Wednesday, June 09, 2004

ENGLAND TEAM PROFILE : Keeping the faith

When England were knocked out of the FIFA World Cup quarter-finals by losing 2-1 to Brazil in a match they had led, coach Sven-Göran Eriksson admitted: "We did well in the first half, until added time. We seemed tired and lost a little bit of our shape."

Second-half comebacks
Less than two years on, and England are no longer a team that shows their best before half-time. Indeed in winning UEFA EURO 2004™ qualifying Group 7 they did not concede a single second-half goal, and came from behind in three of their six wins, as well as their draw at home against F.Y.R. Macedonia. Their new-found mettle was also shown in both games against runners-up Turkey, as they won the home match 2-0 with two goals in the last 15 minutes and withstood a late bombardment to draw the final fixture 0-0 in Istanbul.

Stable team
Eriksson was helped in his task by his stable squad - his first-choice team at the end of qualifying differed little from the one that started the campaign. The most important change was in goal, though, where slips by David Seaman in the October 2002 draw with the Macedonians persuaded Eriksson to turn to the younger, but experienced, David James, who kept four clean sheets in the remaining six games.

Defence constant
The first-choice defence of Gary Neville, Rio Ferdinand, Sol Campbell and Ashley Cole remained constant and reaped the benefits of familiarity. Wayne Bridge proved an able deputy at left-back for Cole, while John Terry produced a magnificent performance as Ferdinand's replacement in the decider in Turkey, with Gareth Southgate and Jonathan Woodgate also having filled in at centre-back during qualification. Phil Neville remained a versatile replacement, not least for brother Gary.

Reshuffled midfield
While captain David Beckham went from strength to strength on the right of midfield, scoring five goals and producing some inspirational performances, the left remained a question mark. Eriksson's favoured solution became the switch of Steven Gerrard from the middle to the left flank, with Nicky Butt taking over the anchorman role and Paul Scholes supporting the attack. Kieron Dyer, Frank Lampard and Owen Hargreaves all played their part in reserve.

Owen leads the line
In front of Scholes, Michael Owen remained the main striker and scored five times in the campaign, but alongside him teenager Wayne Rooney edged out Emile Heskey for the home game with Turkey in April 2003, and scored in the September games against F.Y.R. Macedonia and Liechtenstein. Rooney - the youngest ever England international and goalscorer - and Heskey both played in Turkey with Owen injured, while Darius Vassell proved a useful substitute, opening the scoring at home against the group runners-up 15 minutes from time.

Team spirit
But as much as talented individuals, it was team spirit that was vital to England, with Beckham often the single-minded personification of that will to win. Even when the squad was unsettled by the Football Association's decision to exclude Ferdinand on the eve of the trip to Turkey for missing a drugs test, they responded with a determined performance to clinch the group by a single point.

High expectations
England have only reached two UEFA European Championship semi-finals, which by the high expectations of the home fans is a disappointing return. The blossoming of what has long been touted as a golden generation of talent seems finally to be coming to fruition, though, and provided the squad is not again exhausted by the gruelling domestic season - all but Beckham and Hargreaves play in England - for once their fans' faith may not be misplaced.

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