The Czechs look poor without their first 2 strikers. The guy they had on in place of Koller looks worse than Doherty even. I agree that if everyone is fit we'll be able to cope in this group. We were relying on players returning from injury or warming the bench for their clubs too much last year.
Given that the title of this thread includes ''the Future'' I'm going to quoute Gerard Houllier from today's Sunday Telegraph, commenting on what he's seen of the WC so far:
'Football is changing - and for the better. [The] World Cup has seen such a resurgence of skill & speed to suggest that Greece's triumph...was a once off.
The trend towards skill rather than systems, or at least the higher priority given to skill, will be good for the game's future because it points the way for the young, who will have to work on speed & technique if they want to make their living from the game."
I think this observation is spot on & I've felt for ages now that the game in the rest of the world is moving on from the style played in UK & Ireland, though I still think that England's direct approach could still reap rewards simply because many of the major countries are still ''work in progress'' whereas this England team is closer to its peak.
Do we have players skillful or athletic enough to thrive in the current environment? Yes: Duff, Robbie, Doyle, Given, Finnan, McGeady, Steven Reid (certainly in athleticism).
Are any of these playing in a culture that emphasies these merits? No, not really, but we've debated this to the nth degree.
At one stage I honestly thought Kerr had twigged this. The way we played in Paris & the fast moving passing game we played against Faroes 4 days later. Don't laugh: the Faroes game was a classic example of how to go about winning a game against a minnow. Pass the ball quickly & confidently (not like England vs T&T) and the poorer teams can't cope. One subsequent failiing in my opinion was to treat Israel away differently.
Can we employ our better players in a team system mimicking those we've seen thrive in the WC? I like to think so. I accept that playing in a finals is different to qualifying. Sometimes the latter is a battle of attrition, but by & large I think Stan has got to combine the spirit of his era with the modern approach being exemplified in these finals.
To those on this board close to the FAI or with proper coaching experience, how does the FAI's Technical Development plan stack up? Is it simply churning out players for the Enmglish lower leagues, or is it a genuine attempt to turn out young players capable of matching the technique of the best abroad?
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