The Scotsman

Southgate again shows he can handle all the dramas

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week he had been through: pulled apart publicly, on social media, news channels, debated on newspaper pages and websites, for the tattoo of an assault rifle on his right calf, which had been there for months.

If Southgate had thought that public opinion was behind the 23-year-old, he would’ve been surprised to see the player rated as the worst of his starting side — and fourth worst of the 16 who featured — by a hefty proportion of the public voting for the players’ ratings on the BBC’S website. Sterling, while missing some decent chances, set up Harry Kane’s winner and was one of England’s most lively attacking outlets. He was nowhere near one of the worst. And a lot of the Sunday papers wrote largely positive pieces about the player. You really can’t please everyone.

The inclusion of Jordan Pickford indicated that the Everton goalkeeper is edging ahead of Jack Butland to become England’s tournament No1. It is a huge call for either player at the sort of age — Pickford is 24-yearsold and Butland 25 — where a strong performanc­e in Russia could establish them as the national team’s longterm goalkeeper. With Joe Hart, 31, left out of the squad, that position is available.

Chelsea defender Gary Cahill was unsure if he would even make the squad following an up-and-down season with his club, was handed a chance against Nigeria in the back three ahead of Harry Maguire, a player Southgate will consider a starter, headed in a seventh-minute opener and, with his experience as the squad’s most-capped player, will now be legitimate­ly wondering if he could force his way into becoming more than just an older head sharing a few wise words in Repino. Tournament football is as much about how the players’ off-field issues are managed as their appearance­s on it. Steve Cooper, who oversaw the Englandund­er 17s’s World Cup victory last October, said recently that it was just as important to recognise if someone — including staff members — were having an off day: missing a partner, feeling homesick, discoverin­g the pet dog has died back home, not enjoying the sour cabbage everyone is eating in Russia.

But Southgate is showing every day how well he is able to cope with this kind of responsibi­lity. He was unafraid to cut down foreign secretary Boris Johnson for his inflammato­ry comments about Russia as geopolitic­al tensions rose only a few months out from the World Cup. He is as adept at making a joke in a press conference as he is at tackling sensitive issues. You leave a press conference wanting England to win the World Cup simply because Southgate comes across as a decent bloke, happy to admit he went on the p**s in Magaluf as a player and is not as straight as a die. Peel away the Football Associatio­n shell and he is, God forbid, pretty “normal”. Not a gangster’s accountant, or England’s manager, just a man who would love to see his country do well in a major tournament again.

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