It seemed almost pointless to write anything about England’s
exit. As is the case with any English failure (and, let’s face it, there are
plenty), the post-mortem began even before the referee blew the final whistle
in Uruguay’s victory, and will go on almost endlessly - long into the
qualification campaign for the European Championships of 2016.
But on Friday, when the BBC asked on its website: ‘where did
it all go wrong?’ I was struck by the irony of the question. It seemed to
perfectly encapsulate the arrogance of the media, or at least the ignorance the
press hold when covering the national side. Perhaps it is time they took a hard
look at themselves in their pursuit of an answer.
My piece on Wayne Rooney last week focused upon the impact
the media can have upon the performances of an individual, but the problem goes
deeper than that. As my housemate astutely pointed out this weekend, the press
were never on the side of Roy Hodgson’s England from day one.
Perhaps the front cover of the Sun isn’t completely
indicative of British sporting journalism, but - as said housemate observed - you have to wonder how many
nations would herald the beginning of a new manager’s reign by ridiculing him.
Referring to Graham Taylor’s England of Euro ’92 as ‘Turnips’ is one thing, but
to make fun of a man before a ball has been kicked under his tenure is a
different and much more significant matter.
England, of course, did not look like world beaters at this
tournament. It will be a while before a serious discussion can take place about
winning the World Cup, but they were handed a tough group in which they
competed gamely. Indeed, the Three Lions have played worse in previous tournaments and
qualified, and you would have fancied their chances in nearly any of the
other seven groups at these finals.
There are, undoubtedly, problems with the national side.
A country with our footballing prowess on club level should have achieved more
in recent years, but the point is that not all of the problems are internal.
The English press undoubtedly do a great job of promoting the game and indeed
analysing it, but sometimes those asking the questions should be asking those
questions of themselves.
For low-key expectations before the tournament suddenly
turned to outrage when England’s campaign ended prematurely. The BBC’s Phil
McNulty used the word ‘embarrassing’, whilst Henry Winter called upon the
players, staff and Football Association to apologise to the nation for their
performances. If Luis Suarez's Uruguay exit the competition at the hands of Italy on Tuesday, I doubt his country's press will be making any similar demands.
Mercifully, Jim Holden of the Sunday Express wrote with more
reasoning when he described the campaign as ‘a pity, but not a disgrace’; a far
more balanced view that was more in keeping with pre-tournament predictions. The
reality is that there are positives to come out of this campaign, but the press
have been blinded by catchy statistics and trends of history.
Yes, this may turn out to be England’s worst-ever campaign
historically and indeed statistically, but anyone who knows the game is aware
that football is goes much deeper than that. Winter and McNulty obviously have more knowledge about the game in their little fingers than I do, but as weighty contributors to this country's sporting media it feels like they are doing themselves something of an injustice
by falling into the trap of hyperbole.
The media makes much of the ‘fear’ England players are
burdened with going into big tournaments, but when low expectations still
translate to national backlash, it isn’t hard to see where the source of this
fear can be found.
In answer to the BBC’s question, perhaps that childish
headline is where it all began to go wrong. It’s about time the press were a
help, not a hindrance, to our national team.
'Winter and McNulty obviously have more knowledge about the game in their little fingers than I do'
ReplyDeleteNo they don't! McNulty is probably one of the worst writers on football that there is at the moment. His articles are bland, uninteresting and cliché-ridden. No idea how he became the BBC's chief sports writer.
Anyway, great article. Will be following this now that I have found it!
Have to say I'm not McNulty's biggest fan - I often find myself querying what he says, and most of his columns on the BBC website tend to be cynical criticism s of someone or other. But thought it would be a little mad to question the knowledge of two writers who must have almost fifty years' writing experience between them!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments though, glad you enjoyed it!