Sunderland Echo

KANE HONING SKILLS UNDER COACH RUSSELL

GLASWEGIAN HAVING A BIG SAY IN ENGLAND’S ATTACKING THREAT IN RUSSIA

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Harry Kane led a chorus of praise for the finishing school run by England’s little-known striker coach Allan Russell.

Glaswegian Russell began as a youth player at Rangers but never made the grade at the top level, lining up for the likes of Hamilton, St Mirren and Airdrie, and barely made an impact when he tried his luck south of the border with Mansfield, Macclesfie­ld and Forest Green.

Yet the 37-year-old is the man entrusted by Gareth Southgate with honing the scoring prowess of some of the Premier League’s top marksman over the past year.

Russell runs a consultanc­y called Superior Striker and styles himself as “the world’s number one striker specific coach”. That may be a bold claim but England have no reason to question it at present, having scored eight times in their first two World Cup outings.

All but three of those have come from corners or free- kick routines – one of Rus- sell’s areas of expertise – and Kane, who topped the tour- nament scoring charts with five after England’s second game, is happy to share the credit.

“He does our attacking set plays, which are going pretty well so far. Every little helps – particular­ly the little details at this level,” he said.

“It’s good, because we do a lot of work in training. He does finishing sessions with us, tells us about opposition defenders, goalkeeper­s and telling us maybe where we can exploit a weakness.

“We are all top players, so he is not running through technique telling us how to strike a ball. It’s just lit- tle stuff to maybe give us an edge.”

Jesse Lingard, who hit a superb goal from the edge of the area in Sunday’s 6-1 rout of Panama, echoed Kane’s sentiments.

“After training he (Russell) goes through different plays in and around the box. It’s about finishing,” he said. “He has played an important role.”

Southgate has also highlighte­d Russell’s contributi­on on the training pitch, having specifical­ly targeted an increase in England’s efficiency at dead ball situations.

“We’ve identified that as a key area in tournament­s and it’s a key area we felt we could improve upon,” he said. “We’re giving it the right

 ??  ?? England assistant Steve Holland, striker coach Allan Russell and manager Gareth Southgate at training.
England assistant Steve Holland, striker coach Allan Russell and manager Gareth Southgate at training.

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