"One-nil up lads. Keep it tig... oh."
It’s very un-Spongers for us to piss on everyone’s chips at
a major tournament. But here we are, chaps in hand, aiming for the McCains. Don’t
say we didn’t warn you. After four days of football, England are in town
(Volgograd to be precise). Aside from witnessing the game of the tournament so
far (Spain vs Portugal), we’ve seen Germany humbled by Mexico. France limping
to a 2-1 win against the Aussies. And Brazil and Argentina stuttering to 1-1
draws against two banks of four aka Switzerland and Iceland.
Anti-football is back with a vengeance. We extolled its
virtues back in 2016, explaining it thus: “Fucking shite. It’s the new tiki
taka everyone. Impossible to defend against, because they’re the ones doing the
defending thanks very much and you have to have 59% possession and concede from
a throw-in. Or a tackle.” Remember when you were 10 and playing with your mates
on the playground? When everyone would be tactically disciplined and your team
would be hard to break down? No, NOR DO WE.
Yes, we get it. We get you can’t go out all guns blazing
against teams containing Messi or Neymar. But it’s hardly easy on the eye is
it. Especially when there’s four games in a day and you’ve polished off the
Fosters by 6pm.
Which segues us nicely to England. We have a man in charge that is so sensible he should have a range of sensible slacks at Burtons. For all we know, he does. We haven’t been in Burtons since David Beckham had a hand in designing the 2002 England suit with its lovely narrow lapels (this isn’t true). That, to quote The Guardian’s Barney Ronay, Gareth Southgate looks like “a 1930s intellectual”, we think is a good thing. It’s a ‘radical sensibleness’, as the brilliant Brian Phillips muses for the New Yorker. Very much in evidence by the switch to a 352 harking back to the good old days of France ’98. And it’s more radical and sensible than having Allardici in charge and having to suffer yet another tournament with Rooney waddling around, seemingly eating cake, playing like he’s eaten a whole one, then mostly pointing and swearing. Be grateful for small mercies.
Which segues us nicely to England. We have a man in charge that is so sensible he should have a range of sensible slacks at Burtons. For all we know, he does. We haven’t been in Burtons since David Beckham had a hand in designing the 2002 England suit with its lovely narrow lapels (this isn’t true). That, to quote The Guardian’s Barney Ronay, Gareth Southgate looks like “a 1930s intellectual”, we think is a good thing. It’s a ‘radical sensibleness’, as the brilliant Brian Phillips muses for the New Yorker. Very much in evidence by the switch to a 352 harking back to the good old days of France ’98. And it’s more radical and sensible than having Allardici in charge and having to suffer yet another tournament with Rooney waddling around, seemingly eating cake, playing like he’s eaten a whole one, then mostly pointing and swearing. Be grateful for small mercies.
So this is an England side with a wee bit of swagger, last seen some time around 2006. A fully fit Harry Kane supported by Raheem Sterling and Dele Alli is a nice thing. Kyle Walker and John Stones are nice things. And this seems like a nice squad, with youth on their side. Whether ‘nice’ wins tournaments is another thing entirely, but it’s all very, well, nice. When you hear talk of previous squads being ‘interned’ rather than simply chilling out in their camp, Southgate appears to have taken his own experiences of being an international player as recently as 2004 and decided to take the best bits of this, while discarding the bad bits.
It’s smart and it will help this squad hopefully actually
enjoy the experience of representing their country at a World Cup. Because as
Southgate himself has said: “When I have been at World Cups before, whether
working with the media or following the games scouting, there is a kind of
carnival of football out there that sometimes as a player you don't access and
don't feel part of. We have got to feel that it is a festival of football that
you are fully involved in, and look to play as well as we can." Wise words
and good to hear.
Here’s the crux of the matter though. Although Southgate
talks an awful lot of sense, England are notoriously slow starters at major
tournaments. For all the talk of a brave new dawn, a 1-1 draw seems a
relatively safe bet, given that this is exactly the score line England kicked
off Euro ’96 with against Switzerland. And before that in Italia ’90 against
the Irish. And after that in 2010 against the USA in the infamous E-A-S-Y
group. Remember England’s opening game against Russia in Euro 2016? Yep, 1-1. Remember
that 26th minute opening goal by Ray Wilkins in Euro 1980? No, us
neither. But it was cancelled out in the 29th minute by Jan Ceulemans
in a 1-1 draw. When Sol Campbell put England ahead in their first game against
Sweden in the 2002 World Cup, we can’t say we were massively surprised when
Niclas Alexandersson pulled one back in the second half. The final score? 1-1.
Oh, and I just remembered something else. I just remembered
Jolean Lescott heading England ahead in their opening game against France at
Euro 2012. Must have shut up shop right? Cheeky 1-0 win against one of the
favourites? Na. 1-1 mate. Samir Nasri saw to that. Oh and we drew 0-0 with
Uruguay in ’66. And 0-0 with Denmark in Euro ’92. And 2-2 with the USSR in the
’58 World Cup. And 4-4 with Belgium in Switzerland ’54. In fact, England have
won just five opening games in major tournaments since 1950 – that’s a 21.7%
success rate. Indeed, the last time England opened with a win was against
Paraguay in 2006.
Not that a draw in the opening game is a disaster,
considering England’s finest tournaments (1966, 1990 and 1996) have all started
with a point. And there’s always the cliché about ‘playing yourself into a
tournament’, which at least has some merit. But let’s break the habit of a
lifetime and not expect too much. Then, just maybe, when Kane puts
England ahead tonight, we don’t feel too cheated when Wahbi Khazri equalises
with 10 minutes to go.
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