Euro 2024 thread

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  • rick_chasey
    rick_chasey Posts: 75,660

    Look I think England were a better tournament team than they felt.


    Spain beat the existing world cup finalists, euro finalists and the hosts to win so fair play - they're one of the great Euro teams.

    I think the next England manager needs to give up trying to cram all the top players into a team and create a team within which some of the top players can play.

    Oh and bring more than one left back.

  • Pross
    Pross Posts: 43,597

    I’m still amazed by how many supporters want Southgate gone. He’s taken England to the last two European finals which no other manager has achieved and to their joint second best ever World Cup finish. There were 12 managers between Robson last taking them to a World Cup semi and Southgate achieving it.

    There is so much entitlement and / or over-estimating how good English players are among supporters. Every tournament they turn up with an attitude that England should win and then have to find someone to blame when they don’t.

  • Jezyboy
    Jezyboy Posts: 3,657

    I still think you're placing too much stock in the "tournament football" thing...but I do agree with the general point.

  • Stevo_666
    Stevo_666 Posts: 61,820

    I think he's good, but we probably could do better. Linker's suggestion to hire Klopp isn't a bad idea.

    "I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]
  • rick_chasey
    rick_chasey Posts: 75,660

    Don't really see how Klopp would work in an international team.

    TBH my preference is an English manager but if you're going to go foreign get Mou or someone who can build a sort of siege mentality and can handle the kind of tactics without needing to drill it in over the course of a season.

    I think the player's love for Southgate is an underrated part of their success. I think he really has brought them together and got them playing together.

  • Pross
    Pross Posts: 43,597

    Hire a foreign manager and you'll get people moaning it should be an English manager who will then proclaim how they are vindicated as soon as there are a few bad results. I'd argue Southgate is over-performing and the issue is an arrogance among some fans and the media that England should be winning these tournaments. Someone above listed all the teams that were better than England at the tournament and yet they finished runners up.

  • kingstongraham
    kingstongraham Posts: 28,228

    The settled starting lineup was a solid defence with no fit left back, no left sided midfielder, a striker who preferred to amble about in midfield and hope to get fouled, a really good right side and a skilful central midfield. The tactic was then to play sideways in defence, give it to the goalie (the only left footed player in the team) and hoof it away.

    Each time we went behind and needed a goal, it was like a vision of what we could have had - suddenly the form players for each attacking position were put on the pitch and the dead weight was removed.

    Keep him on, but convince him that England start each match one goal down.

  • rick_chasey
    rick_chasey Posts: 75,660
    edited July 15

    Appreciate you don't have to but I sort of feel in the spirit of the game you really ought to have a coaching team that's all from England too. The national team is a product of the coaching as much as the players are. A big country like England ought not to rely on coaches trained in the big nations to pull a team together, even if their domestic league shows up the paucity of English managers over and over.

    Southgate's come through the whole youth system for the national team too - he's part of the process there.

  • daniel_b
    daniel_b Posts: 12,041
    edited July 15

    It was an entertaining game I thought, full of action, and England played better than I expected, especially given the lack of possession, Spain nearly having the ball for 2/3rds of the game, that's always going to be a tough one to win against, would have been houdiniesque to my mind had they done so.

    Pickford kept them in it, had it not been for him, it would have been 4 or 5 goals easily.

    Spain looked brilliant the majority of the time, but were not unbeatable.

    At 1-1 I thought it could go either way, but for me the better team with more cohesion won.

    Williams was incredible, as he has been the whole tournament, surprised to find out how young he is, long career ahead of him - it does look like they have gotten back to their 'glory years' of a decade and more ago, should make for an interesting world cup in 26 - wherever that is.

    The frustration for me was that it took being a goal down before the England attack really ignited, and it seemed to me that Kane (I'm not a Kane hater I hasten to add, never have been, and am not now) didn't bring much to the party, which leads to the inevitable question why did they not start with A nother striker up front - I appreciate and respect loyalty a huge amount, but when it comes down to winning or losing massive finals, someone needs to make those tough decisions.

    I half wondered if swapping things around and bringing him on for the last 20/30 minutes could have worked well, as he'd be more hungry, have to run for less time so lack of fitness less of an issue, and should they have been in the lead at that point, he would have been good at holding the ball up (if he could get it) and winning free kicks.


    I thought the majority of the team didn't look too dejected either, which makes me think they felt they played a good game, and were simply beaten by the better team on the night, which was much better I thought that feeling decisions have gone against you, and or losing it on a penalty shootout.


    I'm encouraged and optimistic about the future for the team though I have to say, but can see why for the team and Southgate it might be time for someone with a new approach and a clean slate to work from.

    Walker's advancing years is unfortunate, I would imagine he has one more world cup in him at most, and he was one of the stand out England players throughout the tournament for me, both defensively and attacking.

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  • Managing England made a muppet of Fabio Capello, so I think the job poses some unique challenges!

  • TheBigBean
    TheBigBean Posts: 22,029

    Didn't both goals last night come from missing players on the right?

  • If nothing else, Southgate has made the players likeable, so the arrogance is clearly now limited to some fans and some of the media.

  • Jezyboy
    Jezyboy Posts: 3,657

    I think your average tournament finishing position under Klopp would be the same or lower, but with a higher variability. I could see him managing a side to go out at the group stage, but also a side that could win a tournament...

    Tbh I think swapping out Southgate is probably the only way to get the team to the "next level" but is also a massive risk that could see them going backwards.

  • laurentian
    laurentian Posts: 2,568

    Incredible to think there are people slagging off Southgate after the success (massive improvement at worst) he has brought to the England team. As I said days ago in this thread, I was as concerned about him going as I was about the result last night.

    Nothing reinforces my incredulity with the haters as much as remembering 300,000 people in Luton to welcome home the 1990 World Cup squad on an open top bus after they had lost the semi final. That's what it used to be like - it never got better than a world cup semi final defeat and that was celebrated in that way.

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  • kingstongraham
    kingstongraham Posts: 28,228

    Spain just dragged the defence all over the place. First goal especially.

    I suppose being wider here when Cucurella started motoring might have done some good, but who knows? That might have opened up a different space. Walker still got into position, but it was an exceptional first touch cross.


  • Stevo_666
    Stevo_666 Posts: 61,820

    It does, but I still think Klopp (or Guardiola) would be good.

    "I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]
  • Stevo_666
    Stevo_666 Posts: 61,820

    I don't care where they come from. We've already done Capello and Eriksen so its hardly new. Anyway, if Southgate decides to go then obviously we'll have to get someone else so we might as well get the best we can.

    "I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]
  • Stevo_666
    Stevo_666 Posts: 61,820

    I just know he's a bloody good manager, not sure why you think he 'wouldn't work' in a national team? Genuine question.

    As mentioned above, I don't care if they're English or not and the nationality of anyone who wins it as manager will instantly become irrelevant.

    "I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]
  • rick_chasey
    rick_chasey Posts: 75,660
    edited July 15

    Klopp is the kind of manager, like pep, that likes to drill drill drill a very specific style of play and will overhaul a large part of the personnel to reflect that style.


    He's not quite the Pep level of creating an NFL style 'system' with pre-arranged movements and decision trees, but he's really not that far off.


    I don't think that is possible at international level. You don't have the time to build those systems. That's partly why international games go so differently and why those individual moments of player brilliance count for more.

    England particularly suffer from not having a "national style" that everyone grows up playing, so you can't just swap players in and out of a system like you can in say, Spain and still have that understanding.

  • laurentian
    laurentian Posts: 2,568

    I would say that one of the reasons that Southgate has been able to make such massive leaps with the England team is that he has first hand knowledge of English culture, the English press, English football and the weight of the England jersey. I'm not sure any european or premier league or ex premier league manager would have that same insight or understanding. SVE is a prime example of this.

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  • Stevo_666
    Stevo_666 Posts: 61,820

    That may be the case for [ insert names of random non-English manager who hasn't worked in England before]. However I don't think that really applies to the likes of Klopp or Guardiola who have managed here long enough to know how it all works.

    "I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]
  • DeVlaeminck
    DeVlaeminck Posts: 9,108
    edited July 15

    Thought England were really poor and lacking in ambition. An xG of about 0.2 until those headers on nearly 90 minutes - yet another fantastic strike masking the complete lack of chance creation.

    If you play a low block, have no threat on transition because your 9 can't run in behind and your other attackers always want it to feet then what is the plan? It turns out it's to play it back to Pickford to lump long - well at least get Toney on to battle for it.

    Holland game aside England have been unwatchable in this tournament. They've been lucky with the draw - they've been lucky other teams have missed chances and they've relied on rare moments of individual brilliance for the goals that saved them. It's not entitlement - England have gone longer without a trophy than any equivalent nation in terms of size, league, players produced. I'm not even that disappointed now - I just accept the FA couldn't run a bath. We need a manager that plays a fairly simple attacking style - not Potter, not Pep, not Southgate. Howe would be ideal - Klopp would be possible if he wanted it though how he reacts to criticism I'm not sure.

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  • TheBigBean
    TheBigBean Posts: 22,029

    I was more talking about the first goal. Above is England just before the first goal which is an unflattering snapshot, but it starts earlier as shown below. Saka is walking, Walker is overloaded (and apparently unaware), Mainoo is jogging and Rice a bit out of position.


  • DeVlaeminck
    DeVlaeminck Posts: 9,108

    I'm not convinced Klopp is a similar manager in drilling positional discipline and automations like Pep does. So I agree with Rick that kind of manager doesn't work for national teams - I'm just not convinced Klopp is that kind of manager.

    I'd still say Howe is ideal though - if he's not available now then someone like Howe.

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  • pblakeney
    pblakeney Posts: 27,495
    edited July 15

    In the top picture I see 4 v 6. What on earth are they all doing grouped together? Basically 5 players marking 2.

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  • Jezyboy
    Jezyboy Posts: 3,657

    I do think management of international teams is just fundamentally different to clubs. You just have more control over what positions your team invests in and you have more time to shape tactics in your desired style. If you're the national team manager you can't just go and rebalance your team by getting the chequebook out come the January transfer window. If your best 11 players are all midfielders/strikers, then you're out of luck. And when you leave some of the best 11 players on the bench because you think the team is better off for it, you'll get criticized no end...

    Klopp seems to have created a great atmosphere at Liverpool, so that could translate to an international team...but, hasn't he left Liverpool because he doesn't want the stress anymore! The England job isn't what you want in that case.

  • kingstongraham
    kingstongraham Posts: 28,228

    Don't think walker could do a lot more, like you say he was 2v1 and went inside leaving a massive space. They dragged everyone left and then because saka wasn't there it was open season.

  • focuszing723
    focuszing723 Posts: 8,154

    I think the problem with the England team is they should have scored another two goals, consequently by not scoring those two goals they put themselves into a precarious non winning position. Unfortunately this resulted in them coming home without the it.

  • focuszing723
    focuszing723 Posts: 8,154

    To summarise more goals than the opposition results in bring the it home.