Posts Tagged ‘england soccer’

Who To Watch For In The Future

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

With the 2010 World Cup finals well on the way, several of England’s players may be facing their last chance to win.   By the time the 2014 Brazilian World Cup finals roll around, John Terry Gareth Barry, Rio Ferdinand Steven Gerrard, Ashley Cole, Frank Lambert David Beckham and David James will all be well into their thirties so the team will be oh so different

Who is going to replace England’s greats in the next few years? Some likely replacements include…

Joe Hart    (Manchester City, Goalkeeper) – Joe Hart has made a name for himself at Birmingham, where he has been on loan, and is enjoying status as a third choice goalkeeper to be used in the finals.  Hart may find himself at first goalkeeper status as James nears 40 and Green fails to perform, especially if he makes his way into the first team at Manchester city or that of another large Premier league club. When he does, it may be some time before England are looking for a new number 1.


Kieran Gibbs    (Arsenal, Defender)
– Gibbs may have been injured at Arsenal, stunting his career, but the left sided defender is expected to make an outstanding come back.    Gibbs, who has the astounding reputation of being able to play successfully anywhere on the left flank, will improve in years to come.  Clichy can expect to be pushed hard for a spot on the Arsenal team next season and Gibbs is expected to join the ranks of the national team soon. 

Jonjo Shelvey    (Liverpool, Midfielder) – Shelvey, experts agree, maybe the only one who could replace Steven Gerrard for both Liverpool and England national team.  The 17-year-old Shelvey might need a couple of years to advance through the levels at Anfield, but he could end up being as useful to England’s national team and Liverpool as Gerrard has.

Daniel Sturridge (Chelsea, Attacker) – Sturridge has found his progress hampered at Chelsea due to Anelka and Drogba’s partnership but the former Manchester City striker has immense potential.  we can expect to see Sturridge grow as he becomes a stronger player in the fiercer contributor for Chelsea in the next season, and he may even be expected to claim Anelka’s place on the team.    Still young and naive at times, he does have an unerring knack for goals and could prove to be a boon for both Chelsea and England.


Connor Wickham (Ipswich Town, Attacker)
– Not heard of him? Wickham is a prodigious talent and is already being linked with a big money move to a Premiership giant, all at the tender age of 17. The attacker has become a big name on the first team at Portman Road, where he began playing shortly after turning sixteen.  It isn’t a case of if Wickham moves into the Premier League, simply when and for how much.

So, while this looks like being the final World Cup for many of Capello’s stars, it also heralds the start of an exciting future for many.

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Why The Premier League Is Ruining England’s Chances

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Just days before the World Cup starts and Rio Ferdinand, Manchester United and England captain, has been ruled out of the competition after sustaining a knee ligament injury during training.

 

Many people may put this down to bad luck.   Ferdinand’s injuries are alternately cited as the result of poor attention to prior injuries, and the outcome of a long and unwelcome injury jinx in which players are hurt directly before finals.

I don’t hold with these black magic theories and prefer to believe that the reason that so many players on the brink of wearing the England home jersey is down to one thing and one thing alone, the sheer intensity and the volume of matches that the top English (and those from other countries playing in the Premier League) are forced to play in an average season.

If you are playing for a top side, who have qualified for Europe, then you can expect to participating in four competitions each season.  The Premier League, The Champions League or Europa Cup, The FA Cup and the Carling Cup.   This list doesn’t include any of the pre- and post-season games that occur in a season, or the number of pre-season friendlies in which a team can participate.

Then there is the speed and intensity of the game in England. Whereas on the continent the game is often played in a more stop/start fashion, in England it is often full blood from the first whistle and played at a speed and pace which makes injuries inevitable.  A number of top players are known to engage in between forty and fifty difficult games in a single season, plus training.

The workload is immense and the toll comes on the player’s body. Injuries are unavoidable with this kind of consistent strain.

Look at England’s current squad. We’ve already had to lament the loss of Rio Ferdinand, Bobby Zamora, Owen Hargreaves, and Michael Owen from the World Cup tournament, a very sad fact, considering that they are all great players. Capello eliminated Theo Wolcott After his game performance suffered due to an injured shoulder that he sustained in 2008 match against Stroke. 

The players on the team that are fit, didn’t get that way easily Ledley King needs specialist training to keep his knees in prime condition. Other recovering athletes with injuries this season include Steven Gerard, and Joe Cole, Ashley Cole, Aaron Lennon, Glen Johnson, Wayne Rooney and David James. People like Gareth Barry will be missing the first game of the World Cup finals against the United States.  Soccer hero David Beckham finally had to call it quits after an Achilles injury pushed him out of the playing squad for the finals.

It’s an odd quirk of fate that our love of the game in England, our thirst and desire for big games at a quicker pace, more often, is seemingly at odds with the ability to produce that which almost all England fans craves more than anything else: A second World Cup winning team.

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