Euro 2008 Qualifying England v Croatia
- England Crashes out and Fails to Make it to Euro 2008
Sean O'Conor
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England fans at New Wembley |
The Emperor has no clothes and it's official.
For the first time within the walls of the awesome citadel that
is the new Wembley Stadium, the
English national team has come a cropper in a big way, and this
time there can be no hiding from the naked truth.
Now let these somber words ring out across our green and pleasant
land: England are a mediocre football nation and it's high
time we accepted it.
One final appearance in 57 continuous years of international football
competitions tells its own story and cannot by any logic justify
the perennial Mount Everest of expectations heaped upon the Three
Lions.
As the 3-2 victory over England by a competent yet not exceptional
Croatian eleven on Wednesday
proved once more, there is simply no case for believing we deserve
a place at the high table of the world's football nations,
so please don't try to make it.
After such a miserable and humiliating surrender, can anyone seriously
believe we can win the 2010 World Cup? Will the patriotic punters
be out in force again to waste their money, like they have for the
last forty years since we won the World Cup at home?
That the English invented the sport and still sustain a 92-team
professional league is utterly immaterial if the national team consistently
fails to perform, yet year after year, an inferno of fan fervour
is stoked up by London's boorish tabloid media with no basis
in reality.
But the media is only partly to blame for the unrealistic expectations
and to a great extent is only a mirror of the national zeitgeist.
The obscenely ballooning waistline of the cash cow that is the
FA Premier League is also only reinforcing an existing tunnel vision
shared by millions throughout the home of football.
There is a foreign influx in our leagues and globalization all
around us, but it clearly does not follow that a great domestic
league can produce a world-class national team.
So who do we blame this time?
The usual suspects for the latest shambles are lining up and while
they all shoulder a part of the blame, are mostly red herrings while
the prime suspect is still at large.
Steve McClaren
is not the main culprit and I take no pride in having predicted
as soon as he was appointed that he would fail
Although guiding your club to 15th place in the Premier League
is not the best preparation for coaching your country, McClaren
had served apprenticeships under Alex Ferguson and Sven-Goran Eriksson
and there were no realistic alternatives for England last summer.
While some fans are slating McClaren for starting with 4-5-1 at
home, without Michael Owen and Wayne Rooney his striking options
were limited and when reinforcements did arrive in the shape of
Darren Bent and Jermain Defoe, the much-needed punch up front was
still lacking.
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England - Croatia |
In fact, the catalyst for England's comeback was the arrival
of David Beckham, in perhaps his last national team appearance,
after halftime, a player from Major League Soccer who provided an
artistry and finesse with the ball otherwise lacking from his team
on the night.
The English players' superstar salaries are almost irrelevant
too. Serie A pays huge wages but that never stopped Italy's
national team winning the World Cup impressively last summer. And
English players certainly do not lack passion. If anything, they
play with too much heart and not enough head, yet England critics
routinely bemoan a lack of passion and self-belief as the reasons
for falling short.
That there may be too many foreign players in England for the national
team's good is also an argument that looks shakier by the
day. In fact, on the evidence of last night, no wonder Arsene Wenger
shops overseas.
The dissections and post mortems on the corpse of England's
latest failure are everywhere, though few have realised the fatal
disease is merely an inherited and myopic attitude that the English
way is best.
Like Charybdis, the fearsome whirlpool of Greek mythology, our
semi-permanent debate on the national team ends up going round in
circles of self-delusion, our consistent demand for unrealistic
success devouring all passing managers lured too close to the job.
This insular hara-kiri was evident off the field as well as on.
Thousands of England fans pointedly ignored the Wembley announcer's
request to respect both national anthems by booing Croatia's
loudly, before reveling in taunting the traveling fans with several
renditions of 'You're not singing anymore', only
to be confounded as super sub Mladen Petric speared a spectacular
25-yard winner with 13 minutes remaining.
'Rule Britannia' is still one of our favourite songs,
but its boasting of global dominance had a particularly pathetic
ring at Wembley last night, a specious self-aggrandizement amid
the carnival of English obsolescence on the field.
Sheltering from the Wembley monsoon while the queues to the tube
station still stretched down Bobby Moore Way a full hour after the
final whistle, I got talking to some Croatian fans, who gave me
some refreshing points of view on our particular malaise.
The heavens were downright miserable, but there was some blue-sky
thinking to be found beneath the deluge.
“England has good players, but they don't play as a
team,” thought Branko from Dubrovnik.
“You're right,” I said, “but we don't
know any different.” Contrary to some opinions aired this
week, England can produce great talents.
I could reel off names such as Bobby Charlton, Tom Finney and Stanley
Matthews, but from more recently, what about John Barnes, Paul Gascoigne,
Gary Lineker and Chris Waddle from the 1980s and David Beckham,
Steven Gerrard, Owen and Rooney from the '90s.
“Your style is twenty years behind the times,” offered
Zlatko from Mostar. “You hit long high balls to the big forward,
Crouch. We know that is what the English do. It is simple to play
against.”
“Well Crouch did score tonight,” I offered in defence,
but I broadly agreed with his analysis.
“Look at the Germans,” said Goran from near Split.
“They work hard the whole time too, but they do it as a team.”
I then racked my brains for times in my life when England have
played with great fluidity and got stuck on a handful of occasions:
In the latter stages of Italia '90, for the first half of
a friendly against Mexico in 2001, against Italy in Rome in 1997
and most famously smashing the Netherlands 4-1 at Wembley in Euro
'96 and Germany 5-1 in Munich five years later.
Our national style still leans towards passionate and direct attacking
– 'droit au but' –'straight to goal',
as the motto of Marseille says. And we have to change this mind
set, wholesale, from the grass roots up, if we want to challenge
for international trophies.
One final in 57 years of FIFA and UEFA competition is surely proof
there is a hairline fracture in the monolith of the Football Association,
a lingering fault line that cannot and should not be attributed
to any particular coach or set of players.
The one excuse I didn't hear on the tortuous journey from
the Wembley mega-arena back to my home in North London was perhaps
the most obvious one: Croatia were just better than us.
“Wake up,” Croatia coach Slaven Bilic said succinctly
post-match. “We're simply a better team.”
They undoubtedly were the superior side, having defeated England
home and away in the qualification campaign, yet I still heard a
fan moaning that England had played badly and lost to 'a shit
team'. 'Yeah, they are a shit team,' echoed his
equally dim friend.
Well, relativism aside, any team who tops a UEFA qualification
group cannot by any sound reasoning be made of caca.
Croats gave England a footballing lesson in both Zagreb and London
in soaking up pressure, throwing bodies into attack or defense appropriately,
counter-attacking and shooting from distance.
But what really stood out for me at Wembley was their outfield
players' superior technique.
The Croats' creed is possession, like it is for all great
football nations, while England still go for broke in the final
third and try to hit that killer ball into the channels or lump
it onto the head of that big lad in the box, too often finding their
optimistic punts intercepted or over hit instead.
On the night, Shaun-Wright Phillips typified what is wrong with
English football. Energetic and brimming with passion, the Chelsea
winger charged goal ward whenever he was given the ball, but too
often his ardour burned out as he mishit a cross, collided with
a defender or ran the ball out of play.
Time and again, England played without any telepathy when they
managed to get the ball near the opponents' box, while every
Croatian tap, layoff or backheel seemed to be wired to an incoming
teammate.
The Croats clearly knew how to counter-attack better than we did,
sprinting upfield, stretching our retreating defence and hitting
first-time passes to runners without hesitation. They built a shape-shifting,
multi-dimensional game which defeated our rigid, one-dimensional
structure with ease.
We might lazily lump all Eastern European football nations together
as tough, former communist, crack army sides from chilly lands,
but remember Croatia, like Romania, is essentially a Mediterranean
country whose warm weather breeds skilful ballplayers.
Facing Italy across the Adriatic, Croatia has only been a country
since 1991 and with a population of under five million, has in that
short space of time, produced stars of the calibre of Zvonimir Boban,
Alen Boksic, Robert Prosinecki and Davor Suker.
But however you compare the two countries, England should be a
far better football nation than Croatia.
But once again, I fear we will skirt around the answer to our ills
- a complete and radical overhaul of the coaching culture.
The intangibility of the problem and its equally nebulous solution
just discourage us from addressing it properly, and so England stumble
to under-achievement every time.
It almost seems a treasonable offense to the Anglo-Saxon virtues
ingrained in our national game to tell our kids to keep the ball
instead of to 'get it in there!', to think about their
shape and position instead of to 'get stuck in lad!'
and to bring others into attack instead of to 'go on your
own, son, have a pop!' etc.
The continental method does seem anathema to a windy Sunday morning
league game in Rotherham, but ask yourself who is the more successful
soccer nation – Italy or England?
'Look at Arsenal,' Zlatko continued. 'They have
a great coach and play in a European style but are an English team'.
Treating football seriously from a young age also draws us into
a political debate we would rather steer clear of, that of mass
education's historic lack of importance in England in general.
If we want well trained footballers, we need well educated players,
who understand the professional commitment and the intellectual
ability the game demands at the highest level.
'What about Wayne Rooney?' you holler. Nothing can
compensate for raw talent like his, surely; only to a point. Imagine
what Gascoigne could have done with the self-discipline of a Zinedine
Zidane, or how Rooney could prosper with the spatial awareness of
strikers like Dennis Bergkamp, Thierry Henry or Henrik Larsson.
On the train home, there was no anger, nor misery at England's
premature exit from Euro 2008, just a resigned mood, an unspoken
acceptance that we have seen it all before.
I really felt that maybe for the first time, an accommodation of
our ineptitude had begun to set in with the fans, a growing acceptance
of the obvious mediocrity we have been dealing with for years.
Make no mistake. This umpteenth failure for England will not be
the last, unless we do start again from the grass roots, bite the
bullet and admit the FA's manuals are mistaken in many ways
and our coaching outdated.
Or, we can bury our heads in the sand once more, blame Steve McClaren
or whoever under performed last night and come 2010, summon up the
blood to bellow from the rooftops our belief that England can win
the World Cup, if only we the fans and they the players want it
enough.
Unless there is a revolution, the future history of the England
team writes itself.
All may not be lost however. As I traipsed down the many steps
from Wembley's upper tier, and some fans began to sing 'Jose
Mourinho', I began to think that the foreign influx in our
game could end up being the solution instead of the problem, whoever
the next coach may be. The tide of the world game is all around
us now, at home and abroad.
And what is for sure is that England's national football
culture, more than ever, is all played out.
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