Southgate keen to avoid unwanted distractions in the build up to Euros
GARETH Southgate has warned his England players not to derail their Euro 2020 hopes by misbehaving on or off the pitch.
Southgate saw the Three Lions’ UEFA Nations League hopes go up in smoke in the autumn after a string of disciplinary issues.
Defender Harry Maguire was arrested while on holiday in Greece that made him unavailable for two matches, Phil Foden and Mason Greenwood broke coronavirus rules while on England duty in Iceland and were subsequently sent home and Maguire was then sent off in a home defeat to Denmark.
With the European Championship less than two months away, and all of England home games at Wembley, Southgate wants to be able to prepare for the matches without any drama.
“We’ve had issues in the autumn. That’s always very difficult for coaches to deal with. It puts you in really difficult positions,” Southgate said.
“I can only compare that with March where we came in with no dramas coming into the camp. It’s just a much better environment to prepare for football.
“We were only having to make football decisions, prepare the team, talk about football topics.
“I think for any coaching staff and any team, when we went into the World Cup in Russia we had minimal distractions going into it.
“That’s something I talked to the players about after the autumn. In the autumn discipline off the pitch and on the pitch created really the biggest issues for us and meant we didn’t get to the semi-finals of the Nations League that we were desperate to be in.
“It still annoys me when I look at that lineup – Italy, Spain, Belgium, France. It’s a brilliant line-up and games you want to be involved in.
“One of the key areas was that we didn’t have availability of players at certain times for on and off the field misdemeanours.
“Coming into the summer we’ve got to make sure we arrive into the camp giving ourselves the best chance to focus on football and that helps to create a calmer environment for everybody.”
If Southgate can ensure a trouble-free camp then he believes his side have a shot at “history” in their bid to win the Euros for the first time as they try and ride on the wave of a euphoric home support.
The 50-year-old says he is not feeling the burden of expectation: “I feel as if over the last two or three years, the team has become relevant to people again, and people are excited about the players. One day I’ll be doing a job that nobody will be bothered about the outcome, and that will be a pretty dull existence, whereas here we’ve got the chance to make some history.
“We’ve never been to a European final... only one semi-final, so our record compared to lots of nations is actually not good in this competition. So if people are excited, and have hope, that’s brilliant, and given what we’ve all been through, I don’t think we should be dampening that. People will ask what does success look like, that’s always judged in the end on the level of performances.
“Our players wouldn’t want to hear anything other than we’re there to try and win. There’s no point in going into the competition with any other mindset really, so we recognise we and the team have still got steps to take, and improvements to make, but that has to be our ambition.”