Daily Mail

END OUR YEARS OF HURT!

England expects more than Euro 96 nostalgia

- MARTIN SAMUEL Chief Sports Writer reports from Paris

SINCE the 2006 World Cup, Germany have won 18 matches at internatio­nal tournament­s. Spain the same. Holland have won 14, Portugal seven, Italy a disappoint­ing five. How many have England won in that time? Three.

Single-goal wins over Slovenia in 2010, and Sweden and Ukraine in 2012 is the sum of it. Switzerlan­d, Croatia, Belgium and today’s opponents, Russia, have celebrated more tournament victories in the same period.

England, meanwhile, have savoured heady triumph in an equal number of matches as Turkey, the Czech Republic and Greece. It is something for those getting sniffy about Euro 96 nostalgia to consider. The reason this sad little country continues harking back to a golden age of two competitio­n wins under Terry Venables and a semi-final exit on penalties, is that England fans have scant else to cling to.

They do not have Germany’s reserves of tournament success, or a golden age that genuinely came to fruition, like Spain. They take solace from fleeting moments of hope and hype: from Paul Gascoigne in 1990, or Wayne Rooney in 2004, or 90 minutes against Holland in 1996 when it really looked like England could play.

We don’t play, that’s the problem. Think back to those matches with Slovenia, Sweden and Ukraine. Were any of them remotely memorable? Who scored England’s winner against Slovenia? Anyone recall Jermain Defoe?

The heroes of the victory over Sweden were a retro 4-4-2, with Andy Carroll and Danny Welbeck the two big men up front, while the match against Ukraine is best recalled for a heroic John Terry clearance that wasn’t — the ball already a foot over the line when he hooked it away. Had the referee, or his useless goal-line official, spotted it, England would have been able to count tournament victories since 2006 without even needing fingers.

So the opportunit­y to hit the ground running in Marseille tonight against an ordinary Russian team weakened by injuries is to be welcomed. So, too, is Roy Hodgson’s decision to abandon the midfield diamond that seemed to bring the worst out of everybody.

Whether his 4-3-3 is the answer remains to be seen. Once again, England arrive at a tournament with the manager throwing open the mystery box. If England’s starting line-up is as predicted — Hart, Walker, Cahill, Smalling, Rose, Sterling, Rooney, Dier, Alli, Lallana, Kane — then for the second tournament in succession in the opening game, Hodgson’s chosen XI will not have started before.

Indeed, this XI has never been on the field for England in so much as one minute of any match, let alone in one as important as the first tentative step in a tournament. For a pragmatic coach, Hodgson is given to placing particular­ly big bets when the pressure is on.

OF course, teams evolve with the intensity of final competitio­n, and that may be the case here. Not much point in all the secrecy at England’s Chantilly base — Hodgson’s players only strolled around the Stade Velodrome pitch last night in case Russian spies hacked their final training session with binoculars — unless England have the odd secret.

The score of the players’ darts competitio­n, or what Gary Neville considers a fair price for prawns — he bought some from a local fishmonger, but it is claimed haggled over the bill — doesn’t really count. Who knows whether Hodgson has been cunning or simply indecisive, but maybe the uncertaint­y over England’s best or preferred XI will prove advantageo­us.

If Hodgson is unsure of his team from game to game — it is unlikely the starting XI against Russia has been in his mind for weeks, unless all three friendly matches were an exercise in deception — then it is going to be doubly hard for the opposition to second guess.

Is there a specific game in which Hodgson sees Jack Wilshere featuring? Having lost his place at nine, and now 10, is Rooney out entirely if he cannot make this latest deeper midfield role work? Where champions start is not always where they finish, and England too often seem caught up in the energy around the first game, allowing any disappoint­ments to dictate the narrative.

It is worth rememberin­g that all of England’s three most successful tournament­s — the World Cups of 1966 and 1990 and the 1996 European Championsh­ip — began with unremarkab­le draws against ordinary opponents: Uruguay, the Republic of Ireland and Switzerlan­d. Yes, England should defeat Russia tonight, but with 16 of 24 teams progressin­g it would not be a calamity if they did not, as long as the performanc­e was strong.

There is some optimistic precedent to be found in Sir Alf Ramsey’s wingless wonders, who came late to the competitio­n in 1966. Some argue that was the plan all along, Ramsey reluctant to show his hand and only fielding his preferred formation in the later stages.

Others believe accident as much as design played its part and Ramsey was trying to make wingers work, before the disappoint­ment of the group stages made him abandon the idea.

Yet this team and their likely shape remains a departure for Hodgson if, as expected, Rooney plays a midfield role. He has performed there for Manchester United, but not England, and the worry would be that such a late switch smacks of a coach sensing his captain’s waning influence, but unable to make the leap to leave him off the team sheet.

In Marseille yesterday afternoon, manager and player disembarke­d from an official vehicle for their press conference, late through the gridlocked cars inching home in time for France’s opening game with Romania. ‘I’ve never seen so much traffic,’ said Hodgson to a UEFA official, meaning he has clearly erased Brazil two

years ago as a painful memory. ‘Without the police escort we would have been here at 10.’

Later he would go 10 rounds with a set of UEFA headphones as Rooney did his best to stifle laughter, but for the moment the captain marched on, hatchet- faced. Another tournament, and the debate centres around him. ‘Sempre Butcher,’ Italian coach Enzo Bearzot would say — ‘ always Butcher’ — scorning England’s reliance on a certain breed of lionhearte­d centre half. ‘ Sempre Rooney’ could be written on the side of the team bus now, so much has England been about one man for more than a decade.

He bristled when told that Russia’s management and players do not think he is the player of old. ‘I don’t have to sit here and defend myself,’ he shot back, eyes blazing. ‘My game has changed but in many ways it has changed for the better. The opinions that matter are those of my coaches and team-mates.

‘I’ve played with people who operated in a different way later in their careers and some of them became better players. I played in midfield at United for some of this season and in many ways it was natural because my football is intelligen­t football. If I play there more I may further my career.’

The problem is that if Hodgson does shift Rooney into midfield and it doesn’t work, he really doesn’t have too many other places to go. Sir Alex Ferguson once said that if United had injuries at right back, Rooney’s confidence was such he was the first to volunteer.

He said Rooney would sidle up as they were leaving the training field. ‘I can play right back,’ he would say. ‘I’m a good right back.’ Ferguson didn’t doubt it. That was then, however. It would be lovely to imagine that Rooney still had the confidence and spirit of his youth, but he looks careworn on occasions now, fed up with being asked to justify his place ahead of the latest young shaver.

He talked of the advantage of having youth in the team, going out without fear. ‘I did that in 2003,’ he said. It is 13 years ago now — measured in football terms, a lifetime.

Hodgson added that the worry of every manager is that the players carry their anxieties on to the field — in England’s case the anxieties of past failure. ‘All we can say to them is that we think they are good enough and that they should believe in themselves,’ he insisted. ‘Yet nothing we can say will wipe the slate clean. We can’t help the fact that it is 50 years since we won a tournament, 20 years since we reached a semi-final.’

The mission to redress that void begins tonight. ‘It could be a big tournament for England and this group of players,’ Rooney concluded. The ride home awaited. It would be slow progress; but, with England, is it ever anything else?

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Distant memory: Shearer sinks Dutch at Euro 96
GETTY IMAGES Distant memory: Shearer sinks Dutch at Euro 96
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