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Showing posts with label England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label England. Show all posts

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Is Scott Carson the Worst Debutant England Keeper?

Well, think again. Making his competitive debut for the England national team on 21 November 2007, Carson committed a schoolboy error in the 20th minute by allowing a speculative 20m drive from Portsmouth's Niko Kranjcar to slip into the net.

And with that, England's hopes of reaching next year's European Finals went up in smoke. England eventually lost 2-3 to Croatia with some slack defending and marked their first Finals non-appearance since 1984.

Born in 1985, the young 22-year old Carson was pushed to guard the goalmouth as Tottenham's Paul Robinson faded into obscurity following a drastic dip in form in both domestic and international soccer fronts. Bought by Liverpool from Leeds Utd after the latter's disastrous financial woes were exposed, Carson was however never able to move ahead of current Liverpool number one Jose Reina.

Constantly warming the bench and facing the likely prospects of not making to the England squad, Carson made a loan switch to Aston Villa this season where he impressed with a series of fine performances and clean sheets.

But to be fair to Carson, his four defenders protecting him should not be absolved. Veteran Portsmouth defender Sol Campbell was a pale shadow of his usual robustness while Everton's fullback Jolean Lescott was out-of-sorts playing with Campbell in central defence. Manchester City's rightback Micah Richards gave a raw performance which is below par and Chelsea's leftback Wayne Bridge played listlessly to expose Carson in conceding the second goal.

In 135 years of international soccer for the English, Carson's debut performance ranks among the worst. But is it really that bad? Consider the following goalkeeping incidents: in 1878 Conrad Warner debuted for Scotland, leaked an incredible seven goals and never played for the national squad again. Forward to 2000 where promising Ipswich Town's Richard Wright made his England debut against minnows Malta also at age 22. Foolishly, he gave away two penalties and topped it by scoring an own goal. He went on to secure a prized move to Arsenal but performed unsteadily. Presently, he is languishing in the West Ham reserves when he should have peaked as a keeper of his age.

England's failure to secure a single point against Croatia that would have booked them a ticket to the Euro 2008 Finals has impacted the country in more than one way.

First, they immediately fell to 12th in Fifa's world rankings and 10th in Europe after defending European champions Greece leapfrogged them. This implies that England will not be one of the nine seeded European teams for the 2010 World Cup qualifiers; rather, they are regrouped together with Croatia in qualifying Group F. Note that only the group winners automatically qualify for a trip to South Africa, making the job of the new England manager even tougher.

Second, the economic fall-out is heavy with the British economy expected to lose up to £1b due to England's elimination. This conclusion was derived from an examination of the economic impact of Euro 2004 and World Cup 2006 Finals. We can all but expect a drastic drop in advertising revenue and consumer spending next summer.

Undoubtedly, Carson's name will not go down well in history. Thankfully, soccer fans are in general notorious for being capricious, spitting their anger on every other fall guy on the pitch. And so it won't be long before the next Carson comes along. Or will the English get their revenge against Croatia come late next year?

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Which Big Name Player Will England Leave Out?

England is one of the best supported football teams in the world. With the English nearly assured of a place in the 2010 World Cup, the question on everybody's mind would be who is manager Fabio Capello going to take to South Africa? To be more exact, which big name players will be left out?

The player everybody is talking about today is Jermaine Defoe. Overlooked during the last World Cup, Defoe is in scintillating form, even salvaging a draw against Holland by scoring 2 goals after coming off the bench. There's still a long way to go yet, but if Defoe can maintain his scoring streak, there is no way Capello could leave him out this time.

With Wayne Rooney virtually assured of his place upfront and Capello's preference of Emile Heskey, it looks like a battle between Peter Crouch and Carlton Cole for the fourth strikers position. Crouch might not look like a world class striker, but in my opinion, he was England's best striker during the last World Cup and shouldn't be left out. That must mean the end of Michael Owen's World Cup dreams. Once one of the hottest strikers in the world, and only 29 this year, Owen must be kicking himself for his ill fated move to Newcastle United and his subsequent injury woes.

But it's in midfield where I think the biggest surprise will be. Because of the keen competition for striking positions, Theo Walcott must surely be deployed in right midfield, especially after his master class against Croatia in an earlier qualifying round. With Aaron Lennon and Shaun Wright-Phillips in the form of their lives for Tottenham and Manchester City respectively and Owen Hargreaves coming back from injury, the biggest casualty for England might be David Beckham.

Beckham would be 35 come 2010 and is desperate to secure a loan move to a top flight team to ensure his World Cup place. But even though he has figured regularly for England, time is running out for him and I will not be surprised if he's left out after the qualifying stages.