England: The Kentucky Basketball of International Soccer

>> Monday

It's long been accepted that coaching a team carries with it the responsibilities of leading the team to victory. If the team doesn't win, a change of leadership must be required, and axeing the coach will make all the problems disappear. When the new coach wins his first game, there is jubilation and the glory days are back again. It happens over and over again like dictators succeeding each other in coups.


Such is the case with England. A 4-0 thrashing of Greece last fall convinced many that new boss Steve McClaren was the man for the job, and his dismissal of former captain David Beckham appeared a stroke of genius. The griping and grumbling of English fans over old coach Sven-Goran Eriksson, who skippered England to another disappointing World Cup (ONLY the Quarterfinals) was gone. We'll just ignore that England has only been past the quarterfinals once since 1966, a fourth-place finish at World Cup Italia '90.

Now it is the exact opposite. McClaren's head is being called for and the supporters who once spurned Beckham as a pretty boy starlet with more hair product than on-field talent are clamoring for his return, a move which McClaren seems unlikely to make any time soon, should he still have his job come next week. Fans and columnists are actually citing Beckham's absence and as such absence of leadership as the main reason why England are "underachieving."

It's time for a reality check. First, England are in third place in their 2008 European Championship qualifying group where the top two qualify, only 3 points behind second-place Russia. They have seven matches remaining (3 points for win, 1 for tie), including two against Russia, and one against Group E leaders Croatia (5 points ahead). The Three Lions are by no means out, or even in serious trouble, especially when one considers that four of their final five matches will be in front of thousands of St. George Crosses at the newly renovated Wembley Stadium.

Their scoring drought (1 goal in four matches, where England have gone 1-1-2) is something to be concerned about, but one must keep in mind that three of those matches were on the road, and the goal in any international tournament is to win at home and tie on the road. The teams they have failed to score against for the most part are European also-rans whose only motivation seems to be to avoid being blown out, hence a tightly-packed defensive scheme that results in ugly football. The only loss they suffered was at Croatia, to the group leaders.

But let's even say that England were shite this year, and WERE in serious danger of not qualifying for the EURO. What is being totally overlooked in this situation is that the only place where coaching really matters in top-flight soccer is in terms of setting the formation, and personnel management, which largely depends on setting the formation. Basically, on the world stage, coaching is largely irrelevant. The players have been coached all they can. They know their job and what they need to do.

England has more than enough talent to play, so the loss of Beckham is not an issue either. Nearly every player on the England roster plies their trade in the English Premiership; largely considered to be the best professional league in the world. Beckham's loss of leadership should likewise not be an issue because on England's current roster, six players are currently serving as captain, or vice-captain of their Premiership club.

So what's to cause for England's recent troubles? The fans. Not in the sense that the fans are not supporting England, but the fans are unrealistic. It's the same reason why if you don't win National titles every year at Notre Dame or Kentucky you get run out of town on a rail. Sometimes in international football, the breaks don't go your way. Especially when your qualifying schedule for one of the most prestigious competitions in the world is heavily front-loaded with road games. English fans seem to expect to win every game 5-0, and to win trophies constantly simply because the sport was invented in England. The fact is, England is a very good team. Possibly not an elite team, but there are many other sides who would LOVE to be blessed with the kind of talent and training infrastructure that England possesses. It's almost as if England fans haven't realized that they haven't won a World Cup since the 1966 final at Wembley Stadium. They're not supposed to dominate. They're supposed to win at home and tie on the road, and for the most part, they've managed to do just that.

10 comments:

Vinnie 12:15 PM  

Good work. But until international rules allow for England to recruit Brazilians, I would liken the situation more to managing the Yankees than to coaching Kentucky, where finding and developing the personnel are much more relevant.

Mike 2:15 PM  

Well, upon further research, England midfielder Owen Hargreaves is Canadian-born, but his parents had emigrated from Great Britain, making him eligible to play for either Canada or England. He was never capped by Canada, so he now plays for England.

So I guess I stand by my comparison.

Unknown 2:17 PM  

Only thing is that Kentucky has actually won something recently. I'd say they are more like ND football: unrealistic expectations that will never be met in the 21st century.

Anonymous,  2:19 PM  

you hit an interesting point at the end, the idea of a team's fanbase having an effect on the team outside of the obvious ticket purchases lead to higher payroll. I've always been a firm believer that this is so although I'm not sure it's happening with England right now. I don't see them as making any decisions or having their onfield performance affected by the fans' expectations-yet. On the other hand there are instances where players(like A-Rod in New York) or managers like Lee Elia holding that the fans were a direct cause of problems. It's not always having an effect with every team, but I will maintain that from time to time the fans can become so obnoxious that they can directly and negatively affect their own team.

Mike 2:33 PM  

I don't think we're looking at the fans expectations altering the play on the field, but rather the fans taking a bump or two in the road and turning it into an unwarranted crisis.

This blowing out of proportion is especially apparent in the mainstream American soccer press, most of which views England as their pet team. "McClaren in trouble!" "England in jeopardy!" No they're not. They play a fixture list that sees them go on the road for five of their first seven matches. They're 3 points out of a qualifying spot, and have 7 matches to go.

Nathan 5:09 PM  

FOUL! I call foul! That's the second time you've used that Paint-altered image.

Come up with some new material.

Mike 6:10 PM  

New material added.

Nathan 1:30 AM  

Wow, nice improvement.

Anonymous,  3:16 AM  

Nice to see a pretty ballanced and objective view of English soccer!
The British media seem to have a long standing deathwish for England FC.
Sven-Goran Eriksson has been ranked as No2 most successfull coach (after Sir Alf Ramsey. Arguably; with only 4 competitive matches lost in five and a half years, cruising to top place in all three qualifying groups and rising to FIFA No.4 world ranking, Sven's statistical record surpasses all previous managers.
BUT, with no trophy to show, the media's continual attacks finally drove the guy to quit.
As the foremost Sven celebrity impersonator act, I meet thousands of the grass root fans and general public and the feeling of betrayal and embarrassment at the way he was treated remains very high.
While other nations celebrate qualifying for international tournaments and provide unqualified support for their teams no matter how far they progress, it would seem tha only a trophy will satisfy the British journalists and b-list football pundits and England managers are either put on a pedastal or trampled in the mud?
There is a growing gloom that the Sven/Becks years may have been something of a Golden Era for England's soccer and it looks like it's back to the bad old days of knife edge qualification.
After the way Sven was so well "supported and encouraged" by the media, no other quality coach wanted the job, so the understudy got it by default and it looks like the press deathwish for English football may soon be answered?

www.svenalike.co.uk

Anonymous,  8:02 AM  

Should there be a Salary Cap in Football?
Personally I think there should be! It’s just getting to be stupid money in football at the top of the premiership!
It’s always the same teams at the top proving that football success is based purely on money which ruins the idea of it being a sport! They’ve done it in rugby, basketball, hockey and American football and it makes the sports more competitive and better to watch!
I do a little Spread Betting from time to time and most matches don’t hold much surprise who is going to win, its boring! I want to see a team at the bottom pulling off an amazing season beating last seasons winners in a close fought battle!
Make things fair! It shouldn’t be about money!
Plus!
All there is all that money in the premiership and barely any of it stays in the UK so it’s not even helping the economy!
From my Spread Betting (or more precisely Football Spread Betting) if I ever win big (which is never, I’m unlucky) it’s still nothing compared to the average premiership players weekly wage!

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