The Guardian (USA)

'A moral maze': Gareth Southgate tells young England players the party is over

- Jacob Steinberg

Gareth Southgate has said England’s young players have proven nothing yet and warned them not to risk harming his squad’s reputation after Tammy Abraham, Ben Chilwell and Jadon Sancho were ruled out of the friendly against Wales on Thursday night following their Covid-19 rules breach last weekend.

England’s last two camps have been blighted by indiscipli­ne and Southgate made it clear the “circus” caused by off-field problems risks heaping unnecessar­y pressure on the team. Abraham, Chilwell and Sancho have apologised for their behaviour. Their participat­ion in the Nations League tie against Belgium on Sunday depends on the outcome of coronaviru­s tests.

Southgate said his senior players have worked hard to rebuild a connection with fans after the humiliatin­g defeat by Iceland at Euro 2016 and he wants to avoid any more distractio­ns. The September camp was dominated by England’s manager dropping Harry

Maguire after the defender’s criminal trial in Greece following allegation­s of a violent altercatio­n with police and then sending Phil Foden and Mason Greenwood home for Covid breaches. Foden and Greenwood, who are not in this squad, had invited two women to the team hotel in Iceland.

“We have to recognise that things like this affect the team,” Southgate said. “They affect the energy. They take time to deal with and that time would be better spent being able to focus on preparing for training, having coaching conversati­ons with players.

“You want an environmen­t with the players that the pressure on the team is not made higher than it already is by having this circus going around it. We have achieved that very well. The players who have been with us for a long time deserve huge credit for that.

“We are going back to Iceland and some of the squad this week were involved and they have had to get through a lot of rough to get to a point where the team were respected and getting results which have not been achieved for 20 or 30 years and we are not prepared to let that disappear.

“The younger players coming in have got to realise they are in a position where they can feel comfortabl­e with this group. That is important as you want them to feel they have got the freedom to play and can settle into

the group but they have to realise they have done nothing yet. They have done nothing with us and have it all to prove. We have got to get that balance right.”

The manager said that England benefited from a calm atmosphere in the camp when they reached the semifinals at the 2018 World Cup. “If we have the types of things like we’ve had in the last couple of camps then we give opportunit­y for those sorts of stories to be written, so we have to try and give ourselves the best chance to perform and by having calm ship going into Russia, I think it gave us a better platform on which to perform.”

Southgate, who has less than a year to prepare for the delayed European Championsh­ip, will host Wales at Wembley without several of his most exciting young players. But whereas Greenwood and Foden were punished last month, Abraham, Chilwell and Sancho could return for the glamour tie with Belgium and the Nations League game against Denmark next Wednesday.

The trio broke the government’s “rule of six” guidelines after attending a surprise birthday party for Abraham in London last Saturday and have been forced to delay their arrival with the squad to prevent the risk of infection within the group.

“I’m not certain that punishment is always the correct phrase because that suggests we are taking a moral decision on what’s happened,” Southgate said. “One of the difficulti­es that these sorts of situations create is that you are in a moral maze.

“In terms of a few days off, I’m not sure that’s what any of those players wanted. They are missing the opportunit­y to play for England. They may well depending on assessment on symptoms or testing, if they are not back with us before Friday, and that’s difficult to gauge those timelines, then they will miss Sunday’s game as well. So that affects the team and affects them really.”

Southgate will play an inexperien­ced team against Wales and admitted Jordan Pickford’s form for Everton is a worry. Burnley’s Nick Pope is set to start against Wales, while Manchester United’s Dean Henderson is knocking on the door. “We know that Jordan has made errors,” Southgate said. “Nick actually made errors at the weekend. I always go back to the fact Jordan’s performanc­es for us have been excellent. I am not oblivious to his performanc­e at Everton but there can be lots of factors within individual­s’ performanc­es at their clubs.”

Southgate said that England benefited from a calm atmosphere in the camp when they reached the semifinals at the 2018 World Cup. “If we have the types of things like we’ve had in the last couple of camps then we give opportunit­y for those sorts of stories to be written, so we have to try and give ourselves the best chance to perform and by having calm ship going into Russia, I think it gave us a better platform on which to perform.”

England (probable): Pope; Walker, Coady, Keane; Trippier, Phillips, Winks, Saka; Barnes, Calvert-Lewin, Grealish.

 ??  ?? Gareth Southgate watches his England squad training at St George’s Park, before hosting Wales at Wembley on Thursday. Photograph: Eddie Keogh for the FA/Shuttersto­ck
Gareth Southgate watches his England squad training at St George’s Park, before hosting Wales at Wembley on Thursday. Photograph: Eddie Keogh for the FA/Shuttersto­ck

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