Feb
6
2008

David Bentley: A Ready-Made Replacement for David Beckham

Bentley: A Ready-Made Replacement for Beckham

So Capello named his squad last week, and as usual all the attention was centred on one man. Not the likes of Curtis Davies or Gabriel Agbonlahor, who received their maiden England call ups (but surely not their last). Not even the likes of Ashley Young or Jermaine Jenas, who are two of the in-form players in the Premier League right now. It wasn’t even the seasoned internationals such as Steven Gerrard or Wayne Rooney who were getting the headlines. No, it was a man who wasn’t even named in the thirty man party who had every tongue in the country wagging.

And not for the first time either. Since he was first named in an England squad in 1996 by Glenn Hoddle, David Beckham has attracted the most incredible and sustained publicity imaginable for the England squad. He is unique in world football as a player who dominates both the front and back pages of newspapers, whether it is for his football, his fashion or his seemingly endless commercial work. Indeed, the nation right now could realistically be split into two camps. Those who respect Beckham for the footballer and professional that he is, and those who resent the corporate cash cow that he has become.

It isn’t entirely Beckham’s fault, he can’t help scoring goals from the halfway line or ridiculously regular and important free kicks. He can’t even help falling in love with a Spice Girl. But with Fabio Capello ushering in a new era for England tomorrow against Switzerland at Wembley- minus Beckham- it would appear that Beckham will be forced to hand over the reigns to another supremely talented right footer with the initials DB. Step forward, David Bentley.

Bentley entered the public’s consciousness in 2004 when he scored a peach of a chip for Arsenal against Middlesbrough in the FA Cup. His impudent finish and confident aura drew immediate comparisons to his idol, and fellow initial-sharer, Dennis Bergkamp, and he looked set for a bright future under the stewardship of Arsene Wenger. The following season, however, saw him loaned out to Norwich City, where he struggled to find his feet in a struggling side heading for relegation. He has since admitted that after his return from Carrow Road in 2005, he began to grow increasingly disillusioned with life at Arsenal, as he waited behind the likes of Freddie Ljungberg, Robert Pires & Aliaksandr Hleb for a first team chance. Bentley has stated in recent interviews that he disliked going into training, and had stopped enjoying his football. Hard to imagine given the drastic change of circumstances he has enjoyed in the past eighteen months.

In August 2005, Mark Hughes snapped up the unhappy Bentley on a season-long loan for Blackburn, and whilst he started unspectacularly, he still did enough for Hughes to make the move permanent in the January transfer window. Bentley’s form snowballed, a hat-trick against Manchester Utd confirmed this, and playing in a new wide midfield role, he began to earn plaudits with his running ability, delivery from wide areas, and creative passing. His re-found confidence was in evidence the following season as he began to add a more consistent end product to his game, chipping in with seven goals and twice as many assists, earning him the Player of the Year award from Rovers’ fans.

His withdrawal from the England U21 squad for last summer’s European Championships, due to fatigue, led to hefty criticism from a lot of angles, not least England boss Steve McClaren and U21 boss Stuart Pearce, but Bentley has vindicated his decision by continuing his excellent form for Blackburn. Already this season he has topped last term’s goal tally- eight and counting so far- and his consistency is as good as any winger in the Premiership. Like Beckham, he is the master of engineering enough space for a cross and delivering with devastating pace and accuracy. He may not be as much of an all-action player as his predecessor, but he has plenty of other strings to his bow, he is able to use either foot to good effect, and tends to pose a greater threat when drifting into a central position, where he has shown plenty of times that he can unleash ferocious strikes from distance.

With Aaron Lennon & Shaun Wright-Phillips coming back into form this season, and Beckham still likely to be lurking around come the World Cup qualifiers in September, competition for the right hand side of midfield is fierce, but Bentley for me is the man Capello should turn to. His end product is a lot more consistent than Lennon or Wright-Phillips, whether it be a shot, a pass or a cross, and with Beckham months away from match sharpness, he has a great chance to nail down the number seven shirt as his own and England fans may very well have a brand new DB to worship.

Related Items from Soccerlens

| Subscribe via RSS


Discussion - 9 Responses

  1. David Beckham, no doubt, deserves his 100th cap for England. I think, he still has some to offer for England national team at this level. However, David Bentley should be considered thinking of the future of England side. Bentley has been playing as well a winger needs as to play in the team like England. No doubt, two-footed has an advantage over Beckham.

    However, Beckham must be given some extra credibility when it comes to free kick. Another thing that I want to mention here is that English fans should have enough respect to Bentley and he is, for sure, does not deserve any more boos in an international match for what he did with England U-21. Aaron Lennon and Shaun Wright-Phillips are also assets of Capello, but Bentley has an edge over them.

  2. Lets hope he gets playing time and we can see if he can fill in DB’s boots.

    SWP is fit, so he might not get that big a chance.

  3. If Bentley does play I hope the England fans don’t boo him. We have yet another new dawn here and the slate should be wiped clean.

    At 23 years-old Bentley could represent us in 5 major tournaments and may become England’s greatest ever player. Beckham was hated once, remember?

    Bentley has a chance, and with Wright-Phillips and Lennon battling away with him for that spot, the right side of our team seems set fair for a while to come.

    If only we were spoiled for choice on the left!

  4. I love watching this lad play. He causes no end of problems for Premiership defences week-in week-out, can use both feet, has pace and has an exceptional delivery and shot on him.

  5. Bentley is a lot like Beckham. Good free kicks and he is not quite a winger but Richards can cover for him in that department. However SWP’s chemistry with Richards could limit Bentley’s chances in the national team.

    Hope he plays today!

  6. What do people think about Bentley moving into the centre? That way, we could play Lennon/Wright Phillips and Bentley. Then it’s goodbye Gerrard and Lampard :P

  7. Bentley with Hargo in the center wouldn’t be too bad. Young on the left, SWP on the right, Agbonlahor + Rooney up front…

    I miss my Football Manager…

  8. ridiculously regular and important free kicks
    ——————————-
    you embarrassing t^t.6 free-kicks in 11 YEARS and NOT A SINGLE ONE V A FIRST RATE NATION CAORSS 99 MATCHES and you call that “regular”.You know nothing about this sport mate,just go away and start posting articles on things you have the first clue about.

  9. Morning Pete.

    Thanks for the critique.

    Although i do wonder if you are qualified to speak at all since you seem to forget the fact that Mr Beckham was not confined to playing for England in the past eleven years…..he had a club as well….and i believe his free kick rate was slightly better than 6 in 11 years. try about 6 per season.

    Plus, im not sure if you are familiar with free kicks….but they dont have to be scored direct to bring about goals, and therefore be important, and Beckham provided countless assists for both United and England with his free kicks (and corners for that matter).

    None against big nations? Perhaps he didnt score them against the likes of Brazil or Germany….but get this, the word was “important”…they don’t come too much more important than the last minute of a World Cup qualifier, or a World Cup group match, or even a 2nd round match, or how about providing the free kick which led to Shearer’s winner against Germany? Going into his club form, we see free kicks scored against Manchester City in the derby, at Anfield against Liverpool, and against Barcelona & Real Madrid in the CL. big games? big goals?

    your beautifully succinct argument has been dismantled in a couple of paragraphs. and no need for POINTLESS CAPITAL LETTERS EITHER.

Add Your Comment


Comments are moderated (our comments policy).



Partners

Euro 2008 Tickets
Advertise here

Subscribe


Add to my Widsets

Subscribe via RSS


Get Soccerlens via Email


Have Your Say:

Latest Articles

Hot Topics

Get Started

Pages

Network Headlines

Partners