Daily Mail

I COULDN’T LISTEN TO THAT SONG FOR 20 YEARS

But now Southgate hopes it really is coming home

- MARTIN SAMUEL reports from Moscow

The history boys stood in the middle of Luzhniki Stadium and looked around. Gareth Southgate and his faithful lieutenant, Jordan henderson, unlikely lads on the verge of a unique place in this nation’s hearts, and its sporting pantheon. What a journey it has been. The manager no one wanted and the player whose very presence came to represent english football’s failings. how many World Cup contenders would find room for henderson in

midfield, it was asked? How many great nations would be managed by Southgate?

Yet here they are, these mighty overachiev­ers. Southgate, the most innovative England manager in 20 years, Henderson, whose performanc­es this season have reshaped perception­s of his worth to club and country. A Champions League finalist with Liverpool in May, he could be a World Cup finalist in July. One game. This is all that stands between them and England’s first final on foreign soil. Ninety minutes, maybe a little extra, against Croatia to secure a return to the Luzhniki on Sunday.

This truly is one of the great underdog stories. This site has witnessed some great moments for British sport, duels between Coe and Ovett, triumphs for Daley and Mo, but these were athletes at the pinnacle. Golden days, yes, but half expected.

Nobody, but nobody, placed England in Russia this late in the day. The last eight was the optimistic call, the last 16 and a spirited departure would be acceptable. There were plenty who were not even predicting that. Yet here they are. A win away in what is fast becoming one of football’s great redemption tales.

‘Football’s coming home,’ England’s fans sang in Samara, and Southgate conducted them, happily. He used to hurry from the premises when he heard that song. It made him sad. The memory of 1996 and the shootout penalty he missed was still raw, even two decades later. We are only beginning to appreciate that pain now.

Southgate has done a fine job of masking the hurt he has carried for so long. He hides it in the English way: self-deprecatio­n, rationalis­ation, jokes. Deep down, though, it burns.

Asked what it meant to him to hear ‘Football’s coming home’ ringing out again — and no doubt expecting an upbeat answer — Southgate’s honesty was startling.

‘Frankly, I couldn’t listen to it for 20 years,’ he said. ‘It has a slightly different feel for me.’

Later, he expanded. ‘I would just walk out of the room if it came on,’ he said. ‘It is an anthem and has followed the team for a long time but it’s been involved in some difficult moments for me as well. The 96 tournament ended in disappoint­ment and I suppose it is nice to be able to put a different frame around it now.

‘I still look back on it as an incredible life experience and feel fortunate to have been involved, but I needed a bit of time to get over what happened. Put it like this: I’ll never choose to stick it on, it will never be on the playlist. But I can listen to it now.’

It’s fair to say, then, that Southgate will not be channellin­g the ghosts of semi-finals past on the eve of this match. His players would have little to learn from the ancient history of 1990 — a slow, rather ponderous game, if revisited with eyes used to the athletic extremes of the modern game — or even from 1996 — a home European Championsh­ip in which England never left Wembley.

‘ We feel the past is of no bearing to this team,’ Southgate said, ‘and we’ve been consistent about that from the off. It was my problem being part of that history. Today’s players get blamed for what my generation and generation­s that followed did. But these guys had an opportunit­y to start from scratch and create their own history.

‘Most of them weren’t born when a lot of the stories we talk about happened. They should be judged on their team and I think, to be fair, people have done that. They’ve seen we’ve got good lads who are incredibly proud to play, who are playing in a slightly different style to the one we’ve seen, playing with confidence on a big stage. And they’ve seen we’ve got trust in them doing that.’

Nor will Southgate be burdening his players with lengthy addresses on the talents of Luka Modric and Ivan Rakitic. The pair represent arguably the finest midfield partnershi­p of this World Cup, and Modric may prove its stellar talent. Certainly England have no one like him, no one who can dictate the play quite the same way.

Given that James Rodriguez was injured when England played Colombia, and Belgium fielded a second team in the final group game, Southgate’s players have faced no one of his quality yet in the tournament.

England will prepare for this challenge, obviously, but not, Southgate insisted, to the point of obsession. Little worth in getting as far as this and playing scared.

‘In November, we faced Brazil and Neymar was in the side,’ Southgate added, ‘so we will highlight certain players and the positions they’re likely to take, as we did that night. We look at some of their attributes that need additional focus. Equally, though, we always look at how we can hurt them, what are the areas we can exploit in what we do?

‘Look, I’ve played in a lot of teams where — bloody hell, we played Nuneaton Borough in the cup with Middlesbro­ugh once and I thought their centre forward was Eusebio because we’d built him up that much in the pre-match briefing. You can overdo informatio­n for players. The lads know Croatia’s team, but also that we’ve got good defensive organisati­on.

‘That has to be spot-on the further you go in the tournament, you have to be more compact and play with more awareness. They’ll be the best team we’ve played. Croatia have players that can produce moments you’ve got to be aware of, but we don’t have to shift from what we’ve been doing because we can cover those players from our system.’

Therein the contrast. Back home there is a party, a German supermarke­t, Aldi, will close early on Sunday in fairness to its English staff, and there is ‘waistcoat Wednesday’, a world in which football comes home and nobody gets hurt.

Out here, a group of young men — and that includes the manager, who is relatively inexperien­ced beside his contempora­ries — are attempting to pull off what would stand as one of the great tactical triumphs, given the deficienci­es of this team. Just as Sir Alf Ramsey came up with a clearly defined strategy in the later stages of the 1966 tournament, so Southgate’s plan has propelled England to the brink of a place in history.

He looked vaguely perturbed at the thought of returning to a nation besotted.

‘Let me tell you, whether we win or lose the game, my life will not change,’ Southgate insisted. ‘I will go home, take the dogs for a run, and disappear to Yorkshire. I have been in sport long enough to know what my life is day to day. I will get more attention and it won’t be easy to go out for meals in certain places but it won’t change my view of the world or the things I do.’

Although he might stay if you put on Football’s Coming Home. Just for a verse or two.

 ?? FOCUS IMAGES ?? Music to his ears: Gareth Southgate conducts England fans on Saturday. Below: Skinner and Baddiel
FOCUS IMAGES Music to his ears: Gareth Southgate conducts England fans on Saturday. Below: Skinner and Baddiel
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 ??  ?? History men: Southgate with Jordan Henderson yesterday
History men: Southgate with Jordan Henderson yesterday
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