England’s catastrophe against Iceland was a collective effort.
As the players lost their grasp of the basics on the pitch, Joe Hart
and Wayne Rooney chief among them, Roy Hodgson and his coaching staff
looked on helplessly from the touchline. “He is watching the game like a
cow watches a train pass by,” was one Belgian commentator’s verdict on
the manager. “He has no idea what is happening.”
Despite ducking out of the post-match press conference in Nice,
Hodgson can trust he will feature prominently in the subsequent inquest.
Indeed, it is difficult to look beyond him when considering most of the
mistakes which led to England’s untimely exit. But there is another
name who has been singled out, and not for the first time. Sky Sports
News have been briefed that senior England players questioned Raheem
Sterling’s selection for the Iceland encounter.
That fingers have been pointed at one individual sums up the
cowardice that crept into England’s play as the game unravelled on
Monday night. As players stopped showing for the ball, like statues
struck by the impending doom, one wonders if the blame game was already
afoot in their minds. Hodgson certainly had an exit strategy mapped out;
his conveniently prepared statement appeared to be only thing he didn’t
make up on the spot in France.
But what is it about Sterling that rankles? As a developing
21-year-old under enormous pressure and scrutiny, he deserves patience
from fans and the media. Instead there has been little restraint. His
performances against Russia and Wales were certainly below his
capabilities, but the criticism that followed was both excessive and
unpleasant. “Without his pace, would he be a professional?” asked Joey
Barton. If only Barton’s brain were as quick as Sterling’s feet.
There is something more sinister to Sterling’s treatment though,
wrapped up in the tendency of modern media to appeal to the audience’s
base emotions of anger and jealousy. A ticker totting up Sterling’s
earnings in real-time was unashamedly included in one article, preying
on the absurd resentment caused by his £50m move from Liverpool to
Manchester City. How dare this incredibly talented youngster seek to
better his situation, as though we wouldn’t all do the same in his
position.
The hippy crack exposé, fatigue before England’s qualifier against
Estonia in 2014, a protracted transfer saga: all fairly routine events
in the life of a modern footballer, and yet presented as a rap sheet in
Sterling’s case.
Along with most of the squad, he didn’t play as well as anyone would
have hoped at Euro 2016 on the back of a challenging first season in
Manchester. But has anyone stopped to wonder why his confidence is
crumbling? England have an immense talent in Sterling, a player who
could light up the international stage for the next decade. Let’s not
pander to outrage and destroy him at the start of his career.
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