The Daily Telegraph - Sport

England finally reap benefits of Premier League excellence

Catalan manager’s clubs have provided core of past two World Cup-winning sides – well ahead of his Premier League rivals

- JAMIE CARRAGHER

players are playing in our top division and in the Champions League, and whether enough managers are prepared to give the academy graduates a chance rather than spend big on overseas stars. There is no room for complacenc­y on that issue. But the greatest managers of their generation ensure those English players good enough to play for our Champions League clubs receive an education the envy of the rest of the world.

John Stones and Kyle Walker fit seamlessly into a three-man defence because of their work with Guardiola. Questions were asked when Walker was given a new role by Southgate, but at Manchester City the full-backs do not play as traditiona­l full-backs. They push up so much, and have so much freedom to move inside, they are like midfielder­s. Walker was always going to be ideal as a defender who is good on the ball, and has the pace to get his side out of trouble when counter-attacked. It is perfect for those games when the opposition sits deep. Naturally, he will have more defending to do against Croatia, and certainly in the final should England get that far.

No one thought of Jordan Henderson as a holding midfielder until Klopp revised his role at Liverpool just under two years ago. Until then, it was difficult to define Henderson’s game. People were looking for him to score and create more as an attacking midfielder. Instead,

Klopp identified his greatest strength is covering the yards in front of his defence, breaking up attacks and retaining possession with simple passing to more creative midfielder­s. Southgate has used Liverpool’s midfield as a prototype, so much so that if not for the injuries to Alex Oxladecham­berlain and Adam Lallana, it is my gut feeling they would be alongside their club captain. Harry Kane and Dele Alli thrived as a partnershi­p under Pochettino, the duo instructed to replicate their club relationsh­ip in the internatio­nal team. Kieran Trippier’s advancemen­t at Spurs has taken him to another level.

Mourinho’s style of football obviously differs from that at City, Spurs and Liverpool, but he can be credited for developing players such as Jesse Lingard to internatio­nal standard. It is Mourinho who revived Ashley Young as a full-back so that he not only earned a call-up to the squad, but is a starter again.

Since taking the job Southgate has sought to build a good relationsh­ip with those coaches for mutual benefit. It was frustratin­g that for so long our league was strong but it was not reflected in internatio­nal performanc­e.

Now England are not the only nation to benefit. Belgium’s Roberto Martinez will be equally grateful to Guardiola, Mourinho and Conte, given the strong Premier League presence in his squad. We know Martinez is a student of Guardiola. No manager left in the competitio­n is so influenced by him. Four of the past five major internatio­nal tournament­s pursued by European clubs have been won by nations in which Guardiola was coaching.

His influence on Spain’s success between 2008-2012 is obvious, but there were six of Guardiola’s Bayern Munich players in for Germany’s starting line-up for the 2014 World Cup final. Mario Gotze came off the bench score the winner. Where Guardiola goes, the World Cup follows. This bodes well for England going into their semifinal. Rather than clashes between club and country, English domestic excellence is finally feeding internatio­nal success. Key

Was playing under Mourinho Was playing under Guardiola Was playing under Klopp Was playing under Pochettino

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