Thursday, 17 May 2012

England Euro 2012 Squad – Player by Player Analysis


Following on from perhaps the most underwhelming squad announcement in the history of professional sport, the Hindu Monkey casts his eye over the 22 football players (and Stewart Downing) who have somehow been selected to carry the nation’s hopes and dreams this summer. And once again trash them.

The Keepers:

Joe Hart
A flawless selection, one of only three world class players England have available, the first name on the team sheet.

Rob Green
Inexplicably selected for his country again despite dropping down a division and not even being very good there. Should be nowhere near the plane, let alone the number 2. Prayers are being said that Hart stays fit up and down the country.

John Ruddy
Solid season for Norwich rewarded with international call up. Good shot stopper if far from international class. 3rd choice keeper so unlikely to play but inclusion still represents a gamble.

Who should have gone?
One of Paul Robinson or Ben Foster should have been spoken to about going as the reserve keeper. Both experienced and better than either Green or Ruddy. 3rd keeper should have been someone young and for the future to gain experience. Ben Amos or Jack Butland should be on the plane.

The Defenders:

Glen Johnson
Terrible at the last world cup and in and out of the Liverpool team this year owing to injury. Is, at best, England’s 4th finest right back. His selection, like others, feels like a feeble olive branch to Liverpool FC.

Phil Jones
Raw and unproven, Jones had a hopelessly mixed season for Utd despite gaining an absurd number of plaudits for doing so. Energetic, passionate and undoubtedly talented, his distribution and positioning is erratic at best. Just about deserves to go owing to lack of other options and at least having the right attitude.

Gary Cahill
Played half the season for the worst defence in the league and has been inconsistent for Chelsea. On his day he’s a fine centre back though; and unlike so many others, he’s yet to let England down.

John Terry
A selection that redefines the term “offensive” – the situation which the FA have got themselves and their country into over Terry goes beyond parody. Shouldn’t be on the plane for form or personal reasons and will only serve as a distraction to the squad. An unforgivable error from Hodgson.

Joleen Lescott
Has been the best English centre back in the league this season. His superb performances have been often overshadowed by the mercurial Kompany. He is still prone to the odd error, but has done more than enough to warrant a place on the plane.

Ashley Cole
No arguments here. Despite the man being about as likeable as a dodgy kebab on an upset stomach.

Leighton Baines
Easily the next best left back and again, no arguments. Not picking these two for the left back slot would have been like picking Stewart Downing and Jordan Henderson in midfield. Hold on...

Who should have gone?
Micah Richards stands out as the most strange. Superb for Man City whenever he’s played, he would also have been fresh having been given the last month off. Jags also had to make it, especially given his history of playing with Lescott. There was a paucity of options here which is just about the only thing you can say in defence of the selections, and it’s no surprise he’s only taken 7 defenders and overloaded the midfield. But Terry and Johnson should not have travelled, more so given how truly awful they both were against Germany last time around. Ryan Shawcross would also have been an option and is arguably a much better defender than Phil Jones.

The Midfield:

Gareth Barry
Barry is a tough one to argue. On the surface he’s had a fine season, the unsung hero in a title winning team. However, he was exposed at City whenever Ya Ya Toure didn’t play, who essentially did all his running for him. England have nobody anywhere near as good as Toure and the fear is that, at international level, Barry will be vulnerable as soon as he comes up against pace. 

Frank Lampard
A selection that beggars belief. No single player has let his country down more than Lampard in my lifetime. That he has amassed 90 caps is an insult to every English footballer of the last ten years. He hasn’t played well for his country in over 6 years and will be 34 at the tournament. A totally nonsensical choice given his history and capacity to crumble whenever he pulls on an England shirt.

Scott Parker
Brilliant for Spurs all season but sadly now injured. You have to hope he recovers in time because the standby option of Jordan Henderson feels like a practical joke that’s horribly backfired. That said, even a fully fit central midfield of Parker/Barry looks like an accident waiting to happen. M’Villa and France could carve through them like a knife through butter.

Steven Gerrard
Probably should be on the plane, but as captain? Come on Roy. Gerrard hasn’t been half the player he was for two years now following a series of injuries and Liverpool have played notably better without him. As it is Hodgson has selected the same captain who was so horribly undermined during the World Cup. This would make sense if Terry hadn’t travelled, but that he has just makes it seem like the manager has put his head in the sand. Arguably, Gerrard has also caused much more trouble than Terry has over his career… he just has a much better lawyer.

James Milner
The Mr Average of the England set up. I can’t even bring myself to comment on his inclusion. He is at least fresh and works hard.

Theo Walcott
Deserves his place after a decent season with Arsenal. Still frustratingly hit and miss but given the lack of pace elsewhere in the squad he had to go.

Alex Oxlaide-Chamberlain
The only true wild card selection, the Ox simply has to get games. If he remains on the bench for the entire tournament his presence will be questioned. The hope is that he can do a Rooney of 8 years ago. But right now that looks like a very faint hope indeed…

Ashleigh Young
His selection for the Euro’s will be a hammer blow for the Olympic Diving Team following Ferguson’s comments that his squad will “only play for one team “ this summer. Has had a solid, if controversial season and remains a match winner on his day. Something that can’t be said about much of this lot.

Stewart Downing
There is, put simply, nothing about this selection that makes sense. Downing has never done anything for his country in a competitive match and has just had the worst season of his career. He played almost every league game for his club and did not get a single goal or assist. He has no real pace and is so fragile mentally he would make Arsene Wenger blush. His inclusion is wrong in every conceivable way. He should not be making a 50 man squad. A complete and utter disgrace.

Who should have gone?
Almost none of this lot for starters. If you were going to take an ageing, past it midfielder Paul Scholes was a better option than Frank Lampard and Michael Carrick, whilst average, is still better than either James Milner or Gareth Barry. Aaron Lennon and Adam Johnson must wonder what on earth has happened that Downing has been selected over either of them and it’s a shame that there’s no place for a younger, central presence like Tom Cleverly. Braver still, would have been taking a look at the excellent Leon Britton, who’s 93% passing accuracy this season was better than Xavi’s. Also for Swansea, both Nathan Dyer and Scott Sinclair have had seasons 800% more productive than Downings and are young, talented and unscarred by previous failings. Hogdson explored none of these options and selected the most cowardly 8 players available, plus Oxlaide-Chamberlain. Seemingly just for the hell of it.

The Forwards:

Wayne Rooney
Suspended but had to travel. Will be fresh for the final group match when England will have already been eliminated…

Andy Carroll
Two good performances all season against John Terry should have sent alarm bells ringing for Roy that the latter shouldn’t be going anywhere near the tournament, yet instead Hodgson has selected both players. Oddly, whilst I wouldn’t have taken Carroll even if he agreed to a hair cut, his selection seems more comedic than horrific and he’s one of the few people I’ll looking forward to watching. If only to see how often he’ll fall over.

Danny Welbeck
Has flattered to deceive often this season and is arguably a better player out wide in a 4-3-3. Still, he is at least mobile, young and quick. However, that it has come to the stage where he will most likely start against France, is a sign of quite how far English football has fallen and how little hope we really have of getting out of the group.

Jermain Defoe
I just don’t like him. Although if he really is the Secret Footballer I’ll take it all back…

Who should have gone?
Peter Crouch in a nutshell. A proven international goalscorer and a wonderful professional. For anyone who disagrees, take a look at this - http://ongoalsscored.wordpress.com/2011/08/07/the-peter-crouch-myth/ - elsewhere Sturridge has faded badly but should probably still have gone for the wildcard factor. Grant Holt and Danny Graham both deserve a place more than Carroll and I would probably have selected Fosu Gharban over Jermain Defoe.  

Whichever way you look at it, those first two games look like massive, massive asks for this squad. On the one hand, you can understand Hodgson’s thinking in the sense that when these players fail again, he can truly wipe the slate clean and escape blame free, ideally having time to plan a younger, more vibrant squad for the World Cup. The bottom line is though is that remains a cowards way out. Surely he cannot truly believe that he can succeed where better managers have failed and unite Terry, Gerrard, Barry & Lampard into a world class spine? No. England were probably about the 8th or 9th favourites for the title before the announcement and I’d now rate them closer to 13th or 14th. Even if they get out of the group, which they won’t, they’ll most likely play Spain next.

My prediction? Beaten by France, draw with Sweden and Ukraine. I’m honestly cheering for Germany…

Monday, 14 May 2012

5 Things We Learnt From Watching Football This Weekend - Week Thirty Eight

1. This has been a season to remember.
It’s hard to know at this stage how much of a seismic moment City’s beyond dramatic title win was yesterday. Putting aside that first City, then Utd should have put this title to bed long ago, the cold hard facts state that as the clock ticked past 91 minutes Manchester City needed an absurd two goals in three minutes to win the title. That they did it, in a style every bit as theatrically heart breaking as Utd had once won the Champions League, was the final twist in a season more dramatic than any the Premier League era has yet thrown up. The title changed hands four times on Sunday, as did the relegation battle and the fight for 3rd. Spurs, who saw off a disappointing Newcastle for 4th, now have the un-envious honour of being the first club having to wait to see if they have qualified for the Champions League. It would not be against type in this season of drama if Chelsea denied them that right. This is the first time since the Premier League started that the title has been decided by goal difference and both sides deserve credit for creating such a genuine race to the finish line. City, all attacking thrusts, defensive solidity and bizarre self-destructs have been the better team. A team, it has to be cynically said, that was very expensively assembled. Utd by contrast, smack of a team if not in decline than in need of some serious repairs. That they got to 89 points this season is little short of a miracle. Both a reflection on the poorness of the other challengers, and of the continued brilliance of Ferguson. For all those who sneered at the return of Paul Scholes, his comeback has to be considered an unequivocal success given his record states he lost but one game (against City). As for those who predict City will go on to “dominate” for years to come, that still seems like a long way off. Utd will come back again, as they will do every year until Ferguson steps down and you have to think that certainly Chelsea will offer more of a threat next time around. Arsenal remain dependent upon RVP staying and the nightmare scenario is that City snap him up this summer. That would probably mean curtains for Wenger and his merry band of entertaining balsa, but for now they can at least take solace they will play Champions League football yet again at the Emirates. In all, whilst there is clear evidence that the Premier League has come down a level or two in class, it shows no signs of relinquishing its title as the most entertaining major league in football. Yesterday was the fitting end to a season that sometimes lacked in skill and quality, but made up for it tenfold in fun. 

2. Except of course… if you support Aston Villa.
Aston Villa deserved to go down, let me get that right out there from the start. QPR’s heroic effort before losing in injury time deserved to see them stay up on its own; and Bolton have been brilliant since Muamba collapsed. They have delivered against the odds performances full of heart and flair and were cruelly relegated owing to this season’s 342nd wrong call that television replay's could easily have cleared up. Villa, under the alleged “management” of Alex Mcleish, limped above the drop zone for virtually the entire season by attempting to draw all 38 games 0-0. Only Wolves won fewer games than Villa, a paltry seven all season including just four at home. They scored 37 goals in total, less than all the relegated clubs and have won just once in the last 17 games. They are negative, feeble, boring beyond all reason and shorn of creativity and guile. In terms of entertainment, they are the worst team I’ve ever witnessed in my life. I’ve had the misfortune of watching them for 90 minutes four times this season. Twice I feel asleep and the other two times part of me died inside. If one thing happens this summer… one thing… please, please, for the good of all humanity can it be that Alex Mcleish is forbidden to ever work as a football manager again. Please. I’ll even take John Terry walking free and punching the air in a Judd Nelson homage as he leaves the court house. Nobody deserves another season watching that. Not Villa fans, not football fans, not anybody.

3. Joey Barton should have the book thrown at him.
Despite City’s improbable comeback, Joey Barton’s two minutes of madness went unpunished as QPR somehow avoided relegation. His team deserved that, but he did not. Whilst the initial red card seemed if not harsh, a bit baffling (surely Tevez deserved the same punishment?) what happened afterwards was simply unforgivable. Told to leave the pitch, Barton effectively assaulted Sergio Aguero before trying to head-butt Vincent Kompany. If he hadn’t been held back, mostly by Micah Richards of all people, you got the impression he would have weighed into at least three other players. In many ways that was a shame, because as Balotelli got involved for absolutely no reason whatsoever, we were denied what would have surely been one of the great Premiership moments – Mario vs Joey, the punch up. The potential comedy of two entertaining knobheads slugging it out at Eastlands aside, Barton’s actions are simply unforgivable. He has had too many chances for too many teams and should be banned for as long as possible. The FA should grow some balls and really throw the book at him. Ideally one of those philosophical hardbacks he loves so fucking much.

4. Anyone who doesn’t think Vincent Kompany is the player of the year is a complete tool.
Ok so Van Persie gives him some competition, virtually carrying Arsenal to 3rd on his own through a series of sublime goals, but beyond that nobody comes even close to the performances of City’s captain this year. Kompany is the complete defender; he is a younger, more powerful version of Vidic and has been City’s leader both on and off the pitch this year. When he’s been suspended or injured, City have stumbled. When he’s played, he’s not only kept all the major teams at bay but scored crucial goals as well (not least in the Manchester derby). Put simply, he is world class and, along with Ya Ya Toure and Joe Hart, didn’t deserve in any way to finish the season empty handed. How he didn’t even make the top six in the official player of the year awards is baffling. Well, far more important and prestigious, is my player of the season award and he captains my team of the year below. As the dust settled on this remarkable season, nobody deserved to lift that trophy more than him.

PJ Official Team of the Year

Krul
Walker Kompany Coloccini Baines
Scholes Toure
Silva Rooney Dempsey
Van Persie

Bench: Hart, Lescott, Bale, Britton, Aguero, Ba/Cisse (pre Jan/post Jan)

5. Roy Hodgson has his work cut out. 
With the media and fans already against him, deprived of his best player for two games and with a central defensive crisis, Roy Hodgson will do well to come out of Euro 2012 with any credit whatsoever. With Terry up in court and losing form, Rio unable to play two games in a row and Chris Smalling now joining Michael Dawson on the injury list, Hodgson is running out of options to shore up his defense. In central midfield he must resist the temptation to pick Gerrard, Lampard & Scholes. One of the three makes sense, two is still too reliant on the failed old guard and three would smack of genuine madness. Of the three, Gerrard you'd think should be the one in the squad, but he is half the player he once was and already looks too tired to compete in another tournament. Hodgson does at least have several flying wingers on which to call upon, even if the cries from some to include Stewart Downing make it seem like they haven't watched him play in the last 12 months. Up front Hodgson must take Rooney & Welbeck given the partnership they're formed at club level and with the latters flexibility. Beyond that is anyone's guess. Hodgson is a big admirer of Zamora but he has been awful since moving to QPR. Carroll has been superb for 120 minutes all season and Grant Holt would be a massive, if pleasingly brave, gamble. It is likely that he will turn once again to Crouch & Defoe, the perennial substitutes of the England set up. Both have had good seasons in difficult circumstances, but already the shape of the squad resembles that of the last failed championship one and that cannot be allowed to happen. Hodgson must be brave and pick players who are young, fresh and hungry. Getting out of the group would be a fine achievement under these circumstances, with anything else a massive bonus. France are playing brilliantly again, Ukraine are at home and our record against Sweden is well documented. Hodgson needs time and patience and should not be judged on this tournament, especially given it could be over before our only world class forward has kicked a ball.

PJ's 23 Man Squad for Euro 2012
 
Hart, Foster, Amos
Cole, Baines, Walker, Richards, Jones, Cahill, Lescott
Parker, Barry, Britton, Scholes, Cleverly, Johnson, Young, Walcott, Chamberlain
Rooney, Welbeck, Crouch, Holt 

 

Tuesday, 8 May 2012

5 Things We Learnt From Watching Football This Weekend - Week Thirty Seven

1. Michael Carrick is no Ya Ya Toure.
Despite the fundamentally inaccurate opinion of Fosu Gharban that Ya Ya Toure remains an “average” player, the evidence is fast amounting that the Ivorian is anything but. City’s late surge to their first Premier League title has seen Toure play a pivotal role. Mancini must also take some credit here in how he has started using the player. For the last five games, he has deployed Toure deeper alongside Gareth Barry and then, with the game getting more stretched, has brought on De Jong to allow Toure to play in the space. This tactic ultimately won Manchester City the league this weekend as Toure powered forward to score two unstoppable goals. The Ivorian is a player for which the phrase “everything in his locker” was invented for. Strong, quick and powerful, he is as adept at tackling and heading as he is at shooting and passing. Almost none of that by contrast, could be said about Manchester Utd’s engine room main player, Michael Carrick. Carrick is a decent passer of the ball but he lacks any sort of dynamism whatsoever. If the game is a foot, he’s not going to come up with a killer pass, let alone an actual goal to bring the match back in your direction. As one fan put it on Saturday evening, “Ya Ya Toure wins you matches, Michael Carrick doesn’t.” The need for Ferguson to strengthen his midfield has never been more pressing…

2.  Jordan Henderson is the worst signing in Liverpool’s history.
That may seem like a bold claim given some of the filth that has turned out in red shirts over the past decade, but for a player who cost £20m and has played as often as Henderson has, statistically at least the claim deserves analysing. Until the much maligned Andy Caroll came on this Saturday, Liverpool were fast heading to an embarrassing cup defeat to add to their collection of losses already this season. The big striker restored some of his own reputation and his clubs pride with a marvellous cameo, but before and during that it was striking once again how totally inept both Henderson and Stewart Downing were. Faintly bored as I watched Utd struggle past Swansea on Sunday, I decided to analyse the impact of both these players over the course of the season in direct contrast to two counterparts from all the other clubs. For most of the season they have played as wingers (or Henderson slightly inside right) so taking the two first choice wide players from the other clubs (not strikers who play wide like Sturridge) I compiled the following table of goals and assists created.

 
Premier League Wingers Chart - 2011/12 Season










Club  Wingers Goals Assists Total Minutes  Goals/Assists p/m
Man Utd Valencia/Young 9 25 34 3340 98.24
Man City Silva/Nasri 11 25 36 4871 135.31
Spurs Bale/Lennon 13 21 34 4607 135.50
Chelsea Mata/Ramires 10 19 29 4808 165.79
Fulham Dempsey/Duff 19 12 31 5348 172.52
Arsenal Walcott/Rosisky 9 15 24 4400 183.33
Bolton Petrov/Eagles 8 17 25 4678 187.12
Everton Osman/Pienaar 7 11 18 3443 191.28
Wolves Jarvis/Hunt 10 9 19 4053 213.32
West Brom Morrison/Brunt 7 12 19 4399 231.53
Sunderland McClean/Larsson 12 7 19 4450 234.21
Swansea Dyer/Sinclair 13 9 22 5153 234.23
Stoke Ethrington/Pennant 3 13 16 3976 248.50
Norwich Pilkington/Bennet 9 6 15 3898 259.87
Newcastle Guiterez/Ben Arfa 7 11 18 4681 260.06
Wigan Moses/Gomez 11 7 18 4844 269.11
Blackburn Pederson/Formica 7 10 17 4792 281.88
Aston Villa Nzogbia/Albrighton 4 7 11 3552 322.91
QPR Barton/SWP 3 9 12 4917 409.75
Liverpool Henderson/Downing 1 4 5 4810 962.00

The evidence is beyond damning. It’s no surprise to see City & Utd lead the table, but what’s shocking isn’t just that Liverpool are bottom of the list, but bottom by such a margin. Indeed, the £40m spent on Downing & Henderson has been responsible for a Premier League goal either being scored or created once every 962 minutes. That’s almost once in every eleven games!? Indeed, the stats are so bad; the pair are actually as poor as the next three teams (Blackburn/Villa/QPR) combined. There’s little more I can say. There is simply no defence for the performance of either signing and whilst Downing could perhaps be considered unlucky, Henderson, as he again showed us on Saturday is yet to provide any real evidence he can play this game at all. 

3. Arsenal will only have themselves to blame.
It could have been worse… a lot worse. Throwing away three points against Norwich this weekend, after mounting a typically heroic comeback, was ultimately made to look ok by Spurs stuttering again against Villa and Newcastle going down to the leaders. Still, there remains just 2 points separating three clubs for the Champions League spots with the prospect of Chelsea becoming a fourth if they beat Liverpool this evening. Arsenal should have had this well wrapped up by now and will be kicking themselves that things are still in the balance going into the final weekend. Away to a West Brom side saying goodbye to Roy Hodgson will not be easy, especially given Spurs are at home to Fulham. Newcastle, granted, have a much harder fixture at Everton but the way they’re played this season you wouldn’t bet against them winning there. Arsenal simply have to qualify for the Champions League. Perhaps more than any other club they need that carrot to dangle in front of their star players, not least Robin Van Persie, and convince them to have another shot at glory come August. Arsenal have played with adventure and guile many times this season, but they have also shot themselves in the foot when it’s mattered time and time again. It’s all or nothing time for Wenger’s boys and they owe it to their manager and to their club to finish the job next weekend.

4. Farewell Kentucky Fried Rovers.
It was only a matter of time before this happened. We all wanted Kean to defy his critics, most notably his own fans, but Blackburn have been too bad for too long and if hadn’t been for Yakubu, would probably have been relegated two months ago. Kean, as ever, was defiant in defeat and insisted he will “never resign” and that he had the “full support” of the owners. That may well be the case, but for a club who’s owners targeted 6th at the start of the season… relegation must be a very rude awakening. The fans continue to cry fowl play, but the cold hard facts are that their team has not performed over the course of the season with anything like the level of skill and ability they should have done. Blackburn aren’t quite West Ham under Glen Roeder, but they are still a better team on paper than Wolves, Swansea, Wigan, QPR, Bolton & Norwich and should not have gone down. They have defended too often like domesticated cats rather than Lions and their midfield has been badly exposed by average teams at their own ground. Whether the slightly farcical Venky’s/Kean partnership will continue into the lower leagues only time will tell. But when this advert came out at the start of the season, the writing was probably already on the wall. And yeah, it really does get worse every… single… time… you watch it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYwf2SBWa5o

5. Hi Ho Sheffield Wednesday.
It is a mark of how far Sheffield football has fallen over the last few years that a team getting promoted back into the Championship has gained such a genuine outpouring of local emotion. Sheffield Wednesday have been in the 3rd tier of English football for too long and this weekend’s promotion was richly deserved for a team who have lived in the shadow of their neighbours for the past decade. It was, to Owls everywhere, made all the sweeter that it came at the expense of their local rivals who must now navigate the play offs shorn of confidence and form. That, in turn is a shame. The Steel City would benefit from both teams getting back into the Championship and having a genuine chance of making the promised ground over the next few seasons. The Ched Evans case has certainly hurt Utd, who have been pretty awful since their main striker was sentenced to Jail. Wednesday, by contrast, have won when it’s mattered most; 5 out of their last 6 crucially, which has carried them to automatic promotion. After playing host to the likes of Stevenage and Yeovil for what seems like an eternity, Wednesday fans can at least look forward to the relatively more glamorous matches against the likes of Blackburn, Wolves, Leeds and West Ham again. The belief, finally, has come back to Hillsborough.