Jacob Steinberg in Athens 

Lee Carsley urges England to follow Germany and Spain’s trust in youth

The interim manager has backed the promotion of England’s under-21 players, citing Germany and Spain’s previous success with the approach
  
  

Curtis Jones and Lee Carsley.
Curtis Jones is one of a number of England U21 players given a chance to impress for the senior side. Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images/Reuters

Lee Carsley believes England will have a better chance of glory if they follow Germany and Spain in promoting players who have won trophies at youth level.

Carsley, who steps aside for Thomas Tuchel after Sunday’s home game against the Republic of Ireland, has not been afraid to bring in inexperienced players during his spell as interim head coach.

The shift was notable as England rose to the top of Nations League Group B2 thanks to their 3-0 win over Greece on Thursday.

Noni Madueke, Morgan Rogers, Lewis Hall, Curtis Jones, Anthony Gordon, Rico Lewis and Morgan Gibbs-White have had key roles for Carsley in the under-21 side. Angel Gomes, an unused substitute against Greece, was instrumental in Carsley’s side winning the Under-21 European Championship last year.

The theory that success in under-age football breeds a winning mentality is backed up by Germany’s triumph at the 2014 World Cup and Spain winning Euro 2024.

Mesut Özil, Sami Khedira, Manuel Neuer, Mats Hummels, Jérôme Boateng and Benedikt Höwedes won the Under-21 Euros in 2009 and the World Cup five years later.

Fabián Ruiz, Dani Olmo, Mikel Oyarzabal and Mikel Merino made a similar leap in last summer’s Euros after Spain’s Under-21s won the 2019 edition.

England have recent success at various age groups and Carsley hopes those who have stepped up from the under-21s can establish themselves.

“They’ve won at under-18s as well and I think it definitely helps,” he said. “We’ve seen that with Germany in the past and with Spain so why can’t that be England?”

The youngsters were needed after England were hit by nine withdrawals before facing Greece. “They’ve put themselves in a really good position,” Carsley said.

“We spoke about the amount of players who weren’t here and the focus has been on the ones who are here. It’s given six or seven some opportunity to be in a venue like this.”

Carsley’s gamble of leaving Harry Kane out for Ollie Watkins paid off when the Aston Villa striker opened the scoring. “I definitely didn’t drop Harry,” Carsley said. “He’s done well for me every game he’s played. It was just a case of giving someone an opportunity. Ollie is playing in the Champions League with Villa. It’s great that he got a goal. It looks like a great decision then, doesn’t it?”

Kane is set to return to the starting lineup when England look to seal a return to the top tier of the Nations League by beating Ireland.

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*