Irish Daily Mail

SOUTHGATE should STICK to England. It’s NOT THE RIGHT TIME for UNITED

- Graeme Souness graeme.souness@ dailymail.ie

ENGLAND will be the team to beat at this summer’s European Championsh­ip and if I was advising Gareth Southgate amid rumours making him Manchester United’s next manager, I’d say sit tight instead.

This England squad have at least two more tournament­s in them — going by their age — and Gareth should hang around and enjoy the fruits of that. He enjoyed a huge slice of luck in how he got the job following Sam Allardyce’s departure and has benefited from the very timely developmen­t of this highly talented English group.

As he well knows from his time with Middlesbro­ugh, managing a club side with its daily demands is a whole different job.

Gareth is non-confrontat­ional; he has a safe image so that will appeal to some. Yet look at the three most successful managers in the Premier League: Pep Guardiola, Jurgen Klopp and Mikel Arteta — they are all very emotional, passionate characters who wear their heart on their sleeves. That’s not Gareth. Of course, there is more than one way to get a job done but the United job, if it comes up, needs a big character.

Bigger, more experience­d managers, such as Louis van Gaal and Jose Mourinho, have had a decent crack at it but ultimately still failed while little has improved under the very different approach of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and Erik ten Hag.

As I’ve said before, whoever takes that job needs to get recruitmen­t right first. Find top players and they don’t need telling twice, they do the job for you. I was part of a dressing room like that as a Liverpool player and I had that as a manager with Rangers. Sure, there’s a connection between Gareth and Dan Ashworth, who was technical director at the FA and will do the same job at United, but is that enough? No, if England win the Euros, his best bet is to stay put.

Gareth (right) has a chance to look at another couple of good prospects against Brazil in Jarrad Branthwait­e and Kobbie Mainoo. Should they start or come on, I’d expect them to handle it well, firstly because they are talented young players and, secondly, it’s a friendly and I don’t put any stock in friendlies.

At Liverpool, we were openly encouraged to miss this type of game.

I got 54 Scotland caps and would have won a lot more but passed up the opportunit­y to play in meaningles­s friendlies. That stayed with me as a manager, as if you ever went to watch a player in such a game it was usually a waste of time as the players weren’t really at it.

There’s a fuss around preparing for an internatio­nal debut and it’s generally true that the higher the level you go in football your thought process has to be quicker, your touch has to be better and you should never give the ball away cheaply but in a friendly that process is always a yard behind. I actually made my internatio­nal debut in a friendly against East Germany in 1974. It was special to pull on the Scotland shirt but that first game wasn’t something that concerned me too much. My aim was just to win it, I wasn’t nervous. We knew very little about East Germany and I was blessed with confidence, so it was not something I got too worked up about.

Similarly, Brazil should hold no fears for Branthwait­e and Mainoo. They are really good players, athletic and capable of taking the ball in tight spaces. They’re prepared to pick a pass instead of those who are happy to shift on the responsibi­lity. To underline my point, when you are in the tunnel, waiting to go out, there are two types of players: the one who hopes to get through 90 minutes without making a mistake and the proper player who says, ‘I can’t wait to get out there and be the difference today.’ Branthwait­e and Mainoo are the latter. They have a bright future for Gareth Southgate to count on.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland