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September 2, 2008

Foreigners Killing The Premier League



 

I used to think people were crazy to complain that foreigners in the Premier League were killing the England national team. But now I think they’re right – only it’s not the foreign players, it’s the foreign owners that are to blame. The massive influx in money (highlighted by the recent madness at Manchester City) has created a culture in the Premier League where winning and staying in all competitions is important not just for the fans and players, but also to the long-term financial health of the club. Meaning that trivial things like World Cup qualifiers and even cup games are given second-class status to Premier League weekend games and European competition.

Take the example of Steven Gerrard’s latest injury. It seems that Gerrard has been playing on a groin injury for a while, even after further aggravating it in a midweek Champion’s League qualifier that Liverpool had to win. So what does Manager Rafa Benitez do? Asks him to gut it out for the weekend Premier League game and then schedule surgery for the international break – which, as you can imagine, did not initially sit well with England Manager Fabio Capello.

Rafa Benitez insisted he had made his peace with England coach Fabio Capello yesterday and dismissed claims of a breakdown in communication over Steven Gerrard’s latest injury absence.

Gerrard will have the second of two minor groin operations today and will miss Capello’s first two competitive games in charge, as England begin their World Cup campaign against Andorra next Saturday and Croatia four days later.

Capello was reportedly unhappy at being kept in the dark over Liverpool’s decision to arrange surgery for their skipper in the immediate aftermath of Wednesday night’s Champions League qualifying round win over Standard Liege.

Now it seems that captain John Terry, Frank Lampard, Owen Hargreaves, Wes Brown, and Ashley Cole will also miss one or both international games – which leaves me wondering how England is expected to get a result against Croatia – the team that will most likely be their toughest competition in the group – in a competition where, unlike Euro 2008 qualifying, winning the group is paramount to qualification. I know it happens on-and-off already, but is this going to get to the point where clubs will start to come up with all kinds of excuses to keep their best players out of all international games?

I suppose the good thing is that some non-regulars like Fulham’s Jimmy Bullard will get a chance to impress Capello. But without some kind of continuity in Capello’s system, how can the team be expected to play as a unit? Some would say Capello should drop the overpaid regulars and give the young England stars more consideration. But Capello seems to have a fondness for a more grizzled England team (see:David Beckham) with Michael Owen the only notable exception.

I say instead of picking an England All-Star team, just send Aston Villa. They seem to be the only Premier League team stockpiling young England talent (Ashley Young, Gabby Agbonlahor, Gareth Barry, Steve Sidwell, Luke Young, Curtis Davies, etc.) and there’ll be no worries about not playing together. I suppose they need to find someone to replace Carew, Laursen, Friedel and a few others, but it would certainly have saved them from paying both Shteve McClaren and Fabio Capello all that money when they could get the guy (Martin O’Neill) they probably should have hired after Sven left. Of course we’ll look past the fact that Villa’s owners are American and their manager is Irish!

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August 23, 2008

The Roundup from 2008-08-23



 

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February 13, 2008

Arsenal: The Soul Of English Football



 

You know – I see a lot written and said about how Arsenal with their foreign manager and lack of English talent are ruining the Premier League and the soul of English football. Similar comments were made when Fabio Capello was hired as England manager – xenophobic, to be sure. Then when the Premier League unveiled their plan to go International, the same complaints came up yet again. But why? Sue Mott wrote an interesting article in the Telegraph proclaiming that while Premier League boss Richard Scudamore was a blight on the soul of the game for the average fan, he was no idiot, and that there must be something afoot. Something on the order of stemming a breakaway league or an individual TV rights:

There is no doubt that Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester United and Liverpool would find a lucrative market abroad. With their glossy foreign players and three out of four foreign managers, the next logical step would be to have training bases and matches abroad, perhaps one day soon? in a global Super League which invites the likes of Real Madrid, Inter Milan and, if money is the only language, LA Galaxy to join in.

Perhaps this is the vision that terrifies the Premier League stragglers, all 16 of them. They fear the day that the supreme artists of domestic football, the money-makers and rakers of the Premier League, move on to a more natural habitat on the French Riviera or a purposely-bought Caribbean Island. Anything to cling on to the coattails of that little goldmine. Anything is better than languishing in the remnants of decapitated, land-locked English football.

Look at it. Manchester United have record revenues but profits only enough to cover their enormous debt. Chelsea is seemingly never going to balance the books and keep winning titles. Liverpool is as mortgaged as the entire west coast of California. Then you have Alex Ferguson ducking out after his city came to a standstill to honor their fallen so he could promote a tour in South Africa or wherever it was … only a few weeks after taking his team to play a testimonial in Saudi Arabia in the middle of a week of a busy season. These new foreign owners are not about breaking even. They’re about making a profit, and doing it in whatever way possible. Including an integrity-compromised 39th fixture.

As an Arsenal supporter, it would be nice to have more access to my team here in the US, but I understand. However, it should be noted that of the Big 4, Arsenal are the only ones with majority English ownership and direction, a solid business and operating structure, and with an Academy producing English talent that aren’t hemorrhaging cash and chasing dollars 4 and 5 timezones away. As Obi Wan in Star Wars would say, “These are not the droids you are looking for.”

Other Items:

  • Thanks to United dropping 5 points since their Saudi trip, Arsenal are now 5 points clear and level on goal difference with 12 contests to go: Arsenal vs Blackburn Highlights
  • David Beckham has gotten a lot of flack for not giving back to the soccer community in the US: LA Times’ TJ Simers: So much for Beckham being a voice for MLS (PDF)
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  • January 5, 2008

    Take THAT, Fergie!



     

    Beckham at Arsenal

    I suppose with Fabio Capello flying in this weekend, what better way to stay in the news while staying fit. And while Mr. Wenger has never turned down an opportunity to stick it to Fergie. Plus David did grow up in North London.

    David Beckham began training with Arsenal yesterday (complete with Number 23 training kit) in what can only be described as a veritable ‘love-in’. Arsene said:

    “He doesn’t live far away and always loved Arsenal. That’s why we help him.”

    I think it can only be a good thing for all parties. Beckham has the obvious incentive of keeping fit under Arsene’s revolutionary regime, but our younger players will also get something they’re not often afforded – the chance to train with a truly experienced player. Beckham is now the eldest outfield player on the training ground, and what’s more he’s an extraordinarily gifted one. If he can’t teach the likes of Fabregas and Denilson a thing or two about striking a dead-ball, nobody can.

    Beckham at Arsenal Beckham at Arsenal Beckham at Arsenal Beckham at Arsenal Beckham at Arsenal Beckham at Arsenal Beckham at Arsenal Beckham at Arsenal

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    December 18, 2007

    Don Fabio Unveiled



     

    The new England manager is introduced to the press – and he doesn’t speak English. Surely a sore spot for the proud English football supporters.

    And the newspapers were right on target with the derision. The Sun:

    So what did we learn yesterday? Precious little to add to what we already knew.

    The mountain of information made available to us had included his love of philosophy, classical music and art.

    He is even rumoured to have a £5million Chagall hanging on his wall. Which made a change from Sven, whose own taste was more along the lines of Shag-all.

    He also likes hiking in Tibet and visiting archaeological sites.

    Well, he’s come to a classic one here.

    England, the country whose football is in a similar state of disrepair to the Foro Romano, the ancient Roman ruins he knows so well from his time in the Italian capital.

    The Daily Mail seemed a little more perturbed:

    But when the formalities were completed, it was clear it was not Capello being welcomed into this New England, it was us.

    We are now outsiders. We wait for some translated banality to be passed on like grateful tourists in our own national game. All thanks to a governing body that has so completely lost sight of its duty that the country’s team has merely a passing acquaintance with England.

    In fact, the only evidence of a meaningful English presence in this entire charade is on the banknotes bearing The Queen’s face currently being whisked away to an Italian bank by Capello and his legion of coaching staff.

    But The Telegraph gave him the respect his experience and presence commanded:

    Fabio Capello swept into an auditorium at the Royal Lancaster Hotel in London yesterday like a distinguished emeritus professor from Italy intent on educating a bunch of unruly English undergraduates. His audience was swiftly captivated, spell-bound by the presence of a managerial heavyweight now in the Football Association’s employ.

    The FA have been involved in some momentous calamities in recent years -building the white elephant that is Wembley, dithering over the much-needed National Football Centre, and appointing Steve McClaren – but yesterday they displayed a fitness to govern by asking Capello to bring some method to the madness of English football.

    From McClaren to Capello, from the Wally with the Brolly to the Man with the Plan, in 26 days: even by England’s surreal, switchback standards, this has been a staggering turnaround. The game’s maturing process from penalty-missing, tournament-missing adolescence to trophy-chasing adulthood has only just begun.

    It’s going to be an interesting and fun four years. Expect Becks to get his 100th and play some part on the bench in a leadership and experience role. At least for 2008.

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    December 11, 2007

    No Mo. Fabio’s Next



     

    The “Jose Mourinho to England” dream is dead. I’m guessing they didn’t like what he was selling (or more likely what he wanted to control). But apparently he won’t be without work for long:

    The ex-Chelsea boss has been out of work since leaving Stamford Bridge by mutual consent in September.

    Mourinho had been the favourite to replace the sacked Steve McClaren as manager of the English national team, however the Portuguese tactician is believed to have turned down the Football Association’s job offer.

    According to the Gazzetta dello Sport and a number of English tabloids, the reason for this rejection is AC Milan.

    Jose In A Skirt

    The Daily Express apparently have a hilarious take on the fact that Jose used England to generate interest from other clubs.

    Fabio Cabbage CapelloAnd it now looks like Fabio Capello is the next in line. He’s considered too old for club jobs and he’s had success, winning titles at every club he’s been with. And he was the one who motivated Beckham’s return to form with Real Madrid. TheDaily Express has a take on that too – warning that Fabio Cabbage will have eventually trouble with the media such as the picture on the left.

    UPDATE: It’s Official – FABIO’S THE MAN

    Fabio in a TuTu

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