New Straits Times

Euro 2008 failure won’t haunt fearless Three Lions

- Magazine earlier this

REPINO: For Steve McClaren, England’s World Cup semi-final against Croatia brings back painful memories. It was after a match between the two teams more than a decade ago that he was labelled the “Wally with the Brolly.”

In the pouring rain of a November night at Wembley, England slipped to a 3-2 defeat against a Croatian side who had already secured their place in Austria and Switzerlan­d for Euro 2008, failing to qualify themselves.

The image of McClaren sheltering from the elements under an umbrella came to define the latest in England’s litany of disappoint­ments on the internatio­nal stage and is one he has failed to shirk in a journeyman coaching career since.

Luka Modric and Ivan Rakitic were part of the winning side and have gone on to form the bedrock of a talented midfield that has allowed a country with a population of just over four million to punch above their weight for a decade.

In sharp contrast, not a single member of the England squad that night are in Russia after Gareth Southgate put his faith in youth by bringing the thirdyoung­est squad to the tournament.

“There was this FA umbrella lying around so I thought, ‘I’ll use that, support the FA and keep myself dry!’ McClaren told FourFourTw­o year.

“After thinking I’d get killed for wearing a beanie (hat), instead I got killed for holding a brolly.

“Later I went to Holland and at Heracles there is no dugout — just benches with no cover. We had around eight members of staff at Twente and each of them used an umbrella.

“As I came out the team manager asked: ‘Trainer! Would you like an umbrella?’ I said: ‘No, I’ll end up looking like a drowned rat on the substitute­s’ bench, but I will not have an umbrella’.”

The Croatia defeat was just one of a number of crushing disappoint­ments for a so-called “golden generation” including David Beckham, Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard who never made it beyond the quarter-finals of a major tournament.

England’s current crop have managed to capture the hearts of a nation in a way that star-studded squad never did.

Where once the England manager was a figure of fun, he is now a style icon — Southgate’s matchday attire has seen waistcoat sales rocket in a country gripped by World Cup fever.

Yet what England lack in experience, they now make up for in a fearlessne­ss that is completely at odds with the tension on and off the field that has blighted so many previous campaigns.

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