PORTSMOUTHPOINT

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

England: What To Do?

Posted on 12:12 PM by Unknown
by Tim MacBain

Roy Hodgson: more imagination needed
(source: Wikicommons)
I am, as I am sure many of you will be very aware, not a very sporty person. I love the stuff, but can’t seem to play it properly. However, I do enjoy thinking and talking about sport, and thus I was somewhat incensed by the horrific display the English football team put up against Montenegro on Tuesday evening. How could a team with such ability put in such a depressingly bad display?

When Roy Hodgson became England manager, I think I was with the majority of people in believing that he was one of the best men for the job, and all the better that he was actually English. I am impressed with his new attitude; give young players some time on the field, and change the formation. Now, I have nothing much against the 4-4-2. It’s a very well balanced formation. But it’s SO DULL. It gives no room for imagination; one is always attacking the same way, and as soon as the opposition work out how to repel that attack, you are permanently on the defensive. That was why, when watching the build up to the match on Tuesday, I was ecstatic to see a new formation. I did think the 4-3-3 was a little dubious, for reasons I shall reveal later, but it wasn’t the 4-4-2, so I was more than happy with developments. I was equally happy with the selections.

Almost. I don’t deny that Tom Cleverley has been playing well recently, but why is he starting? Put Frank Lampard on the right of the midfield and you’ve got a simply sublime combination; even better, Lampard and Gerrard aren’t right next to each other, separated by Michael Carrick, so we won’t be faced with the problem we’ve had for so long, will we? If I may also point out the ridiculous inaccuracies of the ITV broadcasting; Milner was OBVIOUSLY playing on the right, NOT the left as their reporting would have us believe. I can understand this incorrectness before the game had started, but after half time? Honestly, this is why I can’t stand watching football on ITV. That and the blooming adverts…

So, the match begins, and England are chugging along rather nicely. A goal in the sixth minute, just what you want, and the whole team, especially Welbeck and Milner, are having a blast. However, the seeds of England’s undoing were sown in the first half. As soon as the goal was scored, as Andy Townsend said might happen, the midfield drops back so their almost having a chat with Joe Hart in goal. With that, they surrender a fair old whack of the pressure they had built up in the opening minutes. I’m afraid to say that this is the problem I have with the 4-3-3 formation; without proper regulation, it becomes more of a 7-3, with an enormous gulf between the defence and strikers/wingers.

This became even more of a problem in the second half, with Gerrard playing more and more long balls; let’s face it, Milner, Rooney, Welbeck and Cleverley aren’t going to win many aerial battles, are they? This meant that England surrendered possession, pressure, and made camp in their own half, relying on last ditch saves to stop a Montenegran goal; which, as the scoreline states, doesn’t work so effectively. It was like the England of old, reverting to the dullest of kinds of football; hoof tackle hoof hoof tackle, block, block, tackle, block, concede. Euro 2004 quarter final all over again, protecting a one goal lead.

So, what can we do?
 
In my humble opinion (which I know doesn’t have much backing in terms of knowledge/experience), we should succumb to the latest formation craze: 4-2-3-1. I was, initially, quite suspicious of this formation, but have since come to the conclusion that it offers an improvement on the basic promise of the 4-4-2, defensive capabilities, whilst offering offensive flexibility in as much as a lot of players in midfield, allowing a team to dominate possession. Keep the same backline (I for one have faith in Chris Smalling, he just needs time to settle into the international setup) apart from replacing Ashley Cole with Leighton Baines, who is FAR more capable and level headed than Cole, and use Carrick and Lampard to sit in front of the defence and feed the front four. Cleverley can be kept on the bench to provide that little spark should we need it in Gerrard’s position.

Gerrard can stop playing the accursed long ball (we know you’re good at them, Stevie, but do you HAVE to do them so often?) and instead supply some delectable through balls to Rooney, Welbeck and Milner. Rooney can hold the ball up if there’s no one in support, or can hang around the opposition’s 18 yard box waiting for one of those magical through balls. Ashley Young, Theo Walcott, and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain can provide another option for Hodgson through their speed and agility, and hey, if all goes belly up, replace Rooney with Defoe and Gerrard with Parker and tell them that AVB is thinking of selling them both; that’ll soon get some pace in the team!

All we need is imagination. Roy Hodgson has shown that he can provide a little. Now we need him to show he can provide a lot.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in Blog Exclusive, Sport | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Recipe: Fifteens
     by Patrick McGuiggan The definitive Northern Ireland traybake is the ‘Fifteen’. They are so delicious I assumed that they would be fairly ...
  • 'Porphyria's Lover': A Feminist Reading
    Josh Rampton offers a Feminist reading of Robert Browning's poem 'Porphyria's Lover'. This article was originally published ...
  • Favourite Films: Skyfall
    by Tom Harper Upon my recent exploration of the latest movie archives I was stopped dead in my tracks by Disney and Pixar’s recent announcem...
  • Interview: with Melissa Smith of ‘The Exonerated’
    by Taylor Richardson Melissa Smith , who plays a main role in the school’s production of The Exonerated , answers five questions surroundi...
  • Why Are We So Fascinated By The Gothic?
    Lucy Cole The Nightmare by John Henry Fuseli, 1781 (wiki commons) Since its humble beginnings in 1764, with Horace Walpole’s The Castle of O...
  • Portsmouth Point Poetry – War and Humanity in 'The Iliad'
    by George Laver  Priam (left) pleads with Achilles (centre) for the return of the body of his son, Hector (below). (source: bc.edu)    ...
  • Is Texting Killing The English Language?
    In this  TED talk , linguist John McWhorter analyses the linguistics of texting: " Texting properly isn’t writing at all — it’s actual...
  • Hackers: Pain Relief
    by Gregory Walton-Green , with an introduction by Benjamin Schofield Introduction Prompted by a writing exercise in Hackers, here Gregory ...
  • Is Lack of Sleep a Problem for PGS Pupils?
    by Hattie Gould and Annie Materna (image source: uratexblog.com) Sleep deprivation is a continual problem for teenagers and can be the caus...
  • Why The US Supreme Court Has Made The Right Decision Regarding Gene Patenting
    by Tim Bustin (source: biopoliticaltimes.org) On Thursday, the US Supreme Court ruled that human genes may not be patented, as “a naturally ...

Categories

  • Art and Literature (72)
  • Blog Exclusive (466)
  • Creative Writing (36)
  • Current Affairs (55)
  • Economics (12)
  • Film and Drama (62)
  • Food (12)
  • From Parents (1)
  • From Teachers (54)
  • Hackers (12)
  • History (21)
  • Language (17)
  • MUN (1)
  • Music (58)
  • Personal (45)
  • Philosophy and Religion (20)
  • Photography (66)
  • Psychology (13)
  • Science and Tech (41)
  • Sport (58)
  • Travel (14)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (346)
    • ►  September (21)
    • ►  August (20)
    • ►  July (43)
    • ►  June (52)
    • ►  May (42)
    • ►  April (41)
    • ▼  March (42)
      • Social Acceptance: The Tyranny of the Majority
      • Easter Sunday Gospel Hour: The Staple Singers
      • 'Be My Baby': A Director's View
      • Photography Club: Self Portraits
      • Good Friday or Forgiveness Friday?
      • Translation of Literature: Challenge, Sacrifice an...
      • England: What To Do?
      • Theatre Review: South Downs
      • Boris Johnson: The Irresistible Rise
      • Review: Tegan and Sara – Heartthrob
      • Formula One: Australia Race Review
      • 5 Things I Can't Live Without
      • The Budget 2013: Another Nail in the Tory Coffin
      • The Budget 2013: Will It Increase Growth?
      • The Budget 2013: No Plan B, No Recovery.
      • A Reason For Running
      • A Worthwhile War? The West's Struggle to Secure Iraq
      • Why The Iraq War Was Wrong
      • PGS Model United Nations Conference 2013
      • My Top Four Embarrassments
      • Images from PGS MUN Conference 2013
      • PGS MUN Conference 2013: A Year 6 Experience
      • Ides of March Lecture: 'Ancient Egypt: From the Py...
      • The Power of Perseverance
      • Un Héroe Local En Un Mundo de Héroes Internacionales
      • Ode to Southern Rail
      • Ultrasound in Medicine
      • Learning Life Lessons from ‘How I Met Your Mother’
      • Review: 'The Next Day' by David Bowie
      • Photography: Winter Fights Back
      • 10 Things That Make This Papal Conclave So Unpredi...
      • High Street Elegy
      • Photography: Sunshine at PGS
      • Hugo Chavez: Man of Contradictions
      • Can Women Have It All?
      • What 2013 Holds for the Gaming Industry.
      • The Travelling Diaries 2: Trains
      • Bram Stoker's Fifty Shades of Dorian Gray: Part II
      • The Best (and Worst) Drummers of All Time
      • The Pig That Wants to Be Eaten
      • Eastleigh: A Tory Reacts
      • Was 2012 the Pinnacle of British Cycling or Is The...
    • ►  February (38)
    • ►  January (47)
  • ►  2012 (153)
    • ►  December (41)
    • ►  November (48)
    • ►  October (45)
    • ►  September (19)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile