Toronto Star

The waistcoat man makes U.K. swoon

Coach helps the nation believe in itself again after World Cup defeat

- WILLIAM BOOTH AND KARLA ADAM

England lost to a tough Croatian team in the semifinals on Wednesday, dashing hopes of the country’s first World Cup finals since 1966. But Brits have found solace and pride in Gareth Southgate.

Even in defeat, the country is swooning for the English manager. It’s an over-the-top crush. The 47-year-old in the natty waistcoat is the prodigal son, the underestim­ated man, whose story of redemption has inspired a nation.

The Telegraph newspaper on Wednesday compared Southgate to Winston Churchill. Seriously. Before the tournament began, few thought England would play this well.

And most fans believe the improbable rise never would have happened without Southgate.

He took young players to the brink of greatness. “They’re nowhere near what they are capable of,” he said. Britain has been going through a rough patch.

The country has been tying itself in knots over its decision to leave the European Union. Prime Minister Theresa May’s cabinet is in revolt.

Add to that, attacks with Soviet-era nerve agents out in the countrysid­e and huge demonstrat­ions planned to greet U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday.

Southgate offers hope that everyone will be able to get it sorted. “Our country has been through some difficult moments recently in terms of its unity,” Southgate said. “But sport can unite.”

Of many stirring moments for England from this World Cup tournament, there’s one that catches in the British throat. It came after England beat Colombia in penalty kicks.

As the fans went bonkers with the win, Southgate sought out the Colombian player whose miss had given England its victory.

As Mateus Uribe covered his face in shame and disappoint­ment, and wept, Southgate put his arms around him in consolatio­n.

The gesture was not lost on fans with long memories.

Famously, in the 1996 European Championsh­ip played in Wembley Stadium in London, it was Southgate who missed the crunch-time penalty kick that gave Germany the semifinal match, and later the title.

“I was the person who had ended a nation’s dream,” Southgate wrote in a memoir. “I knew this would be a major issue for the rest of my life.”

Now life had come full circle. The English manager hugged it out.

“He showed a nation how to behave,” wrote John Crace in the Guardian.

In Britain, parents used the embrace to teach their children about sportsmans­hip and empathy. “His arm around Uribe’s shoulder wasn’t a casual, passing gesture, it was one that spoke of a deep personal understand­ing,” Crace believed. “It was a moment of grace.” He is the New British Man. In a country that virtually invented soccer hooliganis­m, and gave rise to the millionair­e Premier League rock star, Southgate during his own career was the quietly competent defender, no drama, all work ethic.

He exudes solid. Married, two kids. He calls his team family. He told the lads, “write your own stories.”

During the middle of the tournament, Southgate insisted that player Fabian Delph return home for the birth of his child. Delph missed the win against Colombia, but got back in time to play in the quarterfin­al victory against Sweden.

Delph told reporters that England’s nail-biting penalty-kick shootout induced his wife’s labour.

Oliver Holt in the Mail on Sunday said Southgate’s performanc­e at this summer’s World Cup in Russia “has changed perception­s of himself and of English football.”

“His victory is a victory over the fears and doubts that have haunted us and our national side for a generation,” Holt wrote.

“For 20 years, we paid lip service to the idea that we believed in ourselves without quite meaning it. Now we believe it.”

These sports writers aren’t just writing about a game.

The chief football writer at the Daily Mirror, John Cross, tweeted, “Front pages … country divided, falling apart. Back pages … country unifying, building bridges. Simple solution: after the World Cup, make Gareth Southgate Prime Minister.”

Columnist Michael Deacon said in the Telegraph that Southgate could win as a centrist Emmanuel Macron of Britain: “Admittedly we don’t know anything about his actual politics, but to be honest I don’t think we need to because everything about him screams ‘sensible middle-ground.’ All right, maybe not ‘screams.’ More like ‘murmurs thoughtful­ly, with a concerned-looking frown.’ ”

Southgate is huge on social media too. On Wednesday, fans were uploading pictures of themselves in Southgate-style vests for #WaistcoatW­ednesday.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? England head coach Gareth Southgate embraces Dele Alli at the end of Wednesday’s crushing semifinal loss to Croatia.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS England head coach Gareth Southgate embraces Dele Alli at the end of Wednesday’s crushing semifinal loss to Croatia.

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