Coventry Telegraph

Boss draws line under Park strife as England repair rift

- By SIMON PEACH

ENGLAND manager Gareth Southgate insists his England squad are ready to move past the altercatio­n between Raheem Sterling and Joe Gomez, likening the dramatic developmen­t to a family disagreeme­nt.

The Football Associatio­n announced on Monday that Sterling would not be considered for Thursday’s Euro 2020 qualifier against Montenegro, following an incident involving Gomez at the team’s St George’s Park training camp.

The pair had been involved in an on-field clash during Liverpool’s 3-1 win over Manchester City at Anfield on Sunday, with tensions seemingly still running high as the players convened for Three Lions duty.

The pair both trained yesterday morning, before Southgate brought forward his usual media appearance by 24 hours to address the burning issue. He was careful not to offer too many details – there was no elaboratio­n on an apparent scratch beneath Gomez’s right eye, suggestion­s that Sterling was initially sent home before being summoned back to camp or on the role of other individual­s. Instead he attempted to draw the sting from the issue, emphasisin­g that a line was being drawn.

What was clear from his opening statement, though, was that Gomez was absolved of blame. “Raheem in his (social media) post last night explained for a very brief moment his emotions ran over. It would be correct to say that’s not the same for Joe,” he said.

“We are dealing with a very young squad in a sport where emotions often run high. These things happen in football. My priority is always the care and well being of all my players. All my players. “Then you have a decision to make as to whether there needs to be something further, which is my reasoning for not selecting Raheem for the game on Thursday.”

Asked if he was disappoint­ed in Sterling’s conduct, Southgate took a conciliato­ry tone and did not add harsh words to his decision to withdraw the Manchester City man from the match.

“I love all of my players. We are like a family and all family have disagreeme­nts,” he said. “Most important for any family is to come through those disagreeme­nts and work through them. I don’t expect as a manager to never have to deal with things that are unexpected or difficult.

“It’s part and parcel of the job and part and parcel of working with elite players. Our focus now is to move forward. The reality is I’m not prepared to go into details. There is enough conjecture and opinion and talk out there and we don’t need to add to it.

“As a group we’ve decided the best way forward and we’re in agreement on that. We move on from there.”

Southgate did not mention Jordan Henderson by name, following suggestion­s the Liverpool skipper was central to de-escalating the bust-up, but did suggest he was thankful for the interventi­on of calmer heads.

“We have some excellent senior players who’ve played a part in bringing everyone together,” he said.

Sterling’s social media suggestion that he and Gomez had come to an understand­ing over the incident was queried, with Southgate asked to confirm if the pair had sat down to talk together.

He stopped short of doing so, but indicated the whole squad was content with the situation and interactin­g as normal following a team meeting.

“It was crucial to me that everyone in the group is comfortabl­e and speaking and ready to move forward with football,” he said. “That’s why everyone is still in the squad and working together towards beating Montenegro on Thursday.”

We are dealing with a very young squad in a sport where emotions often run high. These things happen in football. Gareth Southgate

 ??  ?? Raheem Sterling and Joe Gomez square up to each other on Sunday and, inset, training together yesterday after the subsequent fracas at St George’s Park
Raheem Sterling and Joe Gomez square up to each other on Sunday and, inset, training together yesterday after the subsequent fracas at St George’s Park

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