Gulf News

More talent and less minutes for English players in league

SOUTHGATE FOR CHANGE AS PLAYERS NOT AS INVOLVED AS LAST YEAR

- BY ANDY HUNTER

Emboldened by the World Cup and perhaps conscious of opportunit­y ahead, Gareth Southgate has called for a debate into the “ethical challenge” of increasing the number of English players competing regularly in the Premier League. The debate is under way from academy to government level and though causes of the problem are easier to identify than solutions, it is not a conversati­on the Football Associatio­n will allow to fall silent.

“Our pool is getting smaller and smaller,” Southgate said last week, when, holding his first press conference since the World Cup, he delivered a statistica­l sting to the positivity generated by England’s run to the semi-finals.

English players have played 30.4 per cent of the 79,200 minutes played in the Premier League so far this season, a drop from 33 per cent last year but one that can be attributed to the national team’s prolonged stay in Russia and late return of internatio­nals to their clubs. Among the top-six clubs the number of English starters drops to nearer 20 per cent; an alarming figure for an England manager wanting to select from a pool exposed to the pressure of challengin­g for the title and the experience of European competitio­n.

Chelsea and Arsenal are lowest on the list with a combined 172 minutes for Ruben LoftusChee­k and Ross Barkley plus a mere 56 minutes in total for Danny Welbeck and Ainsley Maitland-Niles respective­ly. Offering the most opportunit­y so far are Burnley and Bournemout­h, the only clubs to have given English players over 2,000 minutes of Premier League football after four matches.

Southgate cited “the precarious nature of managers in the top flight” as helping contribute to the decline. Aidy Boothroyd, England’s Under-21 manager, believes an overseas manager’s inclinatio­n to look abroad for talent is another factor. Sean Dyche and Eddie Howe, the longest serving managers in the top flight, support both theories.

“There has never been a better time to be an England player, whatever age,” says Boothroyd. Internatio­nal honours back ■ him up with England having won the World Cup at under-20 and under-17 level plus the under-19s European Championsh­ip last summer. However, there is a “ceiling of developmen­t” that Boothroyd fears undoubtedl­y exists in the Premier League. Lewis Cook and Dominic Calvert-Lewin feature regularly for Bournemout­h and Everton respective­ly but none of England’s Under-20s World Cup-winning team from 2017 have establishe­d themselves as a first-team starter.

Solanke’s lack of game-time

England’s Under-21 manager, who is concerned about Dominic Solanke’s lack of game-time at Liverpool before yesterday’s Euro qualifier against the Netherland­s, adds: “In the past you had British managers giving British players a lot of chances to prove they could do it. Now the game is global. I look at my old club Watford, and it is a completely different club to the one that I was at. Foreign owners and foreign managers might perhaps look abroad before looking at what is under their nose although, ironically, the best ones tend to pick our players, so there must be something in that.”

But what is the solution? “We have tried the quota one, haven’t we?” Boothroyd replies.

Quotas could increase with Brexit, which has the potential for conflict between the FA and Premier League and may fulfil Southgate’s wish for the debate over home-grown talent to continue if nothing else.

The Premier League has asked the government to clarify whether it will be exempt from restrictio­ns on European workers after Brexit. With only six months to go, it is still awaiting an answer. The Premier League’s post-Brexit proposals will require FA support. That could be the FA’s opportunit­y to insist on an increase to the current quota of eight home-grown players in a 25-man squad.

For Jurgen Klopp, the antiBrexit Liverpool manager, the issue facing English players and the game’s authoritie­s is the quality and competitiv­eness of the Premier League, a competitio­n that has thrived globally due to access to the world’s finest talent. Trent AlexanderA­rnold, Joe Gomez and Jordan Henderson demonstrat­e opportunit­y exists at Liverpool — and support Boothroyd’s point about the best foreign managers looking under their noses — while Adam Lallana and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlai­n would have increased the club’s England contingent but for injury.

“If a German internatio­nal moves to the Premier League he probably doesn’t start as often as he did before,” says Klopp. “It happens in other countries too. Emre Can didn’t start so far for Juve. Will he be a starter? I have no solution because I didn’t think about it in terms of English football, to be honest, but how I see it is that English football in their developmen­t with the young boys is in a really good way.

“He [Southgate] is right: they have to find solutions for young boys like Loftus-Cheek, for example, to play regularly, but I cannot solve that problem. But the league is just so strong that there are internatio­nal players from other countries who are not starters in the Premier League, not just English players.”

He [Southgate] is right: they have to find solutions for young boys like LoftusChee­k, for example, to play regularly, but I cannot solve that problem.” Jurgen Klopp » Liverpool manager

 ?? AFP ?? England manager Gareth Southgate with his players during training at St George’s Park on Tuesday, ahead of their internatio­nal friendly football match against Spain tomorrow.
AFP England manager Gareth Southgate with his players during training at St George’s Park on Tuesday, ahead of their internatio­nal friendly football match against Spain tomorrow.

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