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Scotland play Holland on March 28 - but who will win?

Capello delighted with perfect end to dream first year in the job

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Published Date: 20 November 2008
FABIO Capello believes it would have been impossible for England to have done any better in his first 12 months in charge after rounding off a memorable year in perfect style by beating Germany 2-1 in Berlin.
Capello's side dominated throughout and even recovered from the setback of conceding a needless equaliser. It means England ended the year with seven wins and a draw from their nine matches under Capello, the only reverse coming against France in his
second match in charge last March.

And the Italian admitted it could not have gone any better. "I think it is impossible to be better than this," he said. "We have played nine games and after every one I said the players had taken another step forward. Today is another one. The players played very well. They played like a team. That was very important."

The manner of the performance was as eye-catching as the victory itself.

"It was a very good result for us," added Capello. "I said yesterday I had confidence in the team because I felt the players knew what I wanted during the game and knew what they had to do. We played very well, all the players did. They played with confidence and technical ability and I am very happy about that."

Capello was reluctant to heap too much praise on the outstanding Gabriel Agbonlahor's shoulders, well as the Aston Villa striker played. The team display was just too accomplished. "Gabriel did very well," said Capello. "He used space and his movement was excellent. He gave us balance when we went forward and when we defended. But I don't like to speak about one player because the whole performance was so good."

German coach Joachim Low admitted his side were second best. "The English were better over the whole game," he said. "We had a bad day and deserved to lose. You can see clearly that England were stronger. We did not have the maturity today to beat these opponents."





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  • Last Updated: 20 November 2008 12:25 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: England's football team
 
1

Haggiskiller,

20/11/2008 01:55:00
"The English were better over the whole game," he said. "We had a bad day and deserved to lose. You can see clearly that England were stronger. We did not have the maturity today to beat these opponents."

It's really odd to hear a manager speaking so candidly about his expectations for his team. I know that it's good to be realistic and to take the long view but it always makes me feel rather uneasy when the manager of my team carries on in this manner.

Maybe supporters are comforted by managers making petty excuses like blaming the referee or (best ever) the ballboys. I think that real progress must follow honest reflection but do they have to admit it to the fans?
2

Few Against Many,

20/11/2008 09:51:15
Perhaps he is just trying to kill the culture of over expectation in England Haggis killer? As a nation the English seem to have massive unfounded self belief about there football team. They (quite rightly) expect England to beat the small teams but can’t seem to grasp that teams that they considered smaller (Croatia, Russia etc) are capable of beating anybody on there day. They also don’t seem to realise when they are up against a team who are superior still expecting victory. Ultimately I blame the Sun newspaper as the main offender in developing this culture.
3

antifa,

20/11/2008 11:52:19
2 - those were the German managers' comments, as must be obvious. So how would this kill the culture of expectation in England?

England has every right to feel confident. They beat Croatia away 4-1 and have just earned a well-deserved victory over Germany with its B-team.

"They also don’t seem to realise when they are up against a team who are superior." Other than Brazil, England have beaten most of the best teams in recent years, so why shouldn't they have ambitions to win?

Do you think any other major footballing country behaves any differently?
4

Jack Slim,

20/11/2008 17:32:39
#3 Couldn't have put it better myself. There seems to be this strong vibe in Scotland that it's a terrible thing for some England fans to have high hopes for their team....as though people from France or Russia or Sweden or wherever don't believe the exact same thing about their own national teamL that it has the chance to win the WC....if you don't have that ambition, why play in the tournament at all?

 

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