BSP-23 ‘Wally with the Brolly’: Croatia flop won’t haunt fearless England

284

ZCZC

BSP-23

FBL-WC-ENG-CRO-MCCLAREN-FOCUS

‘Wally with the Brolly’: Croatia flop won’t haunt fearless England

REPINO, Russia, July 10, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – For Steve McClaren, England’s
World Cup semi-final against Croatia brings back painful memories. It was
after a match between the two teams more than a decade ago that he was
labelled the “Wally with the Brolly”.

In the pouring rain of a November night at Wembley, England slipped to a 3-
2 defeat against a Croatian side who had already secured their place in
Austria and Switzerland for Euro 2008, failing to qualify themselves.

The image of McClaren sheltering from the elements under an umbrella came
to define the latest in England’s litany of disappointments on the
international stage and is one he has failed to shirk in a journeyman
coaching career since.

Luka Modric and Ivan Rakitic were part of the winning side and have gone on
to form the bedrock of a talented midfield that has allowed a country with a
population of just over four million to punch above their weight for a
decade.

In sharp contrast, not a single member of the England squad that night are
in Russia after Gareth Southgate put his faith in youth by bringing the
third-youngest squad to the tournament.

“There was this FA umbrella lying around so I thought, ‘I’ll use that,
support the FA and keep myself dry!’ McClaren told FourFourTwo magazine
earlier this year.

“After thinking I’d get killed for wearing a beanie (hat), instead I got
killed for holding a brolly.”

“Later I went to Holland and at Heracles there is no dugout — just benches
with no cover. We had around eight members of staff at Twente and each of
them used an umbrella.

“As I came out the team manager asked: ‘Trainer! Would you like an
umbrella?’ I said: ‘No, I’ll end up looking like a drowned rat on the
substitutes’ bench, but I will not have an umbrella’.”

The Croatia defeat was just one of a number of crushing disappointments for
a so-called “golden generation” including David Beckham, Steven Gerrard and
Frank Lampard who never made it beyond the quarter-finals of a major
tournament.

Without the same hype or fanfare, England’s current crop have managed to
capture the hearts of a nation in a way that star-studded squad never did.

Where once the England manager was a figure of fun, he is now a style icon
— Southgate’s matchday attire has seen waistcoat sales rocket in a country
gripped by World Cup fever.

Marks and Spencer, official tailors to the team, declared Saturday, when
England comfortably saw off Sweden 2-0 in the quarter-finals, as
#NationalWaistcoatDay in honour of the 47-year-old.

The manager’s big decisions have also paid off. He has switched
successfully to a back three and his backing of Jordan Pickford despite the
Everton goalkeeper’s inexperience has paid dividends.

Pickford made three big saves against Sweden after helping win a first-ever
World Cup penalty shootout against Colombia in the last 16.

By contrast, when McClaren threw Scott Carson in for his competitive
international debut against Croatia, an early blunder saw Niko Kranjcar’s
long-range effort slip through his fingers and Carson never played a
competitive game again for England.

Yet what England lack in experience, they now make up for in a fearlessness
that is completely at odds with the tension on and off the field that has
blighted so many previous campaigns.

“We’re concentrating on us, what’s going on now, not what happened in the
past,” said full-back Ashley Young. “We look forward to the future. We’re
creating our own stories.”

BSS/AFP/SG/ARS/1739 hrs