by stappard_ » Sun Jun 15, 2014 7:15 am
Compared to the same game 2 years ago when England played Italy, there was definite improvement - at least there was an inclination to attack - but for all the small gains made, the core issue of the England team (and probably by extension English football) remains unchanged. At no point in the game was there an option for the England midfield to not move the ball forward; any of the 5 players between the defence and Sturridge would receive the ball and be faced with 4 Italian players between them and a possible pass recipient, so inevitably the only option was a speculative pass forward, which in turn meant almost every move fizzled out discouragingly quickly.
Another systemic issue with this team, whoever's actually playing in it, is the idea that you shouldn't actually play football within 40 yards of your own goal. For some reason we think the only thing to do in that situation, even under no pressure, is to knock it forward again, when in reality these defenders are perfectly capable of actually playing properly and with some consideration that close to their own goal.
In all sports you're told not to do anything without a clear understanding of what you want to achieve - obviously in football there's not enough time to literally visualise the result or anything, but its depressing how often England players will play a pass (in the loosest possible terms) when you know fine well that if you paused the game and asked them what they were trying to do, the answer would either be a confused silence or "i was just trying to get it away from me/our goal". Its telling that the only real moment where a move was strung together that looked like every part of it had a clear intention - 1) pass to space for Rooney to reach, 2) cross to Sturridge specifically rather than just 'getting it in the mixer' - ended up in the only England goal.
Such a frustrating team to support because we seem to be unable to overcome systemic issues that will always hold us back against teams who know how to play. Italy weren't anything special but I had the sense that, until the last moments when they dropped too deep, they always had the wherewithal to stop attacking play that had so little conviction behind it