by sandman » 14 Nov 2011 21:34
by melonhead » 14 Nov 2011 21:43
cmonurz Not long ago (well, a while, but I remember it), that we were comfortably beating Spain 3-0 at home. Ugo Ehiogu scored iirc.
by melonhead » 14 Nov 2011 21:50
No Fixed Abode If I was to pick the england side it would be easy.
Hart
A Cole
John Terry
Rio Ferdinand
P Jones
Lampard
Rooney
Barry
A young
Welbeck
Sturridge
All from the best 3 teams in the Country.
by RobRoyal » 14 Nov 2011 22:36
No Fixed Abode If I was to pick the england side it would be easy.
Hart
A Cole
John Terry
Rio Ferdinand
P Jones
Lampard
Rooney
Barry
A young
Welbeck
Sturridge
All from the best 3 teams in the Country.
by rhroyal » 14 Nov 2011 22:45
M-U-R-T-Y I wonder if any other countries would bicker as much after beating the world champions.
by melonhead » 15 Nov 2011 10:04
rhroyalM-U-R-T-Y I wonder if any other countries would bicker as much after beating the world champions.
The fault lies entirely with those who have made the English public so disullushioned with their football team, which basically means that the media, management and players should share the blame. If we'd felt proud of our country at all recently we'd be congratulating them gladly, but this is the first moment to be proud of we've had since beating Argentina in 2002. And it's a friendly.
Maybe if the players in the past 9 years had appeared to care half as much for their country as their clubs, we'd be behind them more. Kudos to the youngsters and Scott Parker for breaking the trend against Spain; if it continues then maybe you'll see the country support the overpaid players more.
by TBM » 15 Nov 2011 10:20
M-U-R-T-Y I wonder if any other countries would bicker as much after beating the world champions.
by Hoop Blah » 15 Nov 2011 10:32
TBM We wont get better as a team until we change that - who cares if we lost 5-0 to Spain if it meant we actually played some nice football.
IF we get these results next year and win the Euro's then fine but the fact is, playing like that, we wont.
by TBM » 15 Nov 2011 10:37
Hoop BlahTBM We wont get better as a team until we change that - who cares if we lost 5-0 to Spain if it meant we actually played some nice football.
IF we get these results next year and win the Euro's then fine but the fact is, playing like that, we wont.
At the senior level just playing nice football doesn't get you anywhere. What we needed from the game was part of what we got. A lesson in how to snuff out an excellent side and start to work on a method of play we can use when needed.
I don't want to see England go out having played nice football if by being a little more savvy we can actually stop the opposition winning. Accepting that we might not be able to take Spain on at their own game with the current sets of players both nations have is a step forward.
I've seen enough of England try and play their own game and come up short. I'd rather see us be a with little more discipline and 'tactical awareness' if it means we've a better chance of getting further in a tournament.
Totally agree that at kids level it has to be more about getting kids their basics right than just winning a game. From what I've seen over the last 20 years I think that's certainly more the case now (it certainly is if you watch a lot of the training). They do also need to develop a competitive instinct as well though, and they do need to enjoy it, and the competitive side to football is where a lot of the enjoyment comes from.
by melonhead » 15 Nov 2011 11:08
TBM We wont get better as a team until we change that - who cares if we lost 5-0 to Spain if it meant we actually played some nice football.
IF we get these results next year and win the Euro's then fine but the fact is, playing like that, we wont.
by TBM » 15 Nov 2011 11:25
melonheadTBM We wont get better as a team until we change that - who cares if we lost 5-0 to Spain if it meant we actually played some nice football.
IF we get these results next year and win the Euro's then fine but the fact is, playing like that, we wont.
id rather win. dont care if we tap it around the back for for an hour to do that. in fact idf prefer if we didnt
italy have won multiple world cups playing defensively
greece won the euros in organsised, dour fashion
denmark were hardly amazing
winning tournaments is about taking some form and confidence into it, gathering momentum through it,having a proper well balanced and together team of players in it, and getting a little bit of luck when required.
anyone can do it
by Svlad Cjelli » 15 Nov 2011 11:28
by Hoop Blah » 15 Nov 2011 11:33
TBM Thats fair enough. If we actually do this "job" and win something i will hold my hands up.....
TBM but how many times can we play a game like that and expect to win the tournament - i bet the players were mentally and physically exhausted after this [Spain] game, imagine next they had to do the same thing today against Germany, and then 3 days after that Holland
TBM I think with kids they shouldn't play 11-a-side until they are about 14/15 years old - playing 7-a-side will allow every player to be involved, improve their game/touch/skill/technique but also has that competitive edge to win but isn't as important.
by TBM » 15 Nov 2011 11:42
by cmonurz » 15 Nov 2011 11:43
by Svlad Cjelli » 15 Nov 2011 12:45
by Hoop Blah » 15 Nov 2011 13:17
TBM The FA need to invest in coaches....it costs around £7k to get a pro licence, not to mention the cost to get to that stage. Then if someone passes their pro-badge they are not guaranteed a job at the end of it - instead teams give jobs to ex-professional footballers so the interest of somebody taking a coaching course is getting lower and lower. The FA should be funding part of the coaching and then taking these coaches and setting up development centres across the country for the young kids - rather than letting the likes of Utd, Chelsea, Arsenal etc snapping them up at 7/8 years old meaning we cant train these players to an "English style" that we would like the national team to play.
by Hoop Blah » 15 Nov 2011 13:19
Svlad Cjelli The FA are expecting the lowest ever England attendance at the new Wembley, beating the 57,897 for Andorra 6-0 in June 2009 (the tube-strike match). Only 50,000 tickets sold so far.
by melonhead » 15 Nov 2011 13:47
Svlad Cjelli Surely the ultimate aim is to be able to change styles/systems to be able to defeat the opposition?
Football is like a game of rock, paper, scissors, so you need to be able to play differently depending on who you're playing.
But I don't think England have the mental or technical ability to be able to switch styles as much as needed to be successful, the players are far too set in their ways.
by TBM » 15 Nov 2011 14:53
Hoop Blah You don't need a pro licence to be a coach though so that £7k is a bit misleading.
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