Why Capello should pick Crouch to partner Rooney

Peter Crouch’s form should land him a starting place in England’s squad.

The quality Crouch displayed in the game against Blackburn before Christmas highlighted the two sides to his game which make him a complete striker. Firstly, his ability in the air as he headed a cross in off the post to give Spurs a half time lead and secondly, as the game became more stretched, to pick the ball up and find the perfect finish so as to round of a convincing victory.

It was clear from Rovers inability to handle Crouchs’ continual persistence that he cannot be ignored.

Until now, Emile Heskey has held the role of the “target man” in Capello’s line up, however Heskey cannot provide the sharpness in front of goal that Crouch can. Heskey cannot worry defenders with a six foot seven inch frame. Heskey cannot influence a game in the same way Crouch can. Heskey’s miss in front of goal against Croatia in the world cup qualifier at Wembley showcased the threat that it could be him who spurns a vital chance in the latter stages of the tournament in South Africa.

Crouchs’ hold up play could be compared with Luca Toni’s role in Italy’s victorious 2006 world cup campaign. Toni’s excellent work rate and ability to bring Totti and Del Piero into threatening positions was the catalyst for the Azzuri’s success. Crouch will provide a calming influence on an otherwise erratic forward line.

Many try to lambast Crouch as a player who will lead defenders to play the “long ball” up to the lanky forward. While this may be a possibility Crouch can provide the plan B which England may need at a vital point of a match.

The ugly slant we put on the long ball tactic tarnishes it with the image of a brutish side full of bulky centre forwards and battling defensive midfielders. In fact it is an effective system which can wear down and unsettle defences, especially when the man on the end of the long ball is towering over everyone.

You have to look at all the options Capello has for his big man role before realising how Crouch must be a dead cert:

1. Carlton Cole- a decent forward who can be quite erratic and also wasteful in front of goal. A main man for West Ham but does not possess quality to start.

2. James Beattie- never excelled in an England shirt when given the chance. Possibly to old at the age of 31.

3. Kevin Davies- never represented England at any level. Lack of experience and un-fashionable club count against him.

4. Bobby Zamora- poor finishing still a problem despite improving form throughout this season. Lacks skills for prestigious role.

5. Darren Bent- his showing against Brazil in Doha could have ruled him out of contention despite impressive domestic form.
Look at Crouch’s goal record for England. 18 goals in 35 games is impressive for the Macclesfield born striker whereas Heskey has only amassed 7 goals in 57 games.

For me it is obvious who should be picked. Peter Crouch plays consistently for Spurs and Heskey continually bench warms for Martin Oneill’s Villa. The man who’ll weigh in with goals for England is Crouch.

Topics: England, Tottenham, World Cup

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8 Comments

  1. jude

    Hooray! At last – someone who can see the value Crouchy adds to the team. And his workrate is double that of Heskey ( and I’m a long suffering Villa fan.what was MON thinking of??)

    January 25th, 2010 @ 21:52
  2. Tim

    Crouch plays consistently badly for Spurs,rarely scores,has a bad first touch and is useless in the air.He slows play and has no positional sense whatsoever.He has no pace and a weak shot and is horrible to watch.Please do not compare him to Luca Toni and “sharpness” and “Crouch” should not be used in the same sentence.It is true that England have an abundance of dreadful attacking options but,please,Crouch is definately not the answer unless the question is “What is Harry Redknapp’s biggest blunder in the transfer market?”.Are you one of Harry’s mates?

    January 25th, 2010 @ 22:03
  3. Stoney

    Been to any spurs’ games lately? No wonder you’re citing examples of how good crouch is from last year because if you had of attended any you’d realise he’s fucking useless and you wouldn’t write such nonsense.

    January 25th, 2010 @ 22:18
  4. Richard

    @Tim,

    “Harry Redknapp’s biggest blunder in the transfer market?”

    “Crouch plays consistently badly for Spurs”

    “rarely scores”

    Talk about embarrassing yourself!

    He scored twice for England during their last World Cup Qualifier, and has 9 goals in 16 games for Spurs this season having only started 10 games.

    There’s no point telling you Heskey’s stats as you clearly need to do more research yourself instead of repeating some trash you read on a blog site, or heard in the pub.

    Try watching a game or two you muppet!

    January 25th, 2010 @ 22:28
  5. Mark

    I’m a season ticket holder at Tottenham and have to suffer watching the truly awful Crouch every week. He can’t run, he can’t dribble, he has the slowest feet I have ever seen on a pro footballer and he is rubbish in the air. Defenders have completely sussed him. When he jumps for a header they just give him a nudge and he is so weady he can’t cope. On the deck they just let him have the ball because he gives it away. If he starts for England it will be like having 10 players. Why can’t anyone see that the front 2 should be Rooney and Defoe.

    January 25th, 2010 @ 22:46
  6. BD Condell

    Isn’t there another striker at Spurs who is staking a major claim or do you believe that Defoe and Rooney can’t play together?

    Personally I’d play Gerrard off Rooney ala Liverpool and dispense with the need for mediocrity…..but we all know that Capello won’t do that.

    January 26th, 2010 @ 02:42
  7. Chris

    As a Spurs fan for 30 years it’s diffcult slagging off a Spurs player but Crouch is not the answer for England, I would argue he’s not the answer for Spurs either. For someone so tall he is not great in the air, he cannot dribble and gives away far too many fouls. He is worth taking on the plane as a late plan B but that’s it. His goalscoring record isn’t bad but always looks so out of place against top class quality. Would like to see how Defoe and Rooney get on up front but otherwise agree with BD Condell about Stevie G

    January 26th, 2010 @ 08:59
  8. england

    Cmone Guys what about Defoe ???

    January 27th, 2010 @ 03:21