARD CANNOT PLAY TOGETHER! THEY ARE ESSENTIALLY THE SAME PLAYER IN A DIFFERENT BODY, THE ONLY DIFFERENCE BEING THAT FRANK LAMPARD IS IN FORM RIGHT NOW AND STEVEN GERRARD ISN’T! EITHER PLAY A 4-3-3 WITH LAMPARD OR A 4-4-2 WITH GERRARD AND BARRY, BUT PICK ONE OR THE OTHER, YOU BLOODY SORRY EXCUSE FOR A COACHING STAFF!

Sorry, had to get that off my chest. I haven’t mentioned Beckham yet, largely because anyone who’s seen a League One MLS game recently knows exactly what happened: he took a few largely ineffective corners and tried to score from a 40-yard free kick, for reasons known only to himself.

Up front, Michael Owen and Peter Crouch started the match. Michael Owen failed to score! Please, contain your astonishment - I know Owen is England’s first-choice striker, despite not having scored since playing Russia at Wembley three months ago, but even great-strikers-who-can’t-score-and-are-made-out-of-papier-maché have an off day. Or two. or sixty. He injured himself again in this match, so he won’t be playing for a while, not even in our upcoming friendly extremely important qualifying match against Croatia.

Peter Crouch scored again, which is nice considering he almost never starts at Liverpool and wouldn’t have started here if Wayne Rooney were fit. Jermaine Defoe replaced Owen after his injury, but that’s about all he did. And McClaren brought on Alan Smith to replace Peter Crouch during the second half, which is probably all the mention he deserves.

Yesterday, I slagged off the English youth system and the fact that, once the current crop of top English players retires, we’ll be left with Micah Richards, Theo Walcott, and Sir Alex Ferguson’s shoe-shine boy. Today, though, I’m taking a more positive note. For the love of God, this is an England squad that can call upon four members of the Chelsea starting 11 and a host of other top players from some of the best teams in the world. Why, for the love of God, could we barely beat a team that might have improved if reinforced by members of the Austrian FA’s cleaning staff?

Someone in the FA, please, listen to me. Find us a decent manager. Anyone. Someone who knows the basic, rudimentary techniques for building a functioning football team, rather than a mob of 11 individuals running around on some grass for 90 minutes. Someone other than Steve McClaren. I don’t care if we qualify or not anymore, largely because, if we do qualify, there’s a fairly good chance we’ll embarass ourselves repeatedly on live television.

I’m holding out for José Morinho, but to be honest, I’ll take anyone.





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Comments  

  • Jeff |  November 16th, 2007 at 10:09 pm

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    You’re obviously a Gerrard hater. Not in form? If 5 goals in his last six matches is out of form, he must be the best player on the planet. The pass to Crouch to set up comes to mind.

    Micah Richards takes his athleticism for granted, way too often. A team with superior athletes than Austria, will exploit the hell out of him, as happens all the time in the Premiership. He’s young though and has plenty to learn.

    Lampard and Owen don’t care, at least Gerrard does. It was a friendly, get over it, nobody cares.

    Posted from United States

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  • Matthew |  November 17th, 2007 at 7:31 am

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    I’ve no problem with Gerrard when he’s playing for Liverpool - he plays well there. He just doesn’t seem to be able to continue that form with the England team.

    Since Steve McClaren took over as England manager, and despite starting in every match bar one (for which he was suspended), he’s only scored 3 goals, all of which were against the weakest team in the group, Andorra. He’s only scored once in his last 7 games for England, and even under Sven-Gorran Eriksson, he only managed eight goals from 45 appearances, and all but one of those eight were against extremely poor opposition (Andorra, Sweden, Serbia and Montenegro, Hungary, Macedonia, Azerbaijan, Trinidad and Tobago). Not exactly a world-beating record, is it? His record for Liverpool means very little for England if he can’t maintain it during internationals, and I haven’t seen any evidence that he can thus far in the qualifying campaign.

    None of this is to say that he’s a bad player - clearly, he isn’t. He’s just not the same player when he’s in an England shirt.

    Posted from United States

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  • Laurie |  November 17th, 2007 at 11:15 am

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    France only beat Austia 1-0 this year after completely dominating the game, so don’t feel too bad.

    Posted from United States United States

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  • Matthew |  November 18th, 2007 at 9:47 am

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    Looks like The Guardian agrees with me:

    “So before voting for quotas, which would have to be voluntary anyway, consider why it might be that clubs who like to buy British - Sunderland or Derby, for example - are not prospering from all the quality cast-offs unable to get a game with the big teams. Just as there was no golden generation, there is no abundance of English quality either, and Wenger knows that better than anyone.”
    http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/sport/2007/11/18/before_ringfencing_english_tal.html

    Posted from United States

    cornercorner

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