The Truth About England & Gareth Southgate

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2022
  • Gareth Southgate is England's second most successful manager of all time, having taken the Three Lions to the semi finals of the 2018 World Cup and the final of Euro 2020, but a recent 4-0 defeat to Hungary has piled the pressure on the England boss.
    Southgate is accused of being negative, out of his depth, and of having got lucky with England's previous tournament draws... But how much of that is true?
    In this video, HITC Sevens attempts to answer that question, taking a look at some of the most common critiques of Gareth Southgate and sharing his views on the England manager ahead of the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @hunterdvs6535
    @hunterdvs6535 Před 2 lety +342

    If I was England I’d just hire Sean Dyche and let the power of memes carry you

  • @venturer9400
    @venturer9400 Před 2 lety +300

    It is often said here in Croatia that we have 4 million coaches - when the team isn't performing well, everyone seems to have an idea on who to play, which formation and tactics to deploy etc. Of course, as is evident in this case, it's not something unique to either of our nations, but one thing most English fans should do is humble themselves.
    The Premier League is an incredibly competitive league with many English players who play well at top level, as well as an enormous amount of them in the lower ranks, making England one of the greatest footballing nations in the world. But that does not entitle you to repeated success at tournaments. Not only is international football dependent on the 11 players that you field, not your entire country's reserves, but the nature of tournaments is very different to that of leagues. Real Madrid, for instance, do so well in the UCL because they have mastered their performances in tough matches and play best when the stakes are high, compared to Manchester City or PSG who don't manage to do the same with equally strong or even better squads on paper.
    Surprisingly, that doesn't even seem to be the main concern right now - the current criticism has followed an unsuccessful campaign in the Nations League, a tournament that torments players after long seasons and takes away from their breaks by making them play 4 matches in 10 days. Of course that managers will want to rotate most of their squads in this time and experiment with something new. The Nations League, I repeat, doesn't matter. It's not that the results aren't worrying, but they are understandable with all circumstances taken into account.
    Back to Croatia, for example - we lost the opening game 0-3 to Austria, a team which also did not qualify for the World Cup and is equally below Croatia's level as Hungary is below England. We continued to have issues with attacking in the remaining games and scored only one goal from open play in the whole campaign, in our case due to a lack of attackers who are in good form or have the quality (our best no. 9 is 30 years old and plays for Osasuna), but Dalić decided to put two young center backs who had never been called to the national team before, Erlić and Šutalo, for the remaining three games (with the exception of Šutalo in the first game against France). They play for Spezia and Dinamo Zagreb respectively, teams that would probably be in the lower half of the Premier League, but their performances were world-class, as we only conceded one goal in those three games (none when they were both on the pitch). Few expected it from them, but the Nations League helped this experiment succeed and many are calling for them to be our starting center backs in Qatar. What I'm saying is, it's great if you win matches in the Nations League as well, but don't sweat it too much or put pressure on Southgate. You had a perfect qualifying campaign and were a penalty away from winning the Euros last year, so what's the big deal? I'm sure the team will perform better in matches that do matter.
    Sorry for the essay without paragraphs, I might edit the post to add them if it's unbearable to read.

    • @skoczek777
      @skoczek777 Před 2 lety +31

      We have 40 million coaches in Poland.
      So don't worry, you're not alone.

    • @narendrapanse7844
      @narendrapanse7844 Před 2 lety +31

      Indian here, we have @ 1.5 billion cricket coaches and selectors - irrespective of whether we win or lose.

    • @TheAlb100
      @TheAlb100 Před 2 lety +7

      We have 70 million coaches in the UK too. There's nothing showing a lack of humility in wanting your team to perform as well as they can. There is no lack of humility in suggesting they can, and should do better. There is great respect from the English fans for the strength of all nations nowadays in international football and it has never been more true to say that "there is no easy game" internationally any more. It is however natural when you have a very strong attacking squad to want the coach to play attacking football and I think thats what people have been angry at.

    • @venturer9400
      @venturer9400 Před 2 lety +12

      @@TheAlb100 Being humble isn't referring to accepting a heavy defeat, but being content with your team not necessarily being the favorite and even if it is, still knowing that the top odds for a team to win the World Cup are 1 in 6-7 at best. That's what I was referring to, as Alfie mentioned numerous times that some said Southgate is wasting the generation when the results say otherwise.
      Would England perform better if they played more attacking football? Surely, it cannot get worse than the last few matches, so I think the staff have taken note of that. I love to see my team play ambitiously in attack even if they concede more as a result, but I would be happy with a win even if it meant parking the bus. Also, attacking mechanisms are somewhat more difficult to implement than defensive ones, which is why smaller nations are often able to park the bus and score on counter-attack. A team like England that has huge potential in attack will be at their best during a major tournament, when they have enough time to practice and when a standard 11 will be known. Your concern about the team not doing well enough is valid, but that isn't always the call to sack the manager. Constructive criticism is never a bad thing, it's something that can be discussed, but I'm all too familiar within my own nation how quick mindless hate can begin to spark everywhere.

    • @venturer9400
      @venturer9400 Před 2 lety +4

      @@TheAlb100 I also want to add, again from my own nation's perspective, that while I admire respectful fans like you, Croatia was essentially being humiliated by the press and some fans before the 2018 semi-final, with an England-France final already having been talked about. Euro 2020 saw, in my opinion, an improvement in that regard. It's alright to be excited, ambitious and obviously biased towards your team when talking about others' strengths when emotions are involved, some however exceed that limit

  • @MiklosHajma
    @MiklosHajma Před 2 lety +272

    For the record (Hungarian here), there were a couple of additional elements to why did our squad improve this much in recent years:
    - Players who are playing on a much higher level, like Sallai, Szoboszlai, Gulácsi, Orbán, etc. are really highly rated and often quite young players who are playing in strong leagues. Their mentality, physical condition is at an international level now (finally)
    - At the last Euro we were able to give Germany, France really tough games, but the main point which was raised back then was that we can't keep the same mental stability and stamina to the end, and we fizzled out 10-15-20 minutes before the end of these games. This is seems to be fixed now, which is why we were able to play like we did in these recent games.
    - We're actually struggling with the forward positions, given Ádám Szalai is probably in his last years and we don't really have too much competition, even with Martin Ádám (the bearded guy) who was this season's top goalscorer in Hungary. This is why our manager is using a center who's strong and is able to keep the ball and let the wingers and attacking midfielders do the actual scoring.
    - Rossi is really good at putting together a squad in a way like you usually talk about the feats of Unai Emery.

    • @timwightman4473
      @timwightman4473 Před 2 lety +3

      If we had played you when our lads actually wanted to be there we'd had won.

    • @tusaadrian7422
      @tusaadrian7422 Před 2 lety +39

      @@timwightman4473 So they lost 5:0 across two games because they “didn’t want to be there” ? Jog on

    • @timwightman4473
      @timwightman4473 Před 2 lety +2

      @@tusaadrian7422 they showed as much interest as me in it. None. So next time you work for ages and then you have some meaningless away day to go on before you holiday you're going to be properly motivated?

    • @blirt1653
      @blirt1653 Před 2 lety +5

      I'm sorry, Szoboszlai is a great talent but there's a strong chance he doesn't even make our bench. Hungary having a stronger team than in recent years shouldn't be used in Southgate's defense. The fact of the matter is that we should still be winning that game, even if it's a tough game.

    • @r4h4al
      @r4h4al Před 2 lety +2

      @@tusaadrian7422 Yes I think we did lose 5-0 because we didn't want to be there. It's like the league cup in club football the big clubs have a reputation of not caring about it & the smaller sides take it more seriously.

  • @apjsard1
    @apjsard1 Před 2 lety +101

    The fact that pretty much all of Euro 2020 games were at home was a massive advantage. How we would have done against Germany in Baku we will never know...

    • @melpoe724
      @melpoe724 Před 2 lety +6

      but (a) that applies to any host team in a tournament, and (b) England just got beat at home 4-0. Yes home matches do give some advantage, but not enough to say they had an easy ride

    • @pascallovic
      @pascallovic Před 2 lety +4

      But officially England weren't even the host nation that tournament, and still they got the advantage/luck to play six of the seven games at home. If you play opponents that have less quality in their squad at home in a big tournament, the advantage is much bigger. So except for the Germanygame England had a easy ride in the Euro's. And yes youre home advantage will be less if you play with your second team against a fully motivated team like Hungary knowing the trashtalk they've had as a country in the last year from other nations like England, Germany, Netherlands, etc.

    • @juanjoseph
      @juanjoseph Před rokem +1

      @@melpoe724
      There was no "host" team in the Euro. They just got an unfair advantage against everyone else. And still, they robbed Denmark with a fake penalty.

    • @juanjoseph
      @juanjoseph Před rokem +1

      @@pascallovic
      They had an easy ride and still needed the reff's aid against Denmark to pass.... terrible players in England. To male it worse, most of them aren't even english but caribbean.

    • @PantomimeHorse
      @PantomimeHorse Před rokem +5

      @@juanjoseph Huh.... I happened to read your comment aloud, and my dog started barking...

  • @DGAMINGDE
    @DGAMINGDE Před 2 lety +93

    I think its interesting how international managers are seen. As someone from Germany I can say that Löw was critizised most of the time (even though I was very young I think even before the World Cup of 2014) and to this day people ask if the team won because or despite of Löw.
    What I have learned about international tournaments is that it's very rare to see a team completely domination opposition and maybe even loosing. It actually seems that these characters that seem to have "questionable" descisions at time and don't have a huge track record in club football are actually often are quite successfull internationally. Even if England had some easier games it's still not a given to win those.

    • @AdamCanavan12
      @AdamCanavan12 Před 2 lety +1

      Always though low did a great job as someone from Ireland Germany are always playing good football. Southgate however plays horrible football which is the problem rather than his achievements.

    • @FCGroningen1987
      @FCGroningen1987 Před 2 lety +14

      I think a few factors are the cause here:
      - People expect club level play which is unrealistic. You can't play complete systems like Gegenpress as you can't put the training hours required in, the squad keeps changing due to player form and you would need to have an entire squad willing and able to play it. Clubs can buy the players if that's not the case.
      - Nationalism. Fans think too much of their own squad because of it and don't know about other squads.
      - Different crowd. Nation football attracts a lot of casual (nothing wrong with that) audiences that don't know that much about football and just expect to be amused.

    • @AdamCanavan12
      @AdamCanavan12 Před 2 lety

      @@FCGroningen1987 these points are all very fair but how did Spain play some of the best football the world has ever seen only in 2010. Brazil teams of the past have played great football. Germany teams french. Don’t think it excuses Southgate but very good point

    • @FCGroningen1987
      @FCGroningen1987 Před 2 lety +7

      @@AdamCanavan12 Exceptional talents for Spain and the core of the team played at the same club. It was basically Barcelona at it's Zenith without Messi. They played some really good football, but definately not always. If you go back to their tournament matches, you'll see underwhelming scores and gameplay as well.
      The same holds true for the best Germany and Brazil teams to some extend. There's been times a nation squad was clearly better than it's competition; it happens.
      That's not the case now. I don't think England for example can field anything close to Mbappe - Benzema up front. Even then, France can lose and plays very boring in most games.

    • @AdamCanavan12
      @AdamCanavan12 Před 2 lety

      @@FCGroningen1987 I get your point but for me that Spain team In particular played fantastic football dominating possession while teams tried to break them such as the Dutch in the final. They were lacking as you said a messi type of player.
      My point is if you look at England they could play 4 at the back add an extra man in midfield Henderson Philips with Sancho Foden Sterling with Kane up top for example. The have the best rb in the world but don’t play him which would also add great attacking output. They are afraid to play 4 atb because they play Maguire which is ridiculous he should be dropped and they should play many cbs in front of him.
      But anyway my point is they could and should play much better football imo and also in most England fans opinions (not English btw)

  • @adamdickinson2894
    @adamdickinson2894 Před 2 lety +132

    It's amazing how quickly people have forgotten how low expectations were going into the 2018. They were basement-level

    • @pratosaurusrex1128
      @pratosaurusrex1128 Před 2 lety +16

      In a way that probably helped the team. England players in the past have feared playing because of the reaction they get when they come back home.

    • @gonnaw1n
      @gonnaw1n Před 2 lety +7

      Expectation was low because people had given up with the English national team. They were tired of the FA always picking the wrong man and not what the people wanted. Remember they hired Sam Allardyce which no football fan wanted at all and then had no back up plan other than Southgate who had done nothing with the U21s!!!

    • @EuanBCFC
      @EuanBCFC Před 2 lety +8

      And this expectations were reciprocated when we only won 3/7 games without pens - Sweden, Tunisia and Panama…

    • @fjnemo
      @fjnemo Před 2 lety +2

      expectations were based on how bad england does every tournament but England do have a talented team that under performed before that but now they are actually doing well in tournaments

    • @vonelle9122
      @vonelle9122 Před 2 lety +3

      Not outside of England. You have a world-class squad that underperforms under the current management.

  • @Drewbinsky69
    @Drewbinsky69 Před 2 lety +157

    The problem is that even after England score 1 goal and take the lead they don't take advantage of this and try to score a 2nd and give the opponent an uppercut. You can clearly see this in the games England played against Croatia and Italy. England score one goal they don't go for the second and then they concede. The fact that they never go for a second goal in these games is clearly a managerial mistake imo.

    • @Stephen_Platt
      @Stephen_Platt Před 2 lety +29

      This. This is a big gripe I have. The opponent is on the back foot and reeling! Throw a bit more at it and take control of the game with a 2nd goal!

    • @golden.lights.twinkle2329
      @golden.lights.twinkle2329 Před 2 lety +4

      And whenever we play anyone really good like Brazil, Germany or France, we are beaten before the game even starts because we change tactics and play defensively.

    • @benlowes8570
      @benlowes8570 Před 2 lety +6

      @@golden.lights.twinkle2329 given that Southgate has played France and Brazil once (0-1-1) and beat Germany in the R16 you clearly just plucked that little insight out of thin air but ok. Also the France and Brazil games were in his 1st year and were random friendly games instead of actually meaning something.

    • @garymeehan9377
      @garymeehan9377 Před 2 lety +2

      ​@@golden.lights.twinkle2329 not from England so I'm a neutral. So you think they should play more attacking against these teams? Well then expect more 4-0 scorelines.
      France, Spain and Germany to name a few would destroy yous. Southgate has a game plan. Capello etc just tried to fit all the good players in with none and it failed

    • @MassEffect1988
      @MassEffect1988 Před 2 lety +8

      Never in my life have a seen England go for a second or third goal in a game when we've been 1-0 up. It's annoys me SO much 😬😬😬

  • @Kokorba6iqta
    @Kokorba6iqta Před 2 lety +52

    This is a very reasonable video but in my opinion if Southgate gets sacked I am convinced no Premier League team would try to sign him which shows how he is rated. I still think he is not using the full potential of this squad and he has his favorites which makes his starting eleven decisions strange at best sometimes.

    • @futurekillxbox972
      @futurekillxbox972 Před rokem +5

      So Essentially you listened to the facts , listened to the realities of the situation but then totally dismissed it because of your myopic opinion that bares no relevance to anything other than opinionated bias supposition 👍🏻 the only shocking thing is that over twenty people thought that was a reasonable and astute comment 🤦‍♂️

    • @Kokorba6iqta
      @Kokorba6iqta Před rokem +6

      @@futurekillxbox972 The only shocking thing is than in 21st century you still haven't learned that people can have an opinion that's different than yours. I've been watching the same style of reactive, predictive, counter attacking football for more than 3 years at my favorite club Man United and I know what it leads to. Instead of using the strengths of his players southgate is just doing the only thing he knows. On paper his results are good but for example the final of Euro 2020 (2021) against Italy who had a team who I would argue individually has the lesser quality players. Apart from the first goal from Shaw for the rest of the game Italy were totaly in control of the game and southgate had no idea how to change that. He has probably the most creative wing back in the world - Alexander-Arnold and he doesn't know or want how to use him. One of the most creative English players - Foden - again no clue how to use him and so on and so on.

    • @Kokorba6iqta
      @Kokorba6iqta Před rokem +2

      @Green Harp Financial You are right. The problem today is that everyone knows that a top manager would prefer managing a club rather than a national team. So most of the managers of the better national teams are usually people who are not good enough for the top football clubs. Probably the only exceptions I can think of are Flick and Enrique. Deschampl, Santos, Martinez and so on would never be approached by any of the top clubs for the managers position.

    • @futurekillxbox972
      @futurekillxbox972 Před rokem +1

      @@Kokorba6iqta Opinion only has a relevancy when it doesn’t refute a fact otherwise it becomes ill informed nonsense and should be treated as such . I think the real shock should be there are far to many people willing to give participation medals just for trying - that’s a pertinent analogy for the asinine drivel you started that diatribe with🤣

    • @Kokorba6iqta
      @Kokorba6iqta Před rokem +3

      @@futurekillxbox972 Such a prolonged and complicated way of saying nothing. Best of luck on your comments section endeavors.

  • @DynamiteLemming
    @DynamiteLemming Před 2 lety +177

    It's good to see a video with a reasonable perspective on this. The English media in particular are atrocious at taking victories and defeats in thier proper context.
    A win means we're winning the World Cup tomorrow. A loss means the sky is falling, everyone needs to be sacked and we need to start again. Even if that match is in a round robin league we don't take all that seriously yet.

    • @TdfJNR
      @TdfJNR Před 2 lety +2

      He’s an absolute muppet!

    • @Romartus
      @Romartus Před 2 lety +6

      The English football mindset still harks back to the great day in 1066 when a bunch of French-Viking invaders beat those lousy Anglo-Saxons in a game of war.

    • @dcapitan7
      @dcapitan7 Před 2 lety +1

      I've been watching 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 in major ⚽️ competitions since the '98 World Cup. The biggest enemy of the England National Team is the English media.

    • @ronnynoneofyourbusinessgoo7892
      @ronnynoneofyourbusinessgoo7892 Před 2 lety

      The video is shit for once. Southgate coached MIddlesborough with not much success. How is he in the job?

    • @hunterhorsehelmsley7315
      @hunterhorsehelmsley7315 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Romartus Anglo Saxons came from Germany. I blame them.

  • @Goat-wh1qw
    @Goat-wh1qw Před 2 lety +43

    Euro 96 was the only time I felt confident of England's chances to win a tournament. All other squads since have "looked good on paper" but were never at the level their names/club form suggested

    • @enthusiastofcute
      @enthusiastofcute Před 2 lety +4

      The 2002 team was decent, ran into an incredible Brazil side though

    • @Goat-wh1qw
      @Goat-wh1qw Před 2 lety +13

      @@enthusiastofcute on paper the team was decent, 30 mins against 10 men though, Brazil comfortably handled England.

    • @enthusiastofcute
      @enthusiastofcute Před 2 lety

      @@Goat-wh1qw true

    • @pritapp788
      @pritapp788 Před 2 lety +9

      Euro 1996 was also the only one that played like a proper team with cohesion and a clear plan. 2002 qualified with 2 draws in the group stages and went home against the first good opponent.

    • @Goat-wh1qw
      @Goat-wh1qw Před 2 lety +11

      @@pritapp788 I loved the Euro 96 team, Gascoigne, Shearer, Sheringham...what they did to the Netherlands, totally agree, played like a team

  • @steemonkey2000
    @steemonkey2000 Před 2 lety +23

    Mate you've absolutely rinsed anyone who says this is the best England team in 20 years. Like, I can feel their souls disinteresting.

    • @golden.lights.twinkle2329
      @golden.lights.twinkle2329 Před 2 lety

      Youth is sometimes better than experience.

    • @jamesduffy7549
      @jamesduffy7549 Před rokem +2

      Anyone saying that was already too detached from reality to be affected by a reasoned argument. Its like trying to play chess with a pigeon, as the saying goes

    • @juanjoseph
      @juanjoseph Před rokem +2

      Anyone who really thinks this generation is the best in 20 years is clearly delusional or never experienced football prior to 2018.

  • @explodingatom7976
    @explodingatom7976 Před 2 lety +36

    I think he's done a good job but I find that he doesn't have the attitude to go for it 100%, I'm Welsh and even though Rob Page isn't a genius in any way, he always takes risks and doesn't take half measures which we love him for.

    • @rinzler_1482
      @rinzler_1482 Před 2 lety +4

      Pipe your horses it was a lucky Gareth bale sending wales to world cul, page got nothing.

    • @aarondoesyt3194
      @aarondoesyt3194 Před 2 lety +4

      Rob Page hahaha I'm a Northampton fan, the guy was genuinely clueless, took one of our best ever teams and made it one of the worst

    • @melpoe724
      @melpoe724 Před 2 lety

      which is why he won't win anything

  • @attackpatterndelta8949
    @attackpatterndelta8949 Před 2 lety +28

    Southgate is the first manager to get England to a World Cup semi final since Robson. And the first manager to get England to the final of a major tournament since Alf Ramsey. Yet people want to get rid of him.
    He could have played the regular first choice players in the Nations League (a competition designed to replace friendlies and very much the Eurovision Song Contest of international football) and he would have been accused of not trying to develop depth. He’s played some inexperienced players who haven’t quite worked out, and now England fans want to get rid of him.
    The guy can’t win with you lot.

    • @ryancoackley3660
      @ryancoackley3660 Před 2 lety +6

      I'm English and 100% agree. We couldn't have a better manager than we do now. We've tried the best foreign manager in world football and it failed. Southgate does a lot behind closed doors to try and create a philosophy that helps bring through the under 21 into the first team

    • @ifrickinlovethesmiths5851
      @ifrickinlovethesmiths5851 Před 2 lety

      He can win by... winning a tournament perhaps 🤔 just maybe rather than calling failure success.

    • @benlowes8570
      @benlowes8570 Před 2 lety +9

      @@ifrickinlovethesmiths5851 4th in the world and 2nd in Europe is success pal. England have as explained failed to even qualify for tournaments as recently as ‘08 so yes winning would be great but making a 4th and 2nd in 2 tournaments with a team that on paper is vastly inferior to ‘08 for an example is success regardless of which way you slice that. Remember we were a tall Italian man away from a major trophy 1 year ago.

    • @ryancoackley3660
      @ryancoackley3660 Před rokem

      @@ifrickinlovethesmiths5851 failure drives success. One needs to fail in order to know what it takes to win

    • @Schnipp08
      @Schnipp08 Před rokem +1

      The Eurovision Song Contest of football. LOL thats a good one 😂😂😂

  • @Stryker_-qd4nq
    @Stryker_-qd4nq Před 2 lety +21

    I don't think Southgate is totally useless, but I also think he is the limiting factor for this England team.
    He was a safe appointment when he got the job, maybe England should take a risk for the next manager, although as fun as potter would be, I can't see him going to international management.
    I'd imagine conte would have a lot of fun with this England side

    • @21hazza
      @21hazza Před rokem

      Assuming they start next season well , I do think that England would have a higher chance of winning a tournament with Gerrard or Lampard in charge.

    • @Stryker_-qd4nq
      @Stryker_-qd4nq Před rokem +2

      @@21hazza hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahagaha

    • @wolfen210959
      @wolfen210959 Před rokem

      History has already shown us what even the best managers in the world can achieve with a "best in a generation" team, nothing at all. What Southgate has achieved with this current team of, arguably, only 1 world class player is all the more remarkable, especially since the 2 best english central defenders at this moment in time, Stones and Maguire, are not very good at all. Remember that Germany have won more tournaments than England, simply by being hard to beat and relying on 1 or 2 better players performing in a final. It should also be remembered that Italy were the best team at the Euros, and dominated the whole of the final, despite falling behind early, against the run of play.

  • @PassivesAbseits
    @PassivesAbseits Před 2 lety +23

    My biggest issue with Southgate is, that he coached his team into the penalty shootout, instead of subbing in Saka and Sancho 10 minutes earlier, so they can actually do something or at least touch the ball once... unsurprisingly both missed...
    Especially considering, that Southgate knows what it's like to miss the decisive penalty since 1996...

    • @r4h4al
      @r4h4al Před 2 lety +2

      I think Sven did the same thing in 06 he brought Carragher on to take a penalty when he hadn't touched the ball he then missed the decisive penalty.

    • @user-tg6vq1kn6v
      @user-tg6vq1kn6v Před 2 lety +2

      He was a lot more interested in signalling what a virtuous person he is, didn't give the lads a touch all tournament but wanted to make them the heroes

    • @PassivesAbseits
      @PassivesAbseits Před 2 lety +3

      @@r4h4al he did... which only makes it worse... I always point towards Marcello Lippi, who subbed in like 3 fresh attackers and won the semi finale against Germany in 2006 in the 118th minute... I will never understand, why coaches wait for he last second to sub in their penalty takers...

    • @benlowes8570
      @benlowes8570 Před 2 lety

      @@PassivesAbseits in theory it’s because bringing in penalty takers weakens a squad overall because you aren’t usually making like for like replacements so the team ends up weak for as long as the subs are on. Overall I’m a strong believer that letting the lads who played the 120 take the penalties is the best bet because they are warm but managers seem to think differently.

    • @PassivesAbseits
      @PassivesAbseits Před 2 lety

      @@benlowes8570 Do you really believe, that brining on a fresh player, that could actually do something on the attack, "weakens a squad" over letting a player on the pitch, that has already 100+ minutes in his legs? As a small nation, probably, but as England, that has the most expensive squad and tons of talent on the offensive side...

  • @Retired_Vegan_Activist
    @Retired_Vegan_Activist Před 2 lety +4

    This was a great way to explain it. Great vid 👍🏻

  • @r4h4al
    @r4h4al Před 2 lety +22

    Excellent video as always, bringing some sense & rationality to the Gareth Southgate situation. I think Southgate's been fine for England & these results in these Nations League aren't to be taken seriously. The problem is we moan about everything we could have won the Euro's on penalties & people would still say he was lucky for whatever reasoning.
    I think the Nations League is meaningless yes it's technically competitive but in all intents & purposes it's friendly games.
    I think he deserves to carry on but for him to keep his job he has to get at least SF's. The country have to try & see rationality here & try to get behind him again.
    I think we definitely overachieved in the last two tournaments...This WC we obviously have a very good squad but like you say so do like 5 other teams so with that in mind I think SF's would be acceptable. 2 of those 6 won't even make the SF's let's remember. I think Gareth Southgate will have learned from the Croatia & Italy games where if we go 1-0 up I've got no doubt that we search for the 2nd goal and go for 2-0 & 3-0 in that sort of situation again. As always at the end of the year the WC is what we will judge him on not the Nations League.
    Also thanks for clearing up the "5 at the back" myth. When people say that it's so misleading it's like we're playing a flat back 5 which is nothing of the sort.
    Like you say with Trent & Chilwell in there it's more attacking than a 442 everybody fails to grasp that concept. Or people say we play with 7 defenders I assume they're counting Rice & Phillips in there, which is a bit of a stretch to count them as defenders when they are predominantly midfield players.

    • @golden.lights.twinkle2329
      @golden.lights.twinkle2329 Před 2 lety +1

      Every defeat should be taken seriously! Hungary certainly took it seriously.

    • @john-adriancoker2789
      @john-adriancoker2789 Před 2 lety +1

      Based on last season's form & any new developments next season, prior to the WC, Southgate should start the following in terms of form, ability & chemistry
      Ramsdale
      Shaw
      Tomori
      Stones
      Trent
      Rice
      Henderson
      Sancho
      Bellingham
      Foden
      Kane

    • @r4h4al
      @r4h4al Před 2 lety

      @@john-adriancoker2789 While I disagree with that team it's still strong nonetheless.

  • @chibifirestorm
    @chibifirestorm Před 2 lety +26

    He's the International version of Ole, nice guy who the players like but he's clueless tactically

    • @lollol9772
      @lollol9772 Před 2 lety +12

      what a garbage take

    • @ritchierich2793
      @ritchierich2793 Před 2 lety +1

      @@lollol9772 kinda liked your take with lewandowski is better than ronaldo..

    • @Roowfc705
      @Roowfc705 Před 2 lety +1

      Looking at the evidence - yes play defensively and lose 4-0 to a much worse side

    • @Rassalcon
      @Rassalcon Před 2 lety +4

      I disagree. Southgate's main weakness is that he isn't great at making substitutions, something ole was good at. I'd take Southgate over ole as United boss though, like it or not he does have a game plan, it's defensive and kinda dull but it wins the important games (just so long as he uses his subs at a good time)

    • @venturer9400
      @venturer9400 Před 2 lety

      @@Rassalcon I can't stress enough how frustrating late subs are. I feel for anyone who has a coach that waits until the last 15 minutes for subs when the team isn't winning.

  • @kenanreiss107
    @kenanreiss107 Před 2 lety

    This has got to be the most precise England related football video of the last 20 years! Bravo! 🎉

  • @GARYBLONDER
    @GARYBLONDER Před 2 lety +12

    Well done - I thought your analysis was 100% accurate. The reality is that Gareth Southgate has done better than anyone except Sir Alf Ramsay. Working with undercooked and overcooked players and one howling tactical error in a competition nobody cares that much about does not a crap manager make.
    Even Sir Alex Ferguson, without doubt the greatest football manager the world will ever know (I'm not a Man U fan btw) made the odd tactical howler, and in crucial games too.
    Southgate should and will be judged on his team's performance at the Euros and World Cup - that's what we care about. Making the semis or better in these tournaments with the players he has should be regarded an excellent achievement. It would seem to me ridiculous to sack a manager who hasn't actually failed yet in the tournaments that matter. He deserves to keep his job for now.

    • @bricktop.
      @bricktop. Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly. Judge him on competitions that matter, not dead freindly matches or this pointless nations league nonsense

    • @petesmart1983
      @petesmart1983 Před 2 lety +3

      But he got an easy run in a poor tournament so pretty much a bad team got overated

    • @bricktop.
      @bricktop. Před rokem

      @@petesmart1983 The man can only beat the teams infront of him in any tournament. I'd just like to add that I have absolutely no sympathy for Southgate as a Boro fan. He got us relegated ha ha. Actually never understood how he got the England job off the back of Middlesbrough but there we are.

    • @yoshiwoollyworld
      @yoshiwoollyworld Před rokem

      @@bricktop. would you want him out after he got england regulated?

  • @mamtapartani7015
    @mamtapartani7015 Před 2 lety +57

    Germany beat Portugal 4-2 not 5-2 and when England had beaten Germany Rice avoided a red card in the early stage of the game. As you say football is a game of fine margins Thomas Muller missed an easy chance due to which England won. English media and fans hype players to the max due to these extremely high expectations there is a lot of pressure so the failure is inevitable.

    • @elolafino3842
      @elolafino3842 Před 2 lety +7

      That Germany team was also not as bad as some made it out to be, so overcoming it was still a remarkable feat. Big tournaments are always games of fine margins and in that case, England got lucky though that result wasn't completely undeserved.
      Sometimes you're lucky, sometimes not (the final)

    • @Jonathanizer
      @Jonathanizer Před 2 lety +3

      England was slightly better than Germany in that Euros match a year ago, but only very slightly. I've seen hundreds of games, where the slightly better team still looses. It takes one deflected shot, one defender stumbling, one surprise rebound goal chance, one clumsy penalty or one fast counter attack. It's part of the magic of football and the difference to sports with high score lines (such as Basketball, Volleyball, Handball etc.): it's not enough to slightly better to be guaranteed a win.

    • @R3in_Ch
      @R3in_Ch Před 2 lety

      @@Jonathanizer ive seen many so called legendary players have that deflected shots etc goals and suddenly hypeed up as a great player. football is it what it is, sometimes youre lucky sometimes youre not.

    • @basedelon
      @basedelon Před rokem

      Germany at Euro 20/21 were in a transition.

  • @Morts84
    @Morts84 Před 2 lety +8

    A massive Thank you to you! For calling out and highlighting the dross that is Rory Jennings. Any views he received you should be receiving triple for actually having a common sense and logical approach.

  • @Hilversumborn
    @Hilversumborn Před 2 lety

    Good job for bringing some much needed nuance.

  • @Fisher1874
    @Fisher1874 Před 2 lety +2

    As a Scot it is so refreshing hear an honest and (quite frank) accurate account of the England national team. The team (in comparison to world class teams) is decent at best, you had a very easy route to the final of euro 2021 and the exception levels are a joke. It isn’t helped by the media immediately planning how they are going to win the tournament as soon as the draw is made but fans buy into to so much, it makes them think they only need to show up and they have won the cup already. And before anyone tells me how poor Scotland are, I know we are, we are not comparable to England in the way of quality on the international stage but at tournaments gone pass neither has England to the likes of Spain, Germany or France. Keep up the good work Alfie 👍

    • @matthewhernandez8342
      @matthewhernandez8342 Před rokem

      To be honest this is the best Scottish team I’ve seen in 10 years at least. You guys got to a World Cup qualifier playoff. That’s pretty damn close to getting into the World Cup.

  • @iceman4660
    @iceman4660 Před 2 lety +40

    All success in tournaments relies on a element of success. Whilst i'd love to see attacking football, whatever that means, i won't complain if we win a major tournament playing a defensive style.
    I think the real issue is that we don't seem to have either an identity, nor alternative plans if plan A fails.
    Maybe Southgate understands the risks inherent in our weak defence and thus plays a safety first game.
    The English press and us fans need to realize that teamwork can, and often beats a reliance on individual brilliance.

    • @bricktop.
      @bricktop. Před 2 lety +3

      Greece did it on the euros so it's fine by me

    • @iceman4660
      @iceman4660 Před 2 lety

      @@bricktop. exactly. In 20 years the records will only show the win. How it was done doesn't matter.
      Tbh i did enjoy how Greece did it.

    • @AdamCanavan12
      @AdamCanavan12 Před 2 lety

      I think England were the least exciting team to watch in the euros proper boring. With the talent pool you have id expect exciting football. It is the beautiful game after all.

    • @attackpatterndelta8949
      @attackpatterndelta8949 Před 2 lety +6

      @@AdamCanavan12 so what? They won games and that’s what counts. They could have played like the Brazil ‘82 side, and you’d have found something to criticise them about.

    • @AdamCanavan12
      @AdamCanavan12 Před 2 lety +1

      @@attackpatterndelta8949 if that’s your opinion on football fair enough. I’d much prefer to watch a team play a good brand of football I can enjoy for 90 minutes time and time again. Then watch a team win a trophy playing horrible football to experience winning 1 trophy?
      Also just look at Pep, Klopp, Ferguson the best managers are great tactically but also put huge emphasis on entertaining free flowing football that impresses the fans.

  • @nottom7551
    @nottom7551 Před 2 lety +6

    never heard of someone being referred to as a grade a turnip might have to nick that one lad 😂😂😂😂

  • @edwardwalter3100
    @edwardwalter3100 Před 2 lety +1

    That's the way to end a video Alfie. Thanks from the States!

  • @rimbleskinflint3447
    @rimbleskinflint3447 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Well said mate . I am a Scotsman who really enjoys watching England , and usually roots for them . This does not go down well with my mates . I live in Germany and believe me the thought of playing against Scotland does not illicit the same reaction here as when they hear they`ve drawn England . Although Scotland have been playing rather well recently . The Germans have a saying " suffering at a very high level " , and when I think of the players that England have had to choose from over generations it`s bloody unbelievable and consequently , this saying applies. This present generation of England lads come across as thoroughly decent blokes and I think that`s important , but I also think they can play a bit , and that`s also important . Btw I`m a Celtic fan so I believe I`m used to seeing a pretty decent level of tactical awareness . skil and engagement. Keep up the good work Alfie

  • @havardantonsen
    @havardantonsen Před 2 lety +22

    For me, it boils down to how painful it is to watch them play. It might get you to a final if you're lucky in key moments, but playing with eight players at the back and hoping that the front three are able to sneak a goal on their own is just crap

    • @ethandalton6480
      @ethandalton6480 Před 2 lety +6

      I'd rather play boring and win than playing exciting and lose

    • @havardantonsen
      @havardantonsen Před 2 lety +12

      @@ethandalton6480 And you are of course entitled to your own opinion. I do, however, not think that his style of play is the gives the team the best chance of winning.

    • @ElBarcoGaming
      @ElBarcoGaming Před 2 lety +4

      This is how teams who lack quality from back to front ( the only real quality being at the front ) succeed. You can't expect to play attacking progressive football without good deep lying midfielders to make that happen. Like asking a horse to bark

    • @pritapp788
      @pritapp788 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ethandalton6480 But that's the point, England play boring and still haven't won a thing. If reaching a semi-final and a final is your idea of "win", then so be it.

    • @havardantonsen
      @havardantonsen Před 2 lety

      @@ElBarcoGaming Henderson has played that role extremely successfully at Liverpool for years. Rice and Phillips should be more than capable as well. There is also something in-between "attacking progressive football" and eight at the back.

  • @apc9681
    @apc9681 Před 2 lety +13

    At the end of the day England bottled a European final in their own backyard and were dominated by an Italy team that was good but not great. Southgate was at fault for that for not having a plan b and putting an inexperienced 19 year old on a deciding penalty.
    Southgate is the international equivalent of Solskjær, the stats back the manager up but you know deep down he’s a ticking time bomb. He can motivate the team better than anyone in the last 20 years and deserves credit for that but that’s a double edged sword when his tactics are woeful.
    We should be grateful for what he achieved but if he fails hard at the World Cup we should thank him and move on. I don’t care about playing attractive football but he doesn’t inspire confidence defensively (even if we defended well in the Euros) and he can’t utilise our attackers or midfielders.
    We’re not in a ‘golden generation’ but this team’s mentality and chemistry have as high a ceiling as our teams from the 2000s imo.

    • @TheTennesseeFistMachine
      @TheTennesseeFistMachine Před 2 lety +5

      Italy dominated the tournament from the start and played the best football out of anyone.
      What a bunch of nonsense.

    • @apc9681
      @apc9681 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheTennesseeFistMachine they absolutely did not dominate Spain and didn’t qualify for the World Cup. They’re clearly not a dominant team against other top teams.

    • @JayTechZM
      @JayTechZM Před 2 lety

      Perfect point

    • @JayTechZM
      @JayTechZM Před 2 lety

      @@TheTennesseeFistMachine they literally needed penalties against a Spain team that had great chances to win the game in normal time but Oyarzabal missed golden chances to do so. They tires out as the tournament wore on

    • @Ldoggmillionaire
      @Ldoggmillionaire Před 2 lety

      @@TheTennesseeFistMachine largely the same group of players couldn’t qualify for the world cup so they were hardly world beaters, and most of there games were pretty tight.

  • @BigEnglishStandup
    @BigEnglishStandup Před 2 lety

    Such a thorough analysis. Well done. And all true.

  • @eplv3432
    @eplv3432 Před 2 lety

    Great content. Impartial and objective

  • @drewgibbons6860
    @drewgibbons6860 Před 2 lety +6

    I'm not English.
    But 2018 was the only time I can remember where the England squad had 0 pressure on it.
    I think that was a major contributing factor to their overperformance.
    No one expected that team to be 1 half away from the Final.
    Euro 2020 had all but 1 game at home which definitely helped them get to the Final.
    I think QF is what the realistic expectation of this team should be.
    Especially since they would likely play France in the QF if both teams win their group

    • @elltell1990
      @elltell1990 Před rokem

      Raheem Sterling had pressure heaped on him by the press because he had a gun tattoo. A lot have said that pressure on him was why he underperformed at the 2018 World Cup whereas everyone else (particularly Jordan Pickford) were having a great go of it

  • @shanehealy204
    @shanehealy204 Před 2 lety +5

    As an Irish fan I'm not exactly unhappy with Southgate managing England take that how you will

  • @tillhuyssen1087
    @tillhuyssen1087 Před 2 lety +2

    For the euros, you shouldn't forget that 6/7 games, including all the hard ones, were played in wembley with traveling restricitions, meaning that it was pretty much impossible for away fans to get into the stadium except they were living in the uk.

  • @Fedmyhead1965
    @Fedmyhead1965 Před rokem

    You are so right Alfie, I'm 57, so seen an England team or 2, I have enjoyed watching England under Southgate & yes he's made a few mistakes, but the setup seems to of learned & the team has progressed with each tournament, that's not say we will win in Qatar, but last year's Euros was the first time I've worn my shirt for the whole juration of a tournament, so we need to leave him alone and judge him at the end of the year. We should be supporting not criticising this group of talented players and the staff that are trying to achieve something that could be special.

  • @Ldoggmillionaire
    @Ldoggmillionaire Před 2 lety +19

    2004 and 2006 sides went out against excellent Portuguese sides in close encounters. Lost there best player in both games with injury and red cards. 2004 particularly was very unlucky. Can’t credit Southgates work just for going further with more fortunate draws

    • @oceanmike8516
      @oceanmike8516 Před 2 lety

      i bet if we had won the euros this shit wouldn't have come out of your mouth.
      You're just a bipolar supporter all smiles with things are good but the second things go wrong you're gunning for a rage. When we reached the final everyone was crediting southagate for reaching the final, now when everything is slightly going wrong your saying "man you were lucky." Of course luck exists in every journey no two journeys are the same you simply have to beat what is in front of you. WC 2014 Argentina had 4 clear cut chances higuain missed 3 of them, germany also had chance but argentina had the easier ones but germany won the final, if higuain had scored it would have all been a different story.

    • @amdsavas992
      @amdsavas992 Před 2 lety +2

      2002 against the golden Brazilian generation and we played better than them.

    • @ElBarcoGaming
      @ElBarcoGaming Před 2 lety +1

      The two teams we went out to were better on paper. Italy's gk, defense and midfield make ours look v poor in comparison. Attack similar level.
      Croatia has experience pros all over, Modric, Rakitic and Brozovic, Rebic and Persic v Tripper, Henderson, Alli, Lingaard and Young is even more lopsided.
      Mandzukic played for top clusb for a reason, Vrsalko the same. They had 2 players on their team that weren't top class. We had Kane and Sterling who are..

    • @ryancoackley3660
      @ryancoackley3660 Před 2 lety +1

      @@amdsavas992 we did. Difference was ronaldo and Ronaldinho

  • @Dr.Fiendish
    @Dr.Fiendish Před 2 lety +11

    He should never be forgiven for that catastrophic penalty taking choice decision.

  • @pvtb1ab
    @pvtb1ab Před 2 lety

    Love your work thank all your team

  • @jishb2505
    @jishb2505 Před rokem

    I honestly can't remember an Alfie take that I didn't agree with. Brilliant breakdown as always.

  • @ThePikachuThing
    @ThePikachuThing Před 2 lety +9

    I'll openly admit to having had doubts about Southgate at times in the past but his record at tournament finals speaks for itself, as a lifelong England fan I loved the 2018 world cup and euro 2020, the best I've seen England play in my lifetime at major tournaments, you can't fault that imo and that's why I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt right now

  • @HarryGillard
    @HarryGillard Před 2 lety +3

    Alfie can you make a video on how a draft system would and could work in football as I was thinking about it the other day and would love a more in depth and detailed opinion on it

  • @GodlessScummer
    @GodlessScummer Před 2 lety +2

    I agree with you on this Alfie.
    I think some people tend to hit the panic button after a few poor results.

  • @richardcharlesworth6069

    This is a great analysis

  • @Akuzastar
    @Akuzastar Před 2 lety +16

    The dillusion comes from the easy-ish run we had that took us to the final.
    At the world cup we are in a table that on paper we should walk, but looking at the Hungary performance I don't think that's going to happen.
    If the team doesn't even get out of table formation, I think he will end up leaving.

    • @safebans1369
      @safebans1369 Před 2 lety +5

      'Based on one game where only a few of our starters were fielded, we'll obviously not make it through the groups.' Im not saying that its dead set that we'll do well but I dont think yours is a very rational take

    • @petesmart1983
      @petesmart1983 Před 2 lety +1

      Yep it was an easy run into the final without playing against big teams and then lost to average Italian side in the final, then the team got overated

  • @magicalhikari5859
    @magicalhikari5859 Před 2 lety +3

    I mean, we’ve not really been too clinical and consistent, and I think that’s our problem. In the second Hungary game in particular, it was our defence that needed improving, whereas against Italy we needed to improve our finishing. It’s just our sheer inconsistency which needs to improve quickly; thankfully our group has been really tight, meaning that there is still a chance

    • @pratosaurusrex1128
      @pratosaurusrex1128 Před 2 lety +2

      I get that but should they touted as World Cup contenders? Probably not.
      Italians I know have told me they still don’t know how they won Euro 2020. Compared to other teams that have won trophies their team was very poor.
      England are a very good side, but there are better sides out there.

  • @fredweeks9451
    @fredweeks9451 Před 2 lety

    Was waiting for this take alf

  • @jamesfzj2495
    @jamesfzj2495 Před rokem

    absolutely spot on I think, never really believed in him at the start but he's earnt my respect , when they score recently it has been a good goal, just need to score a bit more but I also agree that u need to be defensively strong as well in a Big tournament

  • @Torkild2007
    @Torkild2007 Před 2 lety +3

    Can you please make a video about that Fredrikstad FK defeated Ajax in 1960 in the European Cup? Fredrikstad was the first Norwegian Club in the European Cup and won 4-3 home vs Ajax and in the second leg Fredrikstad drew 0-0.

  • @glob4067
    @glob4067 Před 2 lety +14

    The problem for England is that they’re a good team but the whole seeding process gives them games against teams they should beat and everyone gets excited until they play a quality team who’re coached well and lose then act surprised

    • @edmundbloxam2714
      @edmundbloxam2714 Před rokem

      This is why I like the Nations League. 4 games in 10 days was insanity (although seemingly a scheduling necessity).
      There's no reason to take it less seriously, and even if the players can't help it, it's certainly more competitive than friendlies.

    • @andrewjoyce9038
      @andrewjoyce9038 Před rokem +1

      Germany and Denmark were quality teams

  • @ColeOfCentauri
    @ColeOfCentauri Před 2 lety +2

    As an American myself, I suppose Gregg Berhalter is held to the same standard as Gareth Southgate, coaching a potential golden generation of USA players. He caught a lot of flak because he seemed to bungle his way through qualifiers, seeing as how USA only qualified for Qatar by goal difference over Costa Rica. While I have only moderate confidence in Berhalter myself, I’d say in his defense that a lot of those golden boys, especially Gio Reyna, spent most of the qualifiers injured, and USA will need a few more generations before we have the depth to deal with such injuries.
    That being said, I am looking forward to what we yanks call Black Friday, the Friday after Thanksgiving, when I will be sure to sing “It’s Not Coming Home!”

  • @angeladew3753
    @angeladew3753 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so so much...yours point on the current squad and the overachievement from it are absolutely bang on the money. It shocks me how ignorant our fans are...

  • @ryanbooth7321
    @ryanbooth7321 Před 2 lety +4

    He got Middlesbrough relegated to the championship. Oh yeah let’s give him the England job.

  • @mattheendpod2659
    @mattheendpod2659 Před 2 lety +12

    Declan Rice said during the Euros, “I’d like to do more but I do what I’m told”

    • @danbanfield9764
      @danbanfield9764 Před 2 lety +3

      You mean in England's best euros ever?

    • @mattheendpod2659
      @mattheendpod2659 Před 2 lety +1

      @@danbanfield9764 yeah, but this team didn’t play the other tournaments as well to compare to. So I’d say ‘96 was a bigger achievement due to the top table teams being superior.
      In either case the point was adding to a part of the video not it’s justification.

  • @briangomez9119
    @briangomez9119 Před rokem +1

    I appreciate what you said in 8:40, this why I don't understand why the value of some English players are higher than they should.

  • @bas6628
    @bas6628 Před 2 lety

    Great analysis

  • @EMarinoTrumpet
    @EMarinoTrumpet Před 2 lety +3

    My baseball coach would say "the ball is round and it can roll both ways". I think the same applies to football where some days some teams will have a better day than the other team regardless of talent. What Alfie points out is true, we cannot dismiss a team and its accomplishments because of a bad game.

    • @linuxjodi4311
      @linuxjodi4311 Před rokem +2

      Nah, ball is round and can rolls in any possible way it would.. ¯⁠\⁠_⁠(⁠ツ⁠)⁠_⁠/⁠¯
      Agree with the rest tho.. 🥂
      Just wanna point out that it's not always one or another, not always win or lose, but also a draw.. ☕

    • @EMarinoTrumpet
      @EMarinoTrumpet Před rokem

      @@linuxjodi4311 Good point lol. You can't draw in baseball.

  • @sidosh2229
    @sidosh2229 Před 2 lety +8

    Day 42: Considering that the last player who played in the miracle of Bern died about 7 months ago, I would really like to see a video about the whole story between Germany and Hungary, especially because it meant so much to at least the German population

  • @johnwise6633
    @johnwise6633 Před rokem

    You are just amazing mate

  • @bensmith7971
    @bensmith7971 Před rokem

    I think the way to look at this is by analysing the games as individual matches by excluding the context of them being at a major tournament.
    2018 WC: we needed a last minute winner against a weak Tunisia team, trounced the worst side in the WC, then got outclassed by Belgium. We effectively drew against Colombia because we were content to sit on a one goal lead and couldn't break them down in extra time. We dispatched a very average Sweden side in the quarters. A familiar story in the semis, we scored early and sat back to defend a narrow lead - effectively inviting pressure onto us for most of the game - and then had zero momentum to work with in extra time. Croatia are by no means a bad side, but negative football cost us here - especially considering we were in the driving seat for the first half.
    2021 Euros: scraped 1-0s against Croatia and Czech Republic in the groups - in both matches we were the better side but seemed happy to hold a narrow lead, which could easily cost us in the future. We played possibly the most boring game of all time against Scotland, and showed how bad we are at breaking a sitting defence. The team selection and substitutes were far too negative for a game like this. We played well against Germany to be fair, largely controlling the game and deservedly winning - although maybe we got a bit lucky with Germany missing some big chances. We beat Ukraine convincingly, but they're the sort of side we should be winning against. We drew against Denmark, and needed a soft penalty to bail us out - they're by no means a bad side but if we have serious ambitions of doing well we really should be beating them (also what a screamer that freekick was). Italy was almost a copy and paste of the Croatia game three years prior; we scored an early goal and then willingly gave up our forward momentum in favour of sitting back to defend a narrow lead, surprisingly we couldn't do that for 75 minutes and then struggled to do anything while we were on the back foot. We were honestly very fortunate to make it all the way to penalties, where the better team won.
    The only match above where we exceeded expectations is the Germany game. That is genuinely the only match we won where we weren't strong favourites. Every other game (barring Ukraine because of the comfortable scoreline) we performed either to par or below expectations. The WC semi and Euros Final were both winnable games - especially because we were ahead for so long in both of them - that were thrown away by poor tactical decisions. There would've been no shame losing to Italy - they were the best team in the tournament and deserved winners - had we made a proper game of it instead of parking the bus in the first half, but Southgate clearly hadn't learnt from the WC semi and was simply too negative.
    So has Southgate really achieved much? Or has he simply performed to par, which only seems spectacular because the bar when he joined was "qualify for tournaments", "get past the group stages" and "don't lose to Iceland"?

    • @yoshiwoollyworld
      @yoshiwoollyworld Před rokem

      Not to mention that england only played ONE GAME at euro 2020 not in Wembley, while everyone had to travel all across europe after every game.

  • @MrMichaeljhinde
    @MrMichaeljhinde Před 2 lety +19

    Southgate partly a victim of his own success in 2018.
    As you compared really well to the squad of 15-20 years ago, this has the potential to be better but it clearly is miles off today. And yeah, our defence is clearly ropey so it's fair to play more conservatively to give extra cover when the alternative is probably the heart-attack approach of Keegan-era Newcastle and trying to win every game 4-3.
    Also, always interested how the other big nations view their results in friendlies, including the Nations League. It should be a good chance to try different things which may result in results like Hungary just so it proves certain formations / players / tactics or combinations don't work and never need to be used in competitive games... but do all big countries prefer to just keep things as strong as possible and make sure to get the friendly wins?

    • @rmh032
      @rmh032 Před 2 lety +5

      A number of the bigger nations lost to underdogs in this round of fixtures. I think a number of the smaller nations saw their opponents were a bit jaded and smelt blood. Hungary ruthlessly dispatched England. You couldn't have had two more contrasting attitudes and energy levels.

    • @balintvarady5160
      @balintvarady5160 Před 2 lety +2

      A player named czibor said once - "for me, there are no friendly games." When a footballer wears the jersey of his nation, there are no friendly games, i think. Fight, and die on the pitch, if necessary.

    • @FCGroningen1987
      @FCGroningen1987 Před 2 lety +4

      @@balintvarady5160 I don't think he'd have to play 70+ games a year back in the day

    • @balintvarady5160
      @balintvarady5160 Před 2 lety +1

      @@FCGroningen1987 maybe, but still a far more sympathetic and sportsman-like mentality than the englishmen represents.

  • @constablekennedy7705
    @constablekennedy7705 Před 2 lety +9

    Gareth SouthGate seems to be a Genuinely Decent Fella and has Admittedly Overachieved with The England National Team but he’s Not a Top Class Tactical Coach … 🤷🏿‍♂️. ⚽️

    • @ian-flanagan
      @ian-flanagan Před 2 lety +1

      And which top class tactical coach would take the England job over a premier league job that pays more?

    • @golden.lights.twinkle2329
      @golden.lights.twinkle2329 Před 2 lety +1

      He's not even medium-level.

    • @wolfen210959
      @wolfen210959 Před rokem

      @@ian-flanagan Exactly, plus we have tried that many times before, good club managers do not always make good national team managers.

  • @TeamGeist06
    @TeamGeist06 Před 2 lety +1

    35 mins .. This is gonna be a good one.

  • @kendrick6740
    @kendrick6740 Před 2 lety

    Adding to your point about back 3s not necessarily being defensive, Cruyff himself used a back 3 in his 343 diamond and had a back 3 with an extra sweeper in his 433, but neither formations were defensive by any means. Having 3 CBs can create a solid platform to defend counters and allow the other 7 players to all push up, whilst also creating a lot of passing options when playing out from the back. Meanwhile Diego Simeone used the 4-4-2 “traditional PL formation” and turned it into one of the most compact defensive units in the world which “only” had 2 CB.

  • @steve-bk1qd
    @steve-bk1qd Před 2 lety +11

    Southgate has his favourites and picks them irrespective of form...and he is way too defensive

  • @GrahamMilkdrop
    @GrahamMilkdrop Před 2 lety +19

    Thanks for this! Can't believe the amount of tripe that has been getting bandied around the last few days! (Although this is England and I've lived here my entire 46 year life... so ought to be used to it by now.) Yes, the last 4 games were awful to watch and criticism is due. Much more urgency was needed in the final third... Grealish should have played more first time passes, for example... but it looked like Southgate was taking the opportunity to try out different players... which is understandable.

    • @Scotticus25
      @Scotticus25 Před 2 lety +4

      He's already said that he tried out "new attacking systems" during the nations league (or words to that effect). Essentially, get ready for more 5atb with 2 dm's, boreball.

    • @GrahamMilkdrop
      @GrahamMilkdrop Před 2 lety +1

      Here's England in 2021 (which were all competitive WC qualifiers or Euro matches)
      pl-13 w-9 d-3 l-1 f-42 a-7 gd-+35
      (including the 3-2 pen shootout loss)
      Whatever happens going forward he achieved that! Can't have been a much better year in the history of English football!

  • @youtuber6193
    @youtuber6193 Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant video, very well put - I’d love to hear you on TalkSPORT up against Jamie O’Hara, he was spouting some nonsense after the game the Hungary game the other night.

    • @bricktop.
      @bricktop. Před 2 lety +4

      Half them melts on talksport just chat total waffle lol

    • @youtuber6193
      @youtuber6193 Před 2 lety

      @@bricktop. that is very true.

  • @Prolix8
    @Prolix8 Před 2 lety

    Excellent video

  • @kevinhanandi
    @kevinhanandi Před 2 lety +9

    Southgate is like english version of fernando santos. Have really good attacking players but play conservatively (except in portugal case it almost cost them world cup qualification and have to go through play off to qualify)

    • @rudreshravishankar8846
      @rudreshravishankar8846 Před 2 lety

      Santos won the euros.. if Southgate won the euros nobody would give a shit about style of play

    • @kevinhanandi
      @kevinhanandi Před 2 lety +1

      @@rudreshravishankar8846 yes, but they finished third in the group in that euros if the euro is like any previous euro, portugal is getting knocked out early in group stage, and some portugal fans want him out after disapointing performance in world cup qualifiers

  • @arzhi_azis
    @arzhi_azis Před 2 lety +8

    Day 276: Indonesia XI If All Eligible Players Had Declared For Them.

  • @Tonyr2
    @Tonyr2 Před rokem +1

    Totally agree with you Alfie. Calm down everyone.

  • @ginge210873
    @ginge210873 Před 2 lety

    I thought we were going to do ok in the world cup. Now you have put us down I am going to be negative again. Thanks mate

  • @ziudra91
    @ziudra91 Před 2 lety +12

    "Second most successful England manager of all time"
    Has not won anything...

    • @powerviolentnightmare5026
      @powerviolentnightmare5026 Před 2 lety +11

      England has won one trophy. ONE. They won in 1966. Since then, zero. Nada. It's easy to be the second best coach.

  • @BALHAM69
    @BALHAM69 Před 2 lety +26

    a documentary on the afc Wimbledon on the nine promotions in eleven years, how they’re a fan own club and how they have a stadium in plough lane now.
    The story of they lost the club, how the F A allowed that and won’t allow that anymore.
    How they were very close to moving to ireland
    How they went up the English football leagues.
    It would be a good documentary video if you can do this. #thepeopleschannel

    • @ritchierich2793
      @ritchierich2793 Před 2 lety

      Never stop spamming my dude.. i noticed you in most comments..

    • @BALHAM69
      @BALHAM69 Před 2 lety

      @@ritchierich2793 i don’t spam it every video but sometimes yes
      It is up to Alfie if he wants to do that

    • @ritchierich2793
      @ritchierich2793 Před 2 lety

      @@BALHAM69 chilled bro, im on your side ... It be really pretty interesting story on afc Wimbledon..

    • @BALHAM69
      @BALHAM69 Před 2 lety

      @@ritchierich2793 i do think Alfie will do a video on his team hull city because they have new owners from turkey soon too

    • @ritchierich2793
      @ritchierich2793 Před 2 lety

      @@BALHAM69 oh what.... Thats some new info.. wait takeover is officially done or in the process of getting bought out..

  • @georgef822
    @georgef822 Před 2 lety +2

    I believe we'll never ever get a better opportunity to win a major tournament than the final last summer. That was our chance. But we lost the game in the second half when Italy started controlling the midfielder and things needed to be changed. Mancini made the changes that were needed but Southgate didn't. That's where Southgate showed his lack of tactical nous.
    However, I'm still split on him and I don't think now is the right time to change it.
    I'm also worried about where our goals are coming from if anything happens to Kane.

    • @ElBarcoGaming
      @ElBarcoGaming Před 2 lety +1

      I'm a huge Southgate advocate, but agree with this. I was screaming for 10 mins before they scored to put an extra man in midfield. But everyone makes mistakes. I feel Southgate gets his highlighted but people ignore the great decisions throughout that led us to be in a position to have a mistake mean so much.. others made mistakes all the way through and never got to that point, but that seems forgotten.

  • @mikeoxlong246
    @mikeoxlong246 Před 2 lety

    Is the introduction part a stab at Michaels last video about Southgate? 😅

  • @777jxh
    @777jxh Před 2 lety +3

    The main problem I have with Southgate is that his big game management is lacking. We went 1-0 up in both the WC semi and the Euro final and he made wrong decisions and stupid substitutions. It's all well and good getting there but you have to have the nous to win the big games.

  • @acenmitch1048
    @acenmitch1048 Před 2 lety +5

    Gareth Southgate is like Ollie Gunner. Came in at an absolute low and managed to bring the fun back into football again for so many England fans. Admittedly he did have the easiest run ever and got thrashed twice by Belgium. Euros was even better and we should have won it. Terrible subs for pens decision which cost us. I doubt we’ll ever get that close again. Sadly we all know how Ollie ended and I can see Qatar finishing like that for our man Gareth. P.S. he would struggle to get a job in the Prem

  • @rammylive4081
    @rammylive4081 Před rokem

    as a hungarian, i feel as if i'm being spoken down to throughout this video. for the record, hungary is a team who *actually* has our best team in 20 years. 40 even. we have a genuinely fantastic team right now captained by the experience of szalai ádám, the youthful brilliance of szoboszlai, defensive rocks in szalai atilla and orbán in centre back and gulácsi between the sticks who's one of the best goalkeepers in the bundesliga. we also have some excellent attacking and midfield talent with decent careers including sallai & schafer. we also have some of the most depth any hungarian team has had with dibusz as our backup goalkeeper (as much as i despise that he plays for fradi), négo as a frequent mid-game substitute, nagy ádám not even starting in midfield consistently, and styles, gazdag, and bolla as rotation players. the win was certainly surprising simply in terms of the scoreline, but hungary has the ability to beat any team in the world on their day. and it's certainly not unprecedented (3-6 & 7-1).

    • @mellowado6184
      @mellowado6184 Před 6 měsíci

      That's because aside from Dominik Szoboszlai your players, are all second rate, let's be honest. You even have Styles who's really English. They'd be playing for better clubs otherwise. The formula isn't that hard.

  • @mikaelvirji5807
    @mikaelvirji5807 Před rokem +1

    I agree with everything you said. While don’t think he’s a good enough manager to actually take England to a title, he’s certainly been very good at his job. He’s built a strong, stable foundation for this team, and deserves credit for it despite his limitations in attacking ideas.

  • @vonelle9122
    @vonelle9122 Před 2 lety +8

    I get that he’s given you guys great memories, but outside of England he’s regarded as clueless. You have a world-class squad that should be able to win trophies, but you consistently underperform because of the type of football you play. Finally you have a generation of technical gifted players, like Trent, Bellingham, Foden and he prefers to play mediocre players that do as he says. The football you play is cowardly and I really don’t get why people defend him.

    • @HITCSevens
      @HITCSevens  Před 2 lety +2

      A World Cup semi final and a Euros final is constantly underperforming? Damn, we must be really good, given that no other country reached the last four of both.

    • @kyletucker3811
      @kyletucker3811 Před 2 lety +2

      🤦‍♂️ The idea of a style or choice of play being "cowardly" is asinine. A style of play is simply that, a style. Just because it doesn't meet your standards of what you enjoy doesn't make it cowardly. It makes it different.
      I'm not even English or anything I just find that whole idea ridiculous.
      If you want to comment on effectiveness, that's fair. But to justify your critique with a subjective emotional judgement of the football they play invalidates any good point you might make rather than underscoring it.

    • @vonelle9122
      @vonelle9122 Před 2 lety +6

      @@HITCSevens Look at the teams you faced to get there. First real hurdle and you’re out. These hurdles being inferior squads like Croatia and Italy that you should be beating. And that’s me only talking about the results.

    • @vonelle9122
      @vonelle9122 Před 2 lety +4

      @@kyletucker3811 It is an opinion indeed. If find it cowardly and so do many others. If you play like that you should be winning like France and Portugal did. Otherwise what was the point? A final isn’t a result, I know all too well as a Dutchman.

    • @HITCSevens
      @HITCSevens  Před 2 lety

      I must have imagined us beating Germany. And our biggest win came in the only game that we didn't play at Wembley.

  • @GardinerAlan
    @GardinerAlan Před 2 lety +7

    Agree with every point on this. All I would say is that I'm disappointed sometimes by the attacking players he chooses in the attacking positions. Mason Mount especially gets far more game time than his play deserves.

  • @MGEX8206
    @MGEX8206 Před rokem

    First up. As you say...Southgate's record speaks for itself. Flashback to 1998...me and my best mate compared the England and Svotland teams of that year's World Cup and came to the conclusion that England had better individuals but Scotland were more of a team. Southgate has for the first time I can remember...managed to build an England team that is actually a team. How would this lot match up against the team of '96 or the Sven Goran Ericsson era team? Not sure because Southgate's approach is so different to that of his predecessors.
    Yet our Nations League form is still a concern. This is a tournament we have already made the finals of in it's short existence. Yes this is a tough group but to be this deep in a hole with two games to go is not good. We finish bottom, we don't get a chance to win it next time around and at it's best, this is a tournament that is winnable for this England team.
    Yes, the timing of these matches is less than ideal but players from other countries have complained about that as well. So either the players are bottling it or Southgate has deliberately decided to write both this and the next Nations League off purely due to the fact that there are no warm up friendlies for the upcoming World Cup. You've implied in your video that you are assuming the latter. Either way, a team as good as the one we saw last year does not turn bad overnight and Southgate has become one of England's footballing immortals whatever happens in Qatar.
    I just hope like hell this gamble pays off.

  • @jimmideerichards9554
    @jimmideerichards9554 Před 2 lety +2

    One thing I will say about Southgate. I appreciate him getting us out of a bad batch for years and enjoying the most successful run in decades, that being said though, he’s not a man with the experience of managing a winning team…. It showed in that Euro final, after all the talent, we shut up shop after 1 minute, and played like a relegation team desperate to hold out for the 3 points. You play like that, you’ll come unstuck in the end, great successful teams never play in such a negative way, as the moment you try to hold on to a slim lead, you leave yourself open to unmanageable pressure and will eventually concede, unless you are extremely lucky. Regardless with the talent we have, should never play this way. It’s because of this I feel, Southgate should be appreciated for steadying the ship, but we should capitalise on his success, by bringing in someone who knows how to cross the finishing line and win trophies, otherwise, it’s gonna go down in history as another missed opportunity. The FA don’t have the balls to do this though as they like a yes man, and Southgate would never just step down from the most honourable job in English football as a English National. So unfortunately he’s here to stay, and we’ll be lucky if we ever do bring it home.
    That being said we can’t judge these recent games, it’s been such a long season and it’s a joke that these pretty pointless internationals are being played when I’m pretty sure 90% of players just want to go on their holidays and get mentally ready for a new upcoming season. So pay no attention to these recent results as I know their hearts arnt fully in it, why I’ve not bothered watching a single minute of the matches, only checked the scores after the games finished.
    Also regarding Harry Kane, he’s 100% our Talisman, but Southgate has no clue how to use him properly, he’s majority of the time playing so deep, in a defensive forward position when he should be leading the line. It’s unreal how many times we have an attack and Kane’s no where to be seen in the box which is equally as mental as setting him as a corner taker. Southgate really needs to watch Spurs, see how Kane and Son play, pick his best equivalent to Son in this squad and work on a partnership between them and attempt to replicate this way of play, but unfortunately that’s way tactically out of Southgate’s depth.

  • @JayTechZM
    @JayTechZM Před 2 lety +4

    I agree with most of what Alfie says but here the notion of "oh we were so bad in the past so we should be grateful at coming close and failing yet again" doesn't necessarily hold up. Personally he should have probably walked after the Euros and left on a relative high for the next manager to build on this squad to go on and try to compete at the world cup, but this year's tournament is going to be far more different than the others before it, he has two games pretty much to prepare for the tournament in September and then after that the big one kicks in. Mid season might I add.
    People who say this is the best team in years are right because they function well as a unit unlike the failed golden generation that had petty club squabbles get in the way of performing well at international level.
    I just think he's done a wonderful job of uniting a fractured team given what happened in Euro 2016 but this is as far as he can take them. He's not flexible enough to win a tournament outright with a good bunch and sugarcoating these defeats as "meaningless friendlies" after "a long season" is disrespectful to other countries who've had long seasons themselves so what makes England's case any special?
    All I'm saying is, this world cup will be a painful reminder of what should have been done last year. I have absolutely no hope going to Qatar given every context. If he proves me wrong fair enough but as for now, he's running on thin ice.
    EDIT: Well my expectations were met and yet again the insistence on failing to read the game cost England. At 1-1 be proactive and make changes in your favour but nope, he reacted too late ONCE AGAIN. He's just not good enough to win something for England I'm sorry.

    • @MrGentleman2051
      @MrGentleman2051 Před rokem

      what a hopeless person

    • @yoshiwoollyworld
      @yoshiwoollyworld Před rokem +1

      Would losing to a team that failed to qualify for the world cup (despite taking a 1-0 lead against them after 2 minutes and having a 2-1 lead over them in the following penalty shootout) be sackable?

    • @JayTechZM
      @JayTechZM Před 11 měsíci

      @@yoshiwoollyworld absolutely! Italy were lucky to reach that final if Spain had prime David Villa/ Torres/ Raul upfront not Oyarzabal Italy wouldn't be in those finals and we've all seen how garbage Italy have been since winning that tournament (or even before Euro 2020 really).
      Southgate has done well with uniting England as a team but to get to the next level you have to be ruthless and have an edge over your opponent and he doesn't have that or will ever have it. Don't let qualifiers against San Marino fool you.

  • @aacistrlcoholic2
    @aacistrlcoholic2 Před 2 lety +9

    I’m firmly in the Gareth out camp and have been pretty much since he got the job mostly because the way he sets up the team and the football he wants to play is very boring, he doesn’t make the right subs early enough in the game to have an impact and when we are losing I have zero confidence that he knows what to change tactically to turn it around. The squad definitely isn’t world class and I don’t expect us to be winning any tournaments, just want us to play attacking and exciting football.

    • @gm2407
      @gm2407 Před rokem

      Makes it even more impressive that he gets to the later stage of the tournaments. Pleanty of more tallented England squads have bottled it earlier on in tournaments. Never rated Southgate, but think about it like Napoleon "is he lucky?". Luck means he has intangeables which effect his team's results in the important games. So he must be doing something right and that works for his squads.

  • @nathaniel7744
    @nathaniel7744 Před 2 lety +1

    I love HITC Sevens

  • @jackwoolley7859
    @jackwoolley7859 Před 2 lety +1

    Football CZcams’s voice of calm and reason 🧘‍♂️

  • @aryamanmani4025
    @aryamanmani4025 Před 2 lety +6

    I’m not English, so I can’t say that I care. As a neutral England are a pretty boring watch in general. I used to like Southgate because he had a selection criteria and stuck by it, now that’s been thrown out of the window. Case and point Harry Maguire. Southgate is a boring coach, now with inconsistent man management.

  • @MarioHernandez-ey5cb
    @MarioHernandez-ey5cb Před 2 lety +5

    Good grief, I love your videos Alfie; but, there's a considerable bit of copium in this video.

  • @daviidolu6848
    @daviidolu6848 Před 2 lety

    This is excellent

  • @silviofelix1991
    @silviofelix1991 Před rokem

    You are absolutely right about Fernando Santos 😔

  • @noahtabensky7030
    @noahtabensky7030 Před 2 lety +12

    Could you please do a video on how the world cup would go if each team had to have a manager from their country or something of the sort

    • @JayForsure
      @JayForsure Před 2 lety +7

      It's actually crazy to me that, that isn't a set rule

    • @Ale_LSH
      @Ale_LSH Před 2 lety

      Going by history, having a manager from the country of origin is usually the best bet. No nation has ever won a WC while being managed by a foreign manager, even counting runners up it's still very rare as only 2 times has a foreign manager led a nation to a WC final. First it was George Raynor with Sweden in 1958 and then Ernst Happel with Netherlands in 1978.

  • @danielnoah7719
    @danielnoah7719 Před 2 lety +11

    This is not the best England team in 20 years
    😂

  • @avjosh3386
    @avjosh3386 Před 2 lety +1

    I agree with pretty much everything you had to say here, and even though i am not the biggest fan of southgate, i do feel it would be silly to change manager this close to a tournament. However, i think you missed a big part of why i dislike southgate, which is his weird selection choices, clear biases, and hypocrisy.
    Selection choices first, the squad picked for these 4 games made no sense. Although we have a wealth of talent at right back, it doesn't mean we have to take all of it, the lack of left backs within the squad hurt us. Both James and Trippier, although i thought both had ok games considering they were out of position, looked uncomfortable within their position. Trippier being a key example, with his hesitance to move forward, or when he did to use his weak foot, slowed down many attacks against germany. The amount of defenders called up in the first place is slightly worrying also.
    The clear biases come from three areas, a clear biases for big 6 club players (look at the narrative behind Grealish spouted by southgate post City move), a clear biases for premier league players, and a clear biases for Crystal Palace players. The big 6 bias is self explanatory, the Grealish example being one of them, or Maguire consistently being picked over superior centrebacks, with Mings and Kilmann (Also a small mention to Reece Oxford too) playing significantly better than him not only in the run up to this international break, but the entirety of the season. The premier league bias was show blatantly when he hinted that players playing in foreign leagues would be better suited and have more chance to play in the england squad if they were in England, look at how long it took for Tomori to get into the side. Palace players has felt obvious also, you can definitely make a case for Mitchell, Guehi, and Gallagher to be in the england squad, but players like Ramsey, Targett, even JWP has struggled for consistent call ups, have been better in the run up to international breaks.
    Finally his hypocrisy on form. It feels like more of a problem created by southgate, with him consistently touting form as probably the biggest factor within the England Squad picking process. Which if you just look at the england squad, and then look at its admissions from the last few squads, then it's clear to see that is false. I don't claim that form should be a major deciding factor within an international squad picking process, overall quality, team cohesion both can easily come ahead of that. But southgate seems to continue to spout rhetoric about form. Also just as an anecdote for southgates hypocrisy, and me being a overall stubborn and petty villa fan, when Grealish was easily in contention for the england squad, while playing in the championship, Southgate spouted nonsense about him not playing at the highest level, and the decided to call up fellow championship player Phillips, who deserved to be in the squad mind you, but rules for one player and non rules for another is pretty silly.
    Also quick side note, i disagree with the statement that because we have had successful managers not work before, that must not be the solution, it is the same nonsense United fans were spouting when linked with Conte, every manager is of course different. However my suggestions wouldn't be mega successful managers anyway, but i thought i would bring up the point.
    Anyway, great video, keep up the good work

    • @JA-pn4ji
      @JA-pn4ji Před 2 lety

      You would think that the varied playing experience gained by players playing in quality foreign leagues would be a plus in selection decisions.

    • @wolfen210959
      @wolfen210959 Před rokem

      You do know that there is a world cup coming up in November ? When, exactly, would be the best time to look at alternative players ? In a meaningless tournament like this ? Or, perhaps, in the group stages of said world cup. ? Don't get all caught up in the diatribe from the media, they want to sell newspapers and online subscriptions, so they have a vested interest in enraging their current and future readers, you should know by now, just how fickle they can be. Do you not remember the run-up to the 2018 World Cup ? They were all predicting we would be lucky to get out of the group and would get nowhere near a semi final, because I do remember.

  • @stevencooke6451
    @stevencooke6451 Před 2 lety +2

    I think in terms of Southgate he deserves credit for rebuilding the squad and creating harmony. My biggest critique of him concerns the poor decision-making in elimination games. Both Croatia and Italy had better teams than England, so losing to them was no disgrace. However, in both games, England got the jump and did not pursue it. I assume this came from him, though I don't know if that also falls on the players.
    He's not a bad manager, and frankly, other than maybe Alf Ramsay, I'm not sure anyone else stands out. Yes, I think people exaggerate the talent on this team. They have many good players, and several of them (e.g., Maguire) play better for England than for their clubs.
    The other thing is that I'm struggling to think of a great manager at the national level. Deschamps isn't great, Enrique is not great, Flick hasn't yet proven to be great guiding Germany and Santos had legions of haters in Portugal and among the diaspora. I guess Scaloni has restored cohesion to Argentina so that's impressive. Tite has the top-ranked team, but we shall see what happens in the fall/winter.
    And I'm not 100% sure we will be able to make much of an assessment of a manager during the upcoming World Cup because so many features will be novel.

  • @tommynoblethecouncilofheav4657

    2nd best England manager well that don't take much does it , saying that I wouldn't put him in the same class of Bobby Robson & Terry Venables .

  • @drummerboy1390
    @drummerboy1390 Před 2 lety +10

    I don’t think he’s clueless, neither do I think he’s a genius. Far from it.
    England has a strong pool of talented players, but I don’t think he’s getting the best from them. It would be crazy to replace him now with the World Cup so close, so let’s see how he does there. Another glorious failure and it’s goodbye Gareth.

  • @foxcanary7292
    @foxcanary7292 Před 2 lety

    Pretty much spot on there’s room for improvement but that goes for pretty much every manager bar pep and klopp

  • @depekthegreat359
    @depekthegreat359 Před 2 lety

    I fully agree with your point of views regarding the England coach Gareth Southgate sir tactical management with his squad and totally wrong for him be called for a sack and an interracial person who has English heritage from my ancestries,I am totally against him from being sacked as he needs to be given some tim till if he would not at least guide the national team to at least up to the final and not winning the trophy,good friend Alfie Potts Hammer!!!🙏