View Full Version : McClaren takes questions in a Web Chat
three lions
18 Dec 2006, 05:16 PM
http://www.thefa.com/England/SeniorTeam/NewsAndFeatures/Postings/2006/12/WebChat_SteveMcClaren.htm
sinner78
18 Dec 2006, 06:13 PM
I see they filtered out all the awkward questions .
like "how come a useless ginger tosser like you is in charge of the team?"
Milos
19 Dec 2006, 09:50 PM
I suppose if they didn't filter the questions it would be a constant stream of abuse and rude stuff. Questions like "Why are you such a tw@t?" Actually it would have been a lot better that way.
lost
20 Dec 2006, 09:23 PM
********ing joke, he did not show a single glimour of football knowledge or tactical acumen. there are at least 100 posters on this board who i would prefer in charge of the england team.
Colm
20 Dec 2006, 09:38 PM
All the questions were being nice to him, they obviously didn't show ones like
"Why are you such a useless tactictly inept ginger numpty?!
three lions
21 Dec 2006, 01:07 AM
All the questions were being nice to him, they obviously didn't show ones like
"Why are you such a useless tactictly inept ginger numpty?!
hahaha.. Yeah, they definately weren't the questions of the majority..
Chewmylegoff
25 Dec 2006, 09:36 PM
his answers are brilliant.
e.g.
Q: what will we achieve over the next 4-5 years?
A: well our players will get about 4-5 years older.
i love mcclaren, i am glad he got the job.
sinner78
26 Dec 2006, 01:06 AM
his answers are brilliant.
e.g.
Q: what will we achieve over the next 4-5 years?
A: well our players will get about 4-5 years older.
i love mcclaren, i am glad he got the job.
the players dont respect him at all.
gerrard clearly has contempt for him.
sunny17
26 Dec 2006, 04:10 PM
Honestly, I have already lost hope in Steve Mclaren’s era. Calling him McSven is a magnificent complement which he doesn’t deserve. What I’m hoping for is that the players come out with or without his guidance to qualify and also win the European Championship. But yet, I’m also hoping for world peace.
Phil McNulty(my favorite football writer) sums up Steve Mclaren's era in this article he wrote after the Crotian game.
England coach Steve McClaren issued a lengthy list of demands to his players before they entered battle in Zagreb.
The meaningless soundbites rolled off the tongue as McClaren called for "character... pride... passion... attitude... an English performance."
England captain John Terry even joined in the jingoism by announcing he was to deliver a Churchillian speech to rally the troops.
All splendid stuff - and all obviously left behind in the dressing room as McClaren's supposedly brave new era was exposed as a sham.
Talk of football and how England might win this game was conspicuous by its absence.
This became more understandable given the clueless efforts of McClaren, his tactical guru Terry Venables, and England's players.
McClaren's trademark grin has graced almost every occasion since his appointment.
Sadly for McClaren, it was wiped emphatically and humiliatingly off his face by a Croatia team prepared and inspired in a far superior fashion by his colourful counterpart Slaven Bilic.
McClaren's list of cliches and Terry's tub-thumping inspired a performance devoid of all the qualities they listed.
England, as so often before, talked a far better game than they actually played.
The only surprise is that anyone should be surprised that this team of players, cossetted and almost treated as a superior race by the Football Association, should flop again.
Croatia deserved their win, admittedly helped by a freak second goal when keeper Paul Robinson missed Gary Neville's back-pass.
But England produced a lifeless, atrocious performance that lacked direction and inspiration and will only increase the doubts of a nation decidedly underwhelmed by McClaren's arrival in Soho Square.
And as for McClaren's quote afterwards about hoping to "sneak" a win - what a depressing message for an England coach to convey.
McClaren's, and Venables' lest we forget, tactical switch to 3-5-2 created uncertainty and incompetence in equal measure.
Ironically, it was only Robinson who kept Croatia out until the 61st minute and Eduardo's looping header.
England's display was in keeping with their palsied efforts at the World Cup and on Saturday against Macedonia.
Wayne Rooney and Peter Crouch were poor, but where was the faster, better service McClaren's overhaul was supposed to provide?
McClaren's reshuffle, with the deserved introduction of Scott Parker, did not stiffen midfield as Croatia created all the chances.
Ashley Cole had a nightmare at left-back, flouting his billing as the world's best in that position.
And the Michael Carrick myth continues.
Manchester United's £18m man could only show less urgency in possession if he actually fell asleep on the ball.
And a defence that had looked sound, even when England had struggled previously, looked ill-at-ease and exposed thanks to McClaren's tinkering.
If a Sven-Goran Eriksson side had produced this performance, one can only wonder at the blood-letting that would be demanded.
McClaren was an integral part of that regime, and this defeat was more of the same - only worse.
England's coach will need all his spin doctors at his side to paint a pretty picture of his recent days in office.
He was outmaneouvred by a rookie coach in Bilic, who at least backed up his brave talk before the game with actions.
Bilic has transformed a Croatia side that had a dreadful World Cup.
McClaren has taken a side that had a dreadful World Cup and delivered no discernible improvement.
Croatia were lively, created chances, and took full note of Bilic's message that McClaren's tactical shift was playing into their hands.
England and McClaren now have five months to ponder two poor performances before the serious Euro 2008 action resumes against Israel in March.
McClaren will hope missing stars of the calibre of Steven Gerrard and Owen Hargreaves are fit and available.
And he must also find more than a few throwaway words - as well as a tactical plan that works - if the doubts expressed when he was appointed in such haste by the FA are not to increase.
leg_breaker
28 Dec 2006, 12:12 PM
McClaren's a joke. Don't choose a formation if you don't know how to coach it. You can't just say 'play 3-5-2' and expect it to work by magic, especially if none of the players have played it before, and none of them are given any defined roles.