Sunderland Echo

England should be a competitiv­e team for years to come - Gareth

- Steve Brown Football Writer

Gareth Southgate is excited for the future with England and expects them to be "competitiv­e for years to come".

Southgate, who is celebratin­g five years in charge of the Three Lions, recently signed a two-year contract extension to keep him in the role until December 2024.

His spell so far has been an overwhelmi­ng success, having taken over a team in turmoil following two disappoint­ing tournament­s and the quickfire sackings of Roy Hodgson and Sam Allardyce.

After making the last four at the 2018 World Cup, the 51-year-old took England to their first major final in 55 years at Euro 2020 before losing on penalties against Italy.

Now with the 2022 World Cup and Euro 2024 to look forward to, he is targeting silverware.

"I remember standing here five years ago, when the opportunit­y first came, and talking about what we would like to do with the team and ideas about how we'd like to work," he said.

"The last five years have been a fantastic challenge, we have created some great memories for England fans. We are hugely excited about what we are doing and what we have done. It was important to get qualified so that was all out of the way and there was never a suggestion our focus was somewhere else.

"In the end that is the dream. We feel we can continue to grow. England should be competitiv­e for years to come ."

Southgate has already delivered plenty of memories, with victories over Germany and Denmark at Wembley this summer the highlights.

"This period since we qualified is the first time we have had a chance to sit and remember those things ," he added.

"To take a country to its first final in 55 years, for everybody involved, all of the staff, all of the players and all of the fans, some of those memories this summer will live with me forever.

"In Russia we brought a connection back with the fans. This year was unique because we had all been locked away, and everything we have lived through. We have got some generation­s of fan who always think it's been this way. Let me tell you it hasn't."

Few would have backed Southgate to succeed, despite a strong showing in his role as Under-21s manager.

He inherited a team that had recently lost to Iceland in Euro 2016 and seen Allardyce sacked after just one game in charge.

Southgate used his considerab­le man-management and people skills to change the environmen­t within the squad, phasing out older players, and setting the Three Lions up for a possible golden period.

He added: "Confidence was low. It wasn't a group that was dis-united but it was low on confidence because of the two past tournament sand two changes of manager in a couple of months.

"We needed to stabilise things to begin with and qualify for a World Cup. That was a priority.

"But what we knew is that there was a generation of younger players coming through to support the guys that were already there, that could provide real competitio­n for places, with some good experience­s of winning at junior level, technicall­y really good players that could play in a slightly different way to traditiona­l England teams of the past."

 ?? ?? England celebrate a Harry Kane goal against Denmark.
England celebrate a Harry Kane goal against Denmark.

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