Albion Rob
New member
There's an element of truth in that, but I don't totally agree.
There are some fine English individuals coming through, but they, and the failed generation before them, have been brought up on 'English' football, which is an inferior, superseded form of the game. As has been proved, it doesn't matter how good your players are, if the system you are playing doesn't suit your style OR it's being counter-acted by a better system, you're not going to get anywhere.
I'm not certain about that TLO. If by 'English' football we mean Premier League football then it's hard to reason away the fact that the Premier has been heavily represented in the Champions League final for most of the last decade, dominating the semi finals stage on many occasions too. To be fair to ManUre (and I hate being fair to them) they have come up against an incredible Barcalona side twice in the past three years. I seriously think they could be candidates for the best team ever when we look back over time.
For me the problem isn't necessarily the 'English' style, it's the way we get to a major tournament and then try to copy the style of teams we clearly don't have the attributes to copy. The amount of times Terry and co passed the ball about at the back in the last World Cup, trying to emulate some sort of possession game that the Spanish play, only for us to give the ball away cheaply or just go down some blind alley or other and eventually concede possession.
I'm not advocating just keeping pumping the ball up top to a big fella but I think the sort of football we played in Euro 96 (albeit with players of genuine standing such as Gascoigne, Ince, Shearer and Seaman) is perhaps a bit closer to what we should be looking for. A high pressure, get the ball forward, run at your man and try to service the strikers style rather than the clever and impressive patient, passing game then move quickly when the opportunity opens. As you've rightly said, our kids just aren't brought up on that.
I'd sooner see us play a more direct, aggressive style which takes more chances than the type of possession game we tried in South Africa which broadly got us nowhere. Nothing wrong with the possession game itself as as Gus has proved, to a point you train good players to be comfortable on the ball and to hold on to it until they can quicken it up when an opportunity presents itself (actually, I think Gus has got us playing a beautiful mix of the aggressive English style and the slick passing game) but I think when you get to the very top you have to recognise that players who are used to playing that style will be better at it than players of broadly equal ability who are trying to imitate it. There's no shame in that and I can't say it would win us tournaments but it would be better to go out having given it a good go than the limp wristed way we tried to imitate more technically gifted sides and failed just over a year ago.