Durhamfootman wrote:This is a decent piece that in some measure reflects my personal view of Southgate, although the tactical deficiencies are perhaps a bit understated for my taste, but there is a lot in here that I agree with
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/ar ... 86pl8v9j8o
Gingerfinch wrote:Durhamfootman wrote:I could see them going foreign again though, but I guess it would have to be someone who'd successfully managed a PL club in the past. They won't want to go full Capello again, imo
Klopp would hold out for the Germany job, I reckon.
which reminds me.... I remember Ancelotti saying that the easiest game he had to manage was the final against Liverpool, because (as he put it) Liverpool had such a strong playing style (which I took to mean that they were completely predicable) that he knew exactly how Liverpool would play and which players would start, making his job of countering that really simple. The same could be said about Southgate
is that the same Liverpool that beat them in 2005?
Durhamfootman wrote:Gingerfinch wrote:Durhamfootman wrote:I could see them going foreign again though, but I guess it would have to be someone who'd successfully managed a PL club in the past. They won't want to go full Capello again, imo
Klopp would hold out for the Germany job, I reckon.
which reminds me.... I remember Ancelotti saying that the easiest game he had to manage was the final against Liverpool, because (as he put it) Liverpool had such a strong playing style (which I took to mean that they were completely predicable) that he knew exactly how Liverpool would play and which players would start, making his job of countering that really simple. The same could be said about Southgate
is that the same Liverpool that beat them in 2005?
the CL final last year or the year before or something. The one in Paris... with the police and the 'rampaging' 'uncontrollable', yet strangely peaceful fans
sussexpob wrote:The Sven v Southgate comparison is another one you can dig deeper into.
In 2002, we beat Argentina. Southgate has never beaten a side of that level in his career. There is no comparison. After beating the Argies, we then smashed Denmark and then played a Brazil team considered their best arguably ever. That team had 4 ballon d'or winners in it and one player who finished second in voting. Has an International side ever fielded so many Ballon D'Or winners together? I'd guess not. The 3 R's attack is considered the greatest to ever play international football... we lost the game 2-1 and were not outplayed or outclassed.
In 2004, we would have beaten a world class France team had it not been for the referee not sending off Mikael Silvestre for the clearest red card ever. Beckham missed a penalty late to win the game 2-0, and then Zidane/David James happened, but the eventual loss was better than we have played against any Southgate matches against a top side.
We then lost to Portugal on penalties twice. People seem to remember these teams as terrible, but Deco was runner up in the ballon d'or in 2004 and considered the best attacking midfielder in the game. Figo won the ballon d'or a couple of years before. Carvalho won world's best defender in 2004. And then of course there is the matter of the second best player to play the sport in 2006.
alfie wrote:I am comfortable enough with the prevailing view that this was the right time for a change - just hope whoever comes in is able to take the team forward ( and get results as well as style points ). At least he will inherit a better starting point than Southgate did in 2016...
alfie wrote: All "reasonable' arguments , true. The only thing I would say in response is that what actually counts at the end of a game - or a tournament - is the actual score. Which is surely what should define Southgate - for both the good and the not so good... Consider : In 1966 England won three knockout games to take the title. Two years later , won a third place Euro's play off over USSR. In the next fifty years they won some six knockout matches in total over those two big tournaments. Southgate has in 8 years presided over nine knockout wins...but sure , he didn't ever land the Big One. Strip out all the subjective opinions and his record is second only to Ramsey's
alfie wrote:All "reasonable' arguments , true. The only thing I would say in response is that what actually counts at the end of a game - or a tournament - is the actual score. Which is surely what should define Southgate - for both the good and the not so good... Strip out all the subjective opinions and his record is second only to Ramsey's
sussexpob wrote:I tell a lie. I actually did have faith back in 2018, but that faith ended with Croatia. On that day in 2018, I watched an inferior side to England make the most simple of adaptations to their play, and completely change the game. Southgate watched 75 minutes of football unable to identify the most simple errors in his tactics, even when they were plainly obvious. It was at that moment that it became clear we had a manager with an infantile level of football understanding.
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