Capello’s England
England’s finest – allowing for injuries and lack of fitness – assemble this afternoon at the team hotel at Watford as they start preparations for their 6th Feb friendly against Switzerland.
Capello’s first game – except that this isn’t Capello’s England yet.
The core is pretty much the same as what Eriksson took to Germany 2006, and the same as what McClaren failed with in the Euro 2008 qualifiers. For England to be Capello’s team, they need to transform themselves into a winning team, a team that fights and capitalises on its talents, a team that is more than the sum of its parts.
And as we wait for England to trounce Switzerland and for Capello-mania to start for real, here’s a look at Capello’s chosen 23 – and yes, we’ll be choosing a captain as well.
Capello on England captaincy:
“I don’t expect to appoint a permanent captain until we start the qualifying games. I want to work closely with the players before deciding on this.
I’m looking forward to working with them on the training ground. There is a lot of work to do but I am ready for the challenge.
We have seven months to prepare for our first competitive match, but the work really starts now.”
The provisional captain will be announced on Tuesday, a day before the Switzerland game.
Goalkeepers
David James (Portsmouth), Scott Carson (Liverpool on loan at Aston Villa), Chris Kirkland (Wigan)
Despite romantic notions of an ageing goalkeeper getting better and better (’37 going onto 27′ was heard), David James is not going to be first-choice in the 2010 World Cup qualifiers. He’s a hard worker and has been in good form for Portsmouth, but 5 big, big reasons count against him.
- He’ll be 39-40 by the time South Africa comes along. I know that goalkeepers are still good around that age but it is definitely a factor, especially considering that James, at his best, is about as good as the other four contenders for his jersey when they are at their best – and they’re considerably younger, so they could still improve. His experience is a positive aspect but that hides something else – James has already had his chance, and he didn’t take it too well.
- Scott Carson
- Chris Kirkland
- Robert Green
- Ben Foster
Leaving aside Paul Robinson (tried and found wanting, like James was a few years ago) and Joe Hart (one for the future), there are four young English goalkeepers who are as good as David James and have more or less an equal chance of claiming the England #1 shirt. One of Capello’s toughest decisions will be to buck the purist / traditionalist opinion and give Carson and/or Kirkland a run-out against Switzerland instead of trying James.
My pick is Scott Carson, but that’s only because he’s been under the tutelage of Martin O’Neill, and from that aspect he is bound to be mentally tougher than your average England goalkeeper (ironic considering his gaffe in his last England performance). Kirkland has been through a lot and it is to his credit that he’s in the squad, but in the long run I can’t see him as a regular England #1.
Defenders
Wayne Bridge (Chelsea), Ashley Cole (Chelsea), Rio Ferdinand (Manchester United), Wes Brown (Manchester United), Joleon Lescott (Everton), Micah Richards (Manchester City), Matthew Upson (West Ham United), Jonathan Woodgate (Tottenham Hotspur)
The left-back berth is well covered, with Wayne Bridge, Ashley Cole and Joleon Lescott all able to play in that slot. Barring any fitness problems Ashley Cole is bound to be Capello’s first choice, if only for his natural talents, comfortable ball-skills and his work-rate. Bridge is an able deputy and would be first-choice at all Premier League teams outside the Big 3, but he lacks Cole’s experience and work-rate. Bridge is a better crosser of the ball (IMO), but it’s not like England have Ruud to launch crosses to (no, Crouch doesn’t count).
At right-back England have Micah Richards and Wes Brown – as much as I love Brown, I have to go with Richards for his chemistry with Shaun Wright-Phillips, his energy and how he pushes the opposition’s left flank under constant pressure. Brown, because of his ability to play both right-back and center-back, should be the first defender on the bench for England.
Rio Ferdinand is the automatic choice as a center-back, and it will be interesting to see how he leads the back four in John Terry’s absence. The other center-back spot is a toss-up between Woodgate, Lescott and Upson, although to be fair these 3 are only there because Terry and King are injured and Carragher has retired (who is better, Woodgate or King?). Woodgate would be the first-choice assuming he stays fit.
Midfielders
Steven Gerrard (Liverpool), Gareth Barry (Aston Villa), Jermaine Jenas (Tottenham Hotspur), Owen Hargreaves (Manchester United), Joe Cole (Chelsea), Ashley Young (Aston Villa), Shaun Wright-Phillips (Chelsea), David Bentley (Blackburn Rovers)
Left midfield has been a constant problem for England, with first-choice Joe Cole rarely using the width available to him and as a result snuffing out England’s chances of attacking from the left flank. Without Stewart Downing in the squad you can expect Capello to start with Joe Cole, although that completely depends on whether he plays a 4-4-2 or a 4-5-1/4-3-3. Ashley Young and Gareth Barry are both second options for the left midfield berth, although both are stronger in central positions.
Right midfield will see Shaun Wright-Phillips as the incumbent facing competition from David Bentley – and my money is on SWP starting with Bentley, if he’s lucky, getting a few minutes on the pitch. Training will tell us more, but Capello isn’t going to spring any major surprises and SWP has been good for England on the right whenever he has played.
Steven Gerrard, like Rio Ferdinand in defence, is first-choice in central midfield but his role and the name of his partner is still uncertain. Hargreaves is the obvious choice but Barry has been imperious for Aston Villa and Jenas has played a big part in Tottenham’s revival under Ramos, and both offer something different to the team.
Hargo and Gerrard are still the best combination, but just for kicks (and especially if Capello tries a 4-5-1 some time in the future), it would be interesting to DROP Gerrard and play Jenas or Barry with Hargreaves – this England team relies far too much on Gerrard and they need to start pulling their own weight.
Forwards
Gabriel Agbonlahor (Aston Villa), Michael Owen (Newcastle United), Wayne Rooney (Manchester United), Peter Crouch (Liverpool)
With Owen out of form and Crouch just limited (although both do score goals, unlike Rooney), it’s tempting to consider Rooney and Agbonlahor as sure starters. I have a strong suspicion that Capello could bench Rooney and start with Owen and Crouch, but looking at the rest of the team, Rooney is a better fit and under Capello you would certainly hope that he starts scoring goals for England.
Agbonlahor is tipped to get a runout as a sub, but he could also start either with Rooney or in his place. A side with Rooney and Agbonlahor leading the line (with Cole / Young and SWP / Bentley on the wings) would be a fast, fluid and very attacking side and keeping England’s long-term future in mind the Aston Villa player certainly deserves more time in the spotlight.
Starting XI / Subs
Mind you, this is my pick from the 23 players available, not a prediction of what Capello will do.
Scott Carson
Micah Richards, Rio Ferdinand, Jonathan Woodgate, Ashley Cole
Shaun Wright-Phillips, Owen Hargreaves, Steven Gerrard, Joe Cole
Wayne Rooney, Gabriel Agbonlahor
Bench: Chris Kirkland, Wes Brown, Wayne Bridge, David Bentley, Jermaine Jenas, Ashley Young, Michael Owen
Captains
Rio Ferdinand, Steven Gerrard, John Terry
John Terry is the incumbent but I don’t expect him to stay captain (and his place in the team will also be up for debate). Steven Gerrard is the vice captain and most likely to get the armband but he’s not the best man for the job, and he already bears the burden of being England’s best player.
Rio Ferdinand is the next logical choice, considering his stature at United and the fact that he’s one of the most respected members of the England squad. Capello’s choice as captain (provisional and permanent) will make for an interesting debate but neither of these 3 men are the natural-born leaders that England so desperately craves. Maybe Gerrard will mature, or maybe Rio will evolve into the statesman the job requires him to be. Maybe Terry will play with his mind as well has his heart.
We’ll see…
Left Out
David Beckham, Jermain Defoe, Paul Robinson
Shame to see Becks being left out, am gutted but with qualification on Capello’s mind Beckham is not ahead of SWP or Bentley in the pecking order. I doubt that Capello will turn to Beckham, with Lennon waiting in the wings and even Gerrard capable of playing there in times of need. Eriksson and McClaren needed Beckham because their teams needed moments of individual brilliance to turn games around, and Beckham’s set pieces and picture-perfect crosses gave them that option. Capello should be able to deal with his absence better.
Rob Maul from 4sportsake.com makes an excellent point for us Beckham fanboys:
Had he [Beckham] not been ‘clever’ and picked up a booking against Wales, thus missing an easy trip to Azerbaijan a few years ago, then he would have reached his century already and this argument would have been academic.
Defoe’s goal for Portsmouth (that too against Chelsea) showed that he hasn’t lost his goalscoring touch and while some argue that he’s not as hard-working as others, Defoe is a far better option than Peter Crouch but is also unfortunately too similar to Michael Owen to be in the England squad at this time. He’ll definitely get his chance by the time summer comes and I would expect him to be playing for England soon – he’s good enough to start in the current team.
Robinson is not going to get a chance anytime soon, simple as that. He’s at #7, behind the 5 keepers discussed above and Joe Hart.
Lennon also deserves a mention here, but Capello’s move to switch him to U21 and pick Bentley instead is a master-stroke – Lennon needs to be away from the pressure to be able to develop properly and the U21 gives him that option. It’s also an indication of how highly Capello rates Young and Agbonlahor to have brought them into the senior squad almost immediately. Lennon will come back, but the competition for the right-midfield spot is quite fierce.
Also See: The Future Today: England’s Lineup for 2018
Topics: England, Fabio Capello, Features


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My ideal team:
Scott Carson
Micah Richards, Rio Ferdinand, Jonathan Woodgate, Ashley Cole
Shaun Wright-Phillips, Ashley Young, Gareth Barry, Joe Cole
Wayne Rooney, Gabriel Agbonlahor
I think that if Capello is picking based on form, it’d be a travesty not to start Ashley Young, who has been, for me, in the top 5 midfielders in the Premiership so far this season.
February 3rd, 2008 @ 11:19I think Capello did well to omit Robinson but now he must ensure that Carson and Kirkland get as much experience as they can before the World Cup. I could be good to also look at Green.
February 3rd, 2008 @ 11:50If I were him I would line up llike this:
Carson
Richards Woodgate Ferdinand A Cole
Bentley Gerrard J Cole
Agbonlahor Young
Owen
Gerrard can hold the midfield by himself on his day and Bentley can be an auxiliary and a free kick taker while Cole will play just behind Young and Agonlahor. These two have enough speed to a) cover the wings or b) play central and create opportunities for themselves and Owen.
Carson would just be a stand-in for injured Foster and captain would be Ferdinand.
Rooney can be an impact player as can be Hargreaves who could come on in place of Cole to give Gerrard more freedom. Injured Lampard should displace J. Cole when fit and Woody should keep his place forever.
February 3rd, 2008 @ 14:22Good pick. But he should have given a chance to Dean Ashton. He may be a but injury prone but he is a hungry player and and he does create quite a few openings. As for the goal keeper it should be between Scott Carson and Robert Green with Ben Foster as backup/future player……….
February 3rd, 2008 @ 16:06Agbonlahor injured… dammit.
February 3rd, 2008 @ 17:10hagreaves isnt first choice its barry
February 3rd, 2008 @ 18:03Incidentally, Rob Maul’s point is absolutely absurd and entirely lacking in logic. It’s the equivalent to me saying: “Had McClaren picked Beckham earlier, he would have had 100 caps already” or “Had Beckham debuted for England 1 match earlier, he would have had 100 matches” or, hell, “had Titus Bramble been a world-class striker he might have played for England”. Totally pointless.
February 3rd, 2008 @ 18:16Maybe he can call up Defoe?
February 3rd, 2008 @ 19:06he did call up defoe
February 3rd, 2008 @ 21:24I would still liked to have seen Robert Green make his start because i think he could be revelation for England. I’m sure if & when he does he’ll make a huge impact.
But apart from that i think the balance of the team looks good. Capello seems to have got the right mix so far. Now he just has to get a level of consistency out of them.
February 3rd, 2008 @ 21:41My england lineup:
Robert Green
February 4th, 2008 @ 02:28Micah Rio Woodgate Ashley Cole
Jenas Barry
SWP Gerrard Ashley Young
Rooney
i think the team need midfielder who is fast like ashley young.and don’t forget : he can scores too given time & space.
February 4th, 2008 @ 02:46I don’t think Carson is the BEST English Keeper out there, under O’niell, yes he’s made some amazing saves, but he couldn’t really do that at Liverpool and what’s to stop him from falling apart in an England jersey. Also, consider that Robert Green has been part of a defence that has let in 22 goals this season the fifth best behind Man Utd, Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal respectively. Meanwhile, Carson has been part of a defence that can score goals, but can also let in 33 goals, making them the worst defence in the top half of the table.
February 4th, 2008 @ 04:26I feel the captaincy should go to Rooney. The team can do with his drive.
Oh, btw, I don’t think Gerrard should be automatic pick. When did he ever perform for England to become ‘England’s best player’?
February 4th, 2008 @ 08:17when he got man of the match against the best team in the world? (brazil not andorra).
February 4th, 2008 @ 17:08I can’t believe some people at the start of the season said rooney is better that Torres
Besides what has Rooney done lately
Interesting read though i really can’t understand how some of you people think England should drop Gerrard, yes he hasn’t performed to his full potential every time England have played, but then again neither has Rooney and some people think he should be captain! Sorry Karl i completely disagree with you, though to be fair i am a Liverpool fan and you’re a Man U fan so its not that surprising.
Capello would be a fool to leave out either Rooney or Gerrard, the one thing he needs to do is to work on there link up play with each other, they both like to operate in the same areas of the field and they could be unstoppable if they played effectively together.
For me i’d say the Goalkeeping position should be Carson for now, give him some games in a few friendlies like Mclaren should have done, he’s got potential and just to surprise everyone i’d agree Foster should also be in the running when back from injury.
My choice would be
Carson
Richards Woodgate Ferdinand A Cole
SWP Hargreaves Barry
Rooney Gerard
Owen
As for captain i’d personally think Hargreaves could be a good choice, i can’t fault his work effort and feel his determination on the pitch could be used to good effect. However, i’d still think Gerrard would be the best choice.
February 4th, 2008 @ 18:26To be fair to the entire England squad – and to Capello; I think the squad he has picked; regarless of what what the media have said are the same squad most people with their reading glasses on would have picked. But we all knew that the actual selection was going to be a difficult process and rethar an unknown now that Capello has said his soundbites and rounded off the team with Robinson and Beckham not even making the bench.
I would personally like to see Owen and Crouch upfront, with Rooney playing just behind – I agree that Rooney has done absoulately nothing of recent; and whilst this gives the opportunity for goals back to Crouch and Owen (without a doubt our most consistent goal threats); it also leaves Rooney a little more space to just play well; and maybe nip in a few goals himself.
In midfield we have loads of ‘good’ players who can all perform on their day – so its more about who is in form and willing to give it all for the cause of England. Capello knows this well; he also known that without Beckham in the team – we need a other players who will drive the team forward – players like Gerrard (who is a dead cert for me) and Joe Cole. Without these two players in the midfield we have barely any attacking threat at all, and will likely spend much of the game passing around aimlessly, with no real shots on goal. Barry, Jenas, al these kind of players can do a job but are by no means leaders.
In defence, well its back to the old argument do we go for the ‘standard’ lineup who we know all about, or risk a few new faces in there??
I would not mind seeing Terry dropped against the swiss; he is a good dependable player, and nobody is denying this: But his lack of speed could be a problem; and if we are already playing a team to include Rooney and Gerrard (two self confessed leaders) I would wonder where the direction of the team would come fom. And to be honest – I think we need less leaders in the team for the moment; so that eerybody does what Capello tells them rather than hides behind other ‘Big’ players as was the case with McLaren in charge….
That said, the swiss are a team that we should easily beat – and even though this kind of attitude has maybe lost us more than a few games of recent, Capello will not allow us to be beaten anything other than 1-0 and with the whole team galvanised and playing well – this is not something you would expect.
My expectation for England is to win 2-0 at least. One for Owen and Maybe one from midfield. The players will be adapting to Capello, and whilst this may improve their level of performance, their teamwork skills will need time – and Capello needs a little time to add cohesion to a mix that lacks the touch and experience of players like Becks and Scholes.
Good luck England! Up the swiss
February 5th, 2008 @ 13:11Was that Brazil game the useless friendly?
I understand the disagreement about the performances and captaincy, but…
Torres better than Rooney??????? Really??????
I admit that Rooney is going through a bit of a goal-scoring drought at the moment, but the rest of his play is absolutely brilliant. Since when did Torres become better than Rooney? (never mind the fact that even when ‘in-form’, he misses a whole bunch of sitters).
I suppose only end-of-season stats will prove this one hey?
February 5th, 2008 @ 14:00Rooney as Captain ???? He throws tantrums on the pitch… he stepped on someone’s NUTS in one of the biggest games in his career and got sent off. F**k NO ! Even if he is one of the top 5 strikers in the world.
February 5th, 2008 @ 19:17crouch is the best PLAYER for england he is so consistant for country its unreal I dont know why people dont put crouch in their squads???
I cant go agaisnt Torres though i honestly think that if Torres was playing for Arsenal or Man u were they strecth teams far better that Liverpool he’d have atleast 30 goals so far
February 5th, 2008 @ 21:42