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Welcome to The Late Flag! And thank you for reading our regular (well, nearly) postings on this site. We're here to talk about football, since that's what we do all day anyway. If you enjoy this site, or hell, even if you don't, please recommend it to your friends and football-loving acquaintances. The "comments" link at the end of every posting lets you add your views, so please - argue with us, agree with us, add to our points, and we'll discuss your opinion in future posts. Right, that's the intro covered, so here's the footy for today...

Thursday, September 06, 2007

You Don't Know What You're Doing


Earlier this week, Sir Trevor Brooking – the new head of the FA’s Youth Development Programme – spoke to the BBC about his concerns for the future of English football. According to cockney Trev, the influx of foreigners into the Premier League is preventing English kids from breaking through into first teams, and creating an ever-smaller pool of players for Steve McClaren to choose from. He points out that in 1992, at the start of the Premier League, the percentage of English players in our top-flight was around 60%. Now it’s around 30%, and dropping. Brooking is in a position where he can assess very clearly the state of youth development at the moment, and he’s backed up his argument with figures to demonstrate his point. Looking at it that way, it’s easy to suggest he makes a fair argument. Easy, but wrong. I’m about to show you that Brooking is talking b*****ks, in the hope that as many of you as possible will cease to listen to a single word that comes out of this tw*t’s mouth.

There are so many flaws with Brooking’s argument that I hardly know where to start. But first of all we’ll not actually argue with anything he’s said. Lets just assume for a minute – wrongly – that everything Brooking has said makes sense, and is correct. Lets pretend we’ve got too many foreigners, and this means lots of young English kids can’t get a game. That scenario would in no way stop ALL young English kids getting a game, just most of them. In other words, only the very best young English players WILL get a game, and they’ll be playing – on a Saturday as well as every day in training – against the very same players they’d have to face at International level. It is surely of benefit to someone like Michael Johnson at Man City, for example, to train alongside Dietmar Hamann or Elano, and I’d much rather he was playing against Tomas Rosicky than against Michael Thomas.

Back in the day, on a Saturday afternoon the likes of Johnson learned nothing about the way foreign players played their football, but they knew all about how third-rate Englishmen played. That’s great when you’re playing away to Torquay in the FA Cup, but leaves you a bit short going away to Italy. So argument one with Brooking’s theory is actually twofold – even if there ARE “too many” foreigners over here, the cream of English players will always rise to the top (Gerrard, Carragher, Cole, Terry, Richards, Agbonlahor, Derbyshire…) and when they do, they will undoubtedly learn from these foreign players, leaving them better acquainted with the variety of footballing styles that exist in the world.

Argument two is where I start to take issue with his figures. Brooking argues that back in 1992, 60% of Premier League players were English, and this is obviously a figure that is of benefit to the national team. 1992? Wait there a second, Trev – what happened in 1992 again? Wasn’t that the European Championships where we didn’t qualify from our group, and only scored one goal? Yes. Yes it was. And what happened in 93-94 Trev? Didn’t we totally fail to qualify for USA 94? Now maybe, just maybe, that had something to do with the likes of Tony Dorigo, Carlton Palmer and Tony Daley getting a f**king game for England just because they got regular games for some of the top sides in the country.

We were absolutely s**t in the early 90’s, and this is the era that Brooking wants us to model ourselves upon. How handy for him then, that in McClaren, we have the worst English manager since Graham Taylor. We’re halfway to 92 standard already. Now all we need to do is get rid of the likes of Berbatov, Torres and Ronaldo so that Neil Mellor and Chris Eagles get their chance to play for England. Jesus Christ.

My third argument is based on quality. Much has been made of the fact that English players cost far too much money compared to their foreign counterparts, with £6m Kenwyne Jones costing nearly twice as much as Benni McCarthy. This, it is argued, leads English managers to shop abroad. I agree with that to an extent, but it’s nowhere near the whole story. By and large, when a Premiership manager buys a foreign player, it’s because he’s the best man for the job, plain and simple. Look at Manchester United. This is a club where the odd 4-5 million pounds is neither here nor there, whether they pay £8m or £12m for a player is, in the long run, all the same to them. So when they picked up Cristiano Ronaldo for £9m or so, it wasn’t because Stewart Downing would have cost a bank-breaking £12m from nasty greedy Middlesbrough. It was actually because Ronaldo is the dog’s b*****ks, and Downing is fairly ordinary by world standards.

So the foreign players coming into the game are doing so because they’re some of the best available, not purely because of cost. Taking the Ronaldo example, every English full back in the country – Luke Young, Nicky Shorey, Liam Rosenior, Stephen Warnock, every lad we’d only really rely on in an injury crisis – has played against probably the best winger in the world, on a regular basis. In argument one I commented that playing against foreign players helps young English lads learn about different styles – here my point is those players also tend to be class. When I mentioned before I’d rather see Michael Johnson playing against Rosicky than Michael Thomas, I meant he’d be learning about the way a foreign player likes to play the game in a different way, but it’s all the more true that he’d be playing against a class act. This would help him develop even more than learning about different styles. Some foreign players bring a different flavour to the Premier League, others bring a different class. And both are vital in preparing our young players for the rigours of International football.
Y
The vast majority of foreigners in the Premier League genuinely improve the quality. Take Portsmouth – John Utaka (who no-one had heard of) looks a far better buy than David “England Cap” Nugent. If Dorigo, Daley and Palmer were playing now they’d be nowhere near the England squad, or their club’s first teams. They’d be shown up as the s**t they were every Saturday afternoon, and not just when they put an England shirt on. We were genuinely surprised in the 90's, to find out these players couldn't cut it - but the likes of Ronaldo are now providing us with a weekly yardstick to measure our kids against.

In England today, we have the biggest crop of genuinely top-class players we’ve had for generations. Gerrard, Rooney, Terry, Ashley Cole, Joe Cole, Little Mickey Owen, hell – even the likes of Crouch and Wright-Phillips when you think about it – these lads would get into most teams around the world. (Think what AC Milan could do with a target man like Crouchy, or the pace and width of a Cole or SWP. Being Italian, they’d also appreciate Terry, Lescott, and Taylor too.) We also have a superb crop of promising youngsters – Walcott, Agbonlahor, Young, Davies, Carson, Derbyshire, Bentley – and yet we’re undoubtedly underachieving. That’s pretty worrying.

But what’s more worrying is that the head of youth development, at the organisation that runs our national team, actually thinks that our underachievement is down to a lack of quality in our players, rather than looking at the make-up of the team, their style of play, or tactical know-how. In other words, he’s not looking at the Manager. Instead, he’s propagating the exact same “We don’t need Johnny Foreigner” attitude that lead to us appointing a sub-standard manager in the first place, simply because he was English. In other words, the FA still haven’t learned their lesson.
Y
Oh – and thrown in to boot, the head of youth development says the kids aren’t good enough and it’s the clubs' fault – not his. Trevor, YOU’RE the one who should be making sure they ARE good enough, not blaming others when they’re not performing. How the f**k has this xenophobic arse-hole got his job when he’s clearly so clueless? The only answer I can give is that those above him at the FA must be even more so.

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Premier League Winners and Losers


Winners


Liverpool
It might only have been Derby, and a very poor Derby at that. But the way the Reds completely demolished their opponents left no-one in any doubt that they’re a much improved side this year, and they’ll take some stopping. After dominating – but failing to finish off – Chelsea two weeks ago, Liverpool are showing a new-found ruthless streak in front of goal that has been the only thing missing from their game for two years. If they keep this up, the current 2-week stretch in which they’re top of the league won’t be an isolated one.

Arsenal
Also showing a new-found cutting edge this season. Goals from midfield (Gilberto aside) were woefully lacking last season, but without Henry the Gunners’ undoubtedly talented midfield players have stepped up to the plate. They absolutely destroyed Portsmouth with the sort of free-flowing moves we’re used to from Wenger’s teams, but shocked the nation by actually finishing them off. Three times. On this form, they’re making those that wrote them off look very, very stupid.

Aston Villa
Showing signs of turning into a decent side, all things considered. Personally, I haven’t forgiven them for their part in that St James’ bore-fest a couple of weeks ago, but they’ve got a solid backline, and the raw pace of Young, Moore, Agbonlahor etc will cause many teams problems. Even more so when they can finish, like Sunday. Too many off days from those boys though – like the one at St James’ – could cost them a European place, as you struggle to find what looks like a consistent goalscorer in the Villa ranks.

Blackburn Rovers
Proving me wrong. Totally wrong. I thought that not spending money would automatically mean a move backwards for Rovers, bearing in mind the money spent by Newcastle, Man City and others. But by adding Santa Cruz and keeping the rest of his side together, Mark Hughes has put together a quality side, with depth and character. Not many teams will get a point at Ewood this season, although a few might pick up some bruises…

Mickey Owen & Steve McClaren
Beating Wigan 1-0 at home barely counts as a success for Newcastle. I mean, it is a success, but one that was entirely expected, and perhaps by more goals. So whilst Newcastle will be satisfied, they won’t be delighted. Two men who will be are part-time striker Michael Owen, and part-brained England manager Steve McClaren. Owen proved that every once in a while he can perform the feat of playing 90 minutes, scoring a goal, and not getting stretchered off. Which was probably beyond the wildest dreams of either him or McClaren.

Louis Saha
As above, but with Alex Ferguson as the delighted manager.

Everton
Somewhat scraped their result, but Yakubu scoring on his debut is good news. It seems him & Johnson could provide a decent partnership up front, and that’s something Everton have been lacking. The industry and indeed creativity of their midfield has never been in doubt, and under Moyes they’ve always been solid at the back. If those two can provide the goals their potential suggests, then watch out Tottenham – your 5th place is under threat.

Anderson & Nani
Cristiano Ronaldo paying for a few £3000-a-time hookers sounds like a nice welcome present to me. If you’re into that kind of thing.
(Which they clearly are)


Losers

Martin Jol
When you take off the best player on the pitch and lose a 3 goal lead, you know you’re going to get some comeback on that decision. When you’re already the Premier League’s most under-pressure manager it’s only going to make things worse. And the timing and nature of Fulham’s equaliser must have him feeling like the whole world is against him. A draw was harsh on Spurs, but they’ve only themselves to blame after missing a bunch of chances that would embarrass Arsenal.

Bolton
Just when they thought they’d got things going again, they go and f**k it all up. They really will be in trouble if they’re not careful, not even Nicolas Anelka’s stunner could get them something at home to Everton, a game they must have fancied their chances in.

Reading
What’s going on? They’re getting battered all over the place at the moment, and the way they started the season promised so much too. Perhaps it’s easy to get these lads motivated for games against Chelsea and Man U, but when West Ham (who they beat 6-0 last season) come calling, no-one can be arsed. Will need to fix things soon.

Derby
Going…going…and Paddy Power have paid out already on them going down this season. 2 or 3 more defeats similar to ones against Spurs and Liverpool lately will see that decision entirely justified. On Saturday, they were awful. Witness Torres’ 1st goal – and Liverpool’s 3rd – where Mascherano charged 20 yards to dispossess an aimlessly ambling Derby midfielder, allowing Torres to bamboozle two defenders and the keeper before finishing with a side-footer you try in training. And when you watch Babel’s goal – great as it was – it just gets worse from a Derby perspective. Not good enough in any department, frankly.

Chelsea
After going a goal down, they appeared shapeless, and completely devoid of ideas. Somehow ended up with Malouda in central midfield and Joe Cole on the right – Mourinho’s tinkering appeared desperate rather than decisive, especially when first Alex and then John Terry lumbered up front to provide a target man. As if Drogba and Pizzaro weren’t enough. I would normally be tempted to write this one off as one of those days, but the performances against Brimingham, Reading, Liverpool and Portsmouth have all been pretty much as bad. Chelsea are seriously lacking in form, and perhaps confidence. Comparisons of Liverpool’s, and then Chelsea’s performances at Villa Park show a huge gulf in form.

Cristiano Ronaldo
In the words of one of those now-infamous hookers…

“When I walked in the room I recognised Ronaldo straight away – I’ve fancied him since the World Cup, and I was thinking ‘get in! I’ll do this for free!’”

Of course, before she had the chance to make that offer, he splashed out £3000 for her services. Lesson here lads – offer your hookers a drink first, get to know them a bit, don’t just dive straight in with the cash like a flash Portuguese tw*t. You never know what you might get for free.