Mmegi

England hope Holland’s nous can shackle Mbappe

- (The Guardian)

As trepidatio­n grows over the thought of Harry Maguire and John Stones trying to stop Kylian Mbappé when England face France on Saturday night, Gareth Southgate can take comfort from the knowledge his righthand man dealt with this kind of situation when Chelsea won the Champions League in 2012.

Steve Holland’s experience is a reminder that any player, even the most devastatin­g forward at the World Cup, can be contained if the tactical approach is good enough. Southgate’s assistant was on the backroom staff at Chelsea when they became European champions 10 years ago and he remains proud of how Roberto Di Matteo’s unfancied side stopped a peak Lionel Messi from scoring when they reached the final of the Champions League at the expense of Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona.

“There are a handful of players you need to consider special attention to,” Holland says. “Messi has been one and probably still is. You’d have to put Mbappé in that kind of category. We need to look at trying to avoid leaving ourselves in situations where he is as devastatin­g as we’ve all seen.” Holland believes the tie with France is a 50-50 game.

He knows the world champions have forwards who can score a goal in the blink of an eye. He will remember, too, that there was an element of luck involved when Chelsea beat Barça given that Messi, who was just as terrifying as Mbappé is now, missed a penalty in the second leg. England need to strike the right balance. Holland, who has worked for José Mourinho and Antonio Conte at club level, is fascinatin­g on the tactical challenges posed by Mbappé. Do England have to be cautious? Or are they bold enough to try to force him back?

“I remember having a conversati­on with Mourinho when he was with Real Madrid,” Holland says. “[Dani] Alves would be the rightback for Barcelona and flying forwards in attack. He would play a soldier against him to try to stop him, but then you don’t get any threat from your team from the soldier. You’re just stopping

somebody. You’re not actually hurting them. Then he would try to play [Cristiano] Ronaldo one against one because Alves was fantastic going forwards but maybe not quite as good defensivel­y as a consequenc­e.

“There is a plus and a minus to every one. It’s that cat and mouse of: ‘Yes, we have got to try to deal with him, but we also have to try to exploit the weakness that his super-strength delivers.’ Trying to adapt your team to cover for that while still trying to create your own problems is the challenge.

“I would like to think we won’t just be looking to stop a player. We would be looking to try to do everything possible to limit his super-strength while still trying to focus on our own strengths because we have good players; players just as likely to cause France trouble as Mbappé would be to us. We have to find that balance.”

The obvious question, then, is whether England keep faith with their 4-3-3 and back Kyle Walker to stop Mbappé flying down the left. Or is this the moment to switch to a back five, protect Stones and Maguire by moving Walker to right centre-back and start Kieran

Trippier at right wing-back?

“The perception has been that the five is more negative than the four, which I don’t completely agree with,” says Holland, who explains why England used a five against Germany and Italy at Euro 2020. “Germany played 3-4-3 and we felt that if we matched them up we could be superior individual­ly.”

But was it necessary when England met Italy in the final? “You could go either way. They had and still have a similar way of playing where they create five players high in attack. If you’ve got four at the back, you get overloaded at times and that can cause a tactical problem, so that was part of the rationale in that game.

“We have a group 18 months further on than the Euros. One or two of our younger forwards, there has definitely been an evolution. To win tournament­s you need to be the best team in both penalty areas.”Holland thinks about England’s win over Iran in their opening game in Qatar. “Six goals is a good start but two goals a game against is not going to win us the World Cup. We’ve now had three clean sheets, which is clear progress.

 ?? PIC: GETTY IMAGES ?? Superstar: Mbappe is giving England sleepless nights
PIC: GETTY IMAGES Superstar: Mbappe is giving England sleepless nights

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