First off, an apology. Around this time yesterday, Football Daily may have suggested that while the Nations League was a tournament devised to eliminate pointless one-sided international friendlies and instead pit national teams of similar ability against each other, the England team was far too good to be muddying their spats in its second tier. The impression that we expected them to swat a distracted and distraught Greece team aside, in the process boosting Lee Carsley’s chances of being offered the role of full-time manager, was conveyed. In the face of incontrovertible evidence presented over 95 minutes at Wembley, we are happy to concede that we were wrong on both counts and would like to unreservedly apologise to readers for these errors in judgment. In our defence, however, we would like to point out that unlike assorted others, our nonsensical ramblings were written and published before the game. Since its conclusion, we couldn’t help but notice that a few pundits and press-box grandees have used the fairly brutal beatdown dished out by Greece as a spiked baseball bat with which to mercilessly batter observers who had previously opined that the reason England never won any shiny pots under Gareth Southgate was down to the belt-and-braces approach adopted by the former manager that verged on extreme caution. “SEE!” wrote his acolytes. “THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU LET THE HANDBRAKE OFF!!! THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU THROW CAUTION TO THE WIND IN A BID TO APPEASE KNOW-NOTHING BARSTOOL BOZOS WHO DON’T APPRECIATE THE IMPORTANCE OF TEAM STRUCTURE!!!” Which is all well and good, of course, except as Football Daily recalls, most of the aforementioned bozos were happy enough with Southgate’s team selections but just wanted the players he picked to stop constantly and slowly passing the ball backwards and sideways. At no point were any but the most deranged of them calling on Southgate to field two attacking full-backs, two wingers, three No 10s and no striker. Of course, while defeat in a Nations League match doesn’t really amount to a hill of beans for England, Thursday’s omni-shambles in which Greece scored two, had the ball in the net five times and another effort acrobatically hooked off the line could have a detrimental effect on Carsley’s chances of getting the gig on a full-time basis. One loss shouldn’t torpedo his chances of succeeding Southgate, but in seeing his selection gamble backfire so spectacularly, the interim manager has needlessly given the FA a reason to overlook him when the time comes to name a new boss. Assuming, that is, the former Republic of Ireland player actually wants the job. |