Monday 16 August 2010

Let Capello get on with the job

The fall out from the World Cup refuses to go away. The media enjoyed five minutes slating the players, but realising that the players would be around a little longer and any continued onslaught would see the stars boycott interviews, end columns and move to more 'friendlier' papers, they had to stop. Their next move was obvious, and one they have tried before - blame the foreigner!



They fell in love with the Italian after finding the wally with the brolly incompatible. But like any spurned lover, or should we say stalker, they hit back with a vengeance. Capello's problem was he did not play the media game. He was obnoxious, arrogant, and dismissive. He did not care about them, and cared even less about their opinion. That was fine when results were positive but the hacks were sharpening their knives for when it went wrong.



In a sense, Capello only has himself to blame. The title winning manager had ruled with conviction but when it came to naming a 30 man preliminary squad and then a final 23 there was an air of desperation. All the strategic planning went out the window. Suddenly Capello realised that England were primed to get through the qualifying group, but no thought had been given to the finals.



This is certainly not a new phenomenon. England have consistently underperformed in major tournaments, when they have qualified. While Germany accept indifferent qualification results but expect and receive excellent tournament performances, England seem to focus on the opposite. Most teams England face should pose little to no threat, even with third choice keepers, uncapped strikers and backup centre backs.



Instead, Capello played a non-goalscoring striker who he then had to drop, and found that relying on Rooney against determined opposition was inadequate. His slow central midfield pairing of Lampard and Barry, along with an egotistical and erratic Terry, were totally exposed. And the only changes he made were like for like.



Has Capello learnt his lesson? The friendly against Hungary saw a 4-5-1/4-3-3 attempted for the most part. Ironically it was when we switched back to 4-4-2 that we conceded. A few new caps were handed out, and fringe players received game time. But when it comes to the qualifiers against Bulgaria and Switzerland, will Capello continue with the in vogue formation, or switch to the tried and tested (and failed)?



Either way, slating him every five minutes is hardly helping. Such is the psyche of the English media (and too many fans it has to be said) that even a 0-0 half time score in a friendly is met with thousands of boos. England could have played worse and been 2-0 up. What would the fans have done then?



The media has lost respect for him, that is abundantly clear. Now he is simply an easy target. I'm not sure convincing wins in the remaining internationals of the year will satisfy a blood-thirsty press.



If those journalists were true fans they would see the Italian's failings, but they would also give him the support. England have not won anything for a long time. They have not really been close to winning anything for a long time. Maybe its not the manager's fault, maybe the players are not good enough. Either way, getting on their backs is not helping!

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