Nerveless Wales won’t be coming home yet!

Coymay

No longer will it just be people who are collecting their state pensions who have memories of Welsh footballers doing their country proud in the Final stages of a major tournament!

As someone who always fights the corner of the 1976 team which won their qualifying group to reach the Quarter Finals of the European Championships that year, when Wales’ nearly sixty years in the footballing wilderness is brought up, I have to admit that adventure did not have the happiest of endings as we made our exit amid crowd violence, exacerbated by awful refereeing and the almost obligatory missed penalties by us and/or controversial spot kicks for our opponents.

No, even those of us who champion the cause of Mike Smith’s side from the mid seventies have to admit that, when it comes to our football team making the nation swell with pride in the latter stages of a major international competition, you have to go back all of those fifty eight years to Sweden 1958 when a seventeen year old Pele knocked us out of the World Cup after we’d made it into the last eight.

I’m not going to catalogue all of those occasions since then when the country dared to think that this will be the time when new names to rival those of the Charles’, Allchurch’s. Jones’ and Kelsey’s would emerge, because any self respecting fan of the national team should know them off by heart and, if they don’t, they can watch this to get up to Speed (pun intended).

I don’t know if my opinions are representative of the age group who are too young to recall what happened in 1958, yet old enough to remember each of those times we got close to ending the qualifying drought, only for it to end in failure (heroic or otherwise), but, when the long wait was finally ended last September, I told myself that just getting to Euro 2016 was enough for me.

I was so pleased with Chris Coleman and his team because they had given me what I’d began to give up on – watching my country compete in the final stages of a major competition.

The trouble is that human beings tend to be a species that always want more and, as the groups were drawn and the months ticked by towards the summertime extravaganza in France, just being there wasn’t enough any more. I would only be fed until I wanted no more if we could get out of the group we had been classed as fourth seeds in behind England, Russia and Slovakia.

Again, I should qualify this by saying that others might feel differently, but all of that failure had made me cautious – if we were going to make it into the knock out stages, it could only be by scraping in there by being one of the four lucky third placed finishers.

So it was that I said I would have settled for a draw with Slovakia beforehand and that I could not see past a 2-0 loss to England. Unusually for me though, as the crucial match got closer, I was fairly confident we could get the job done.

Oh those Russians! A fairly ordinary Russian team had been too good for us in the last of those heartbreaking close misses back in 2003. However, in their matches with England and Slovakia in 2016, they had done a very convincing impersonation of one of those squads which flies home from a tournament having made a surprisingly early departure amid recriminations from home and calls for the head of the manager/coach.

Aaron Ramsey's celebration after putting us ahead is a pretty calm one given the circumstances, but then that's perhaps to be expected after his cute, nerveless, finish - after all the talk of "passion" before the England, it was quality pure and simple which got the job done for us last night.*

Aaron Ramsey’s celebration after putting us ahead is a pretty calm one given the circumstances, but then that’s perhaps to be expected after his cute, nerveless, finish – after all the talk of “passion” before the England game, it was quality pure and simple which got the job done for us last night.*

Our opponents were beset by injuries to key players and possessed an ageing pair of central defenders, so there were grounds for Welsh optimism that the point, which should have been enough to take us through, or, whisper it gently, even a win by the odd goal could be gained – I defy anyone to claim though that they predicted a 3-0 pasting for a country over eight hundred times larger than us in area and nearly fifty times bigger than us in terms of population with the best performance I’ve seen from a Welsh team in my life when you consider what was at stake.

Yes, as many suspected they might, Russia’s ponderous defence struggled to cope with Gareth Bale as, for the first time, the world’s most expensive player showed the full range of his skills, not just outrageous free kicks.

Also, having looked a poor outfit in their first two matches, Russia were even worse here. After the game, coach Leonid Slutsky said;-

“I would like to apologise to the Russian supporters for our performances, the fans in the stadium and watching at home on TV, they did not deserve this.

I take responsibility. I had enough time to find players. If we did not succeed it is truly my mistake. Someone else should take over with a big championship to come.”

and the one player in their team to emerge with any credit on the night, goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev, went over to the Russian fans to, apparently, apologise for the side’s display.

So, it’s true to say that our opponents were a team with issues and there is no doubt that it was a very good time to be playing them, but England and Slovakia were unable to blow them away as easily and conclusively as Wales did. Any analysis of the ninety minutes has to acknowledge that Russia played nowhere near their potential, but it also, surely, has to credit Wales for a performance that far better teams would have struggled to live with.

Although it didn’t feel like it at the time of course, what happened in the first ten minutes clearly signposted that it was going to be a very long night for our opponents. Within less than a minute, Akinfeev had been forced into the first of a series of saves he had to make from Bale and the Welsh were able to enjoy spells of the sort of controlled possession that they could never manage against England four days earlier.

As mentioned before, Bale’s pace was always likely to cause Russia problems, but the real concern for them must have been that it wasn’t just Wales’ “Galactico” who was looking so much quicker in thought and deed than they were – Russia were struggling to live with a vibrant Wales all over the park.

Recent Welsh success has been firmly based on their tight defence, but here it was the more creative players who were really taking the eye as, with Sam Vokes in to give the attack a focal point for our talented creators to work off, a team I thought would struggle desperately for goals in France, looked like they could score every time they crossed the halfway line!

The magnificent Joe Allen had burst past an opponent in a manner you would not normally associate with “the Welsh Pirlo”to set up that very early Bale chance, but when Man of the Match Aaron Ramsey started to get involved, things began to look very ominous indeed for our opponents.

In my opinion, Ramsey had been one of the few Welsh players who could look at himself in the mirror after the England match and say that he had delivered on the day. Rambo, coming off a disappointing season with Arsenal, was inspired by the occasion last Thursday rather than intimidated by it and it looks to me like he has taken a lot of confidence from what he did against the English.

Trying to cope with Bale is a real challenge for any team in this competition, but if Wales can also draw on a Ramsey with the type of confidence he was playing with back in the first half of 13/14, then they become far more of a threat to the sort of sides who would have been expected to make short work of us under different circumstances.

It’s a bit early to say that Ramsey is fully back to his best yet, but the way he moved on to a superb Allen pass in the tenth minute and allowed Akinfeev to commit himself before gently dinking the ball over him and into the net was not the sort of finish that the hesitant man in the Arsenal shirt had been coming up with over the past ten months.

With Vokes proving a handful, Joe Ledley, like Allen, adding a high quality passing game, to the work rate shown against England and Chris Gunter and Neil Taylor looking like proper wing backs, as opposed the full backs they were on Thursday, Russia were being overwhelmed whenever they lost possession anywhere within sixty yards of their goal – and then, of course, there was Bale!

In the twentieth minute, match summariser Tony Pulis made it clear that he thought Wales had a chance to double their lead after they gained possession about five yards outside their own penalty area. I must admit I thought he was getting  a bit carried away when I heard what he said, but a few seconds later, the ball was being picked out of the Russian net again as Bale caused such panic with another raking run that the pass which put Taylor through on goal came from a Russian boot.

Perhaps not surprisingly, the player whose last goal had come for Wrexham at Grays Athletic in 2010 in front of a crowd of 298, made a bit of a mess of his glorious opportunity as he allowed Akinfeev to save, but he kept his composure to volley the rebound home from six yards.

Wales were playing so well and showing so few signs of nerves that, realistically, complacency was their only enemy now and there was an element of that around as a long punt upfield by the keeper was not dealt with by the defence and the otherwise under employed Wayne Hennessey had to make a fine save to deny the giant Artem Dzyuba.

That incident helped concentrate minds though and the rest of the first period saw play continuing to head in the direction of the Russian goal. It’s hard to remember all of the goalmouth incidents in that forty five minutes, but Vokes shouldn’t really have allowed Akinfeev to save after he had been set up by yet another run by Bale, who, like Ramsey, forced the keeper into action with long range shots.

Russia brought on one thirty four year old Berezutski twin to replace the other (it was their birthday yesterday!) at the back at half time, but it made no difference – the new man had given away a corner within seconds as Wales broke with pace again and the overworked Akinfeev was soon making his first save of the half from Bale.

Ramsey was pulling the strings now with some classic number ten play, setting up Gunter to put in a cross from a very dangerous position that was scrambled behind by the defence and then Bale, only for Akinfeev to foil him once again.

With his Liverpool future uncertain, I wonder if Joe Allen could be tempted back to south Wales to turn out for the capital city club? You never know - well I think I do actually, but, to be serious, there are some players in the squad who could add a lot to the squad who might be tempted to sign for City if the right offer was made - I believe a good portion of any outlay could be recouped through season ticket sales.*

With his Liverpool future uncertain, I wonder if Joe Allen could be tempted back to south Wales to turn out for the capital city club? You never know – well I think I do actually, but, to be serious, there are some players in the squad who could add a lot to the City cause, who might be tempted to sign for us if the right offer was made – I believe a good portion of any outlay could be recouped through season ticket sales if we went for the right man/men.*

However when Ramsey played another pass through a square defence that Vokes had the intelligence not to go for because he was in an offside position, Bale finally got his goal as he nudged the ball home with the outside of his left foot to cap a glorious move which had involved over half of the team.

Peterborough 2009 (City were 4-0 up and ended up drawing) means that I have real trouble accepting that my team are ever home and dry, but even I had to accept that, amazingly given the circumstances, the points were in the bag before the match had entered it’s final quarter.

There was time for plenty of “ole’s” from an ecstatic Welsh support as they watched their team play keepball and Coleman was even able to take Allen, Ledley and Bale off for Dave Edwards, Andy King and Simon Church, but the closest we got to another goal was when Wales got sloppy for just the second time in the game to give Dzyuba a chance inside the six yard box which he really should have converted in the dying moments.

Shortly after that, Wales completed a win which resembled the one by the same score in Israel in spring 2015 in some ways, but, given the opposition and the occasion, was on another level from that one in truth.

The good news did not end there either. With Roy Hodgson choosing to make six changes to the side that beat us, England could only draw 0-0 with Slovakia, thus making us group winners! That result gives the latter a good chance of being one of the third place qualifiers, while the former now face one of Hungary, Portugal, Iceland or Austria for a place in the Quarter Finals.

As for us, I’m afraid Welsh supporters in France (and I daresay a few over here as well!) now face the task of finding a way to get to Paris on Saturday for a 5 o clock kick off with what looks like being one of Croatia, Czech Republic, Northern Ireland or Albania. Pre- Russia, I would have been a bit concerned about facing any of them, but now I say we could beat all of them (although, ideally, I’d rather avoid the first named).

So, Wales have met the target that I, greedily, set them, but that’s it now for me. A win (which looks better by the day) over Slovakia and a night that I still am having problems believing it happened against Russia to win the group is enough for me.

Yes, not really turning up against England (which Chris Coleman and some of the players have now acknowledged) is a slight disappointment, but anything beyond this is a bonus for me now – as far as I’m concerned, the Welsh party can return home as heroes no matter what the rest of the tournament holds for us.

However, I can’t help feeling that there is a strong belief within the squad that they can go further still yet and when you consider that the leading scorer and assist provider in the tournament are Welshmen (Bale and Ramsey respectively), that we are the top scorers and have scored two more first half goals than anyone else (albeit we’ve played a game more than many others) , then, maybe, they’ve got a point. Thank you to everyone involved in our Euro 2016 campaign, you’ve made an old(ish!) man very happy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Wales come a distant second in “Battle of Britain”.

Coymay

It’s because of the feeling that your team were within touching distance of getting a draw only to have it snatched away from you so late in proceedings that losing to a goal in added time is so much harder to take than going down to one scored in, say, the sixty fifth minute.

Whenever it happens to City, you can almost guarantee that someone on some messageboard somewhere will be saying that there is a deep, fundamental, flaw in our training, tactical, managerial etc. etc approach which makes us particularly susceptible to such things happening.

However, while it’s true that we were the victims more than the instigators when it came to very late match deciding goals last season, my suspicion is that City are just like most others teams in this regard – we may concede more of them than some, but there are many who it happens to more.

Scanning my memory banks, it seems to me that Wales may find themselves quite near the top of any table which has the side which concedes the least late winners at the top and the one who lets in the most at the bottom – my impression is that our national team have been good at holding out for a draw down the years.

Therefore, it’s all the more disappointing I suppose that when they fall victims to such a goal, it so happens to be in a major tournament against the team that most of us would regard as our biggest rivals on the international front.

And yet, although it’s hard to get “what might have been” type feelings out of my mind, the truth is that the 2-1 defeat to England in Lens yesterday does not feel as devastating as I would have expected it to if you had asked beforehand how a late, late winning goal for our opponents would effect me.

Presumably, part of the explanation for this is that yesterday’s match did not carry that air of finality which tells you there is no coming back from such a setback? Chris Coleman said more than once in the build up to the game that it was just one of three which would decide whether we would make it into the next stage of the competition and he was right. For now, I’m looking forward to Russia on Monday rather than back to England on Thursday, but whether I can be as philosophical about Sturridge’s goal if our final group game goes against us must be open to doubt.

That said, even though it was England, if I’m being totally honest there is a part of me which has to acknowledge that, in truth, justice was done in the end yesterday – the far better of the two sides won the game.

Two factors dominated the build up to the first ever Wales v England meeting in the Finals of an international competition. I’ll deal briefly with the threat of more of the sort of violence seen in Marseilles between England and Russia supporters and a contingent of locals during the first round of matches later on, but I want to talk now about the phoney war regarding which one of the two sides was the most passionate.

Gareth Bale celebrates after his free kick gives Wales the lead. Yes, just as on Saturday, the goalkeeper should have done better but this shouldn't be allowed to detract from the technique shown by Bale in getting the ball to move as much as it did.*

Gareth Bale celebrates after his free kick gives Wales the lead. Yes, just as on Saturday, the goalkeeper should have done better but this shouldn’t be allowed to detract from the technique shown by Bale in getting the ball to move as much as it did.*

Yesterday morning I read a few opinion pieces in the media which claimed that Wales had “won” the pre match battle hands down. Now, I know “mind games” are an accepted part of modern day sport and I can understand why some place so much emphasis on them, but, perhaps due to my age and the nature of the times I grew up in, I’ve always thought they came second by miles to what happens on the pitch, track, court etc.

More than that though, accusing your opponents of not being as passionate as you are never struck me a particularly clever fight to pick in the first place, because I found it hard to work out how Wales could win it.

Whether things developed as they did as a result of a deliberate policy in the Wales camp or whether it all just snowballed after some unusually frank remarks from a modern day footballer is a matter for conjecture. However, Gareth Bale has had ten years experience of dealing with the football media and it did strike me as odd that he would come out with what were, by some distance, the most controversial comments he’s made in that decade now.

In the event, just like their English counterparts. the Welsh players and supporters at the ground ensured the occasion was dripping with passion, but, as far as the team went, it seemed to me that they brought their hwyl out on to the pitch with them, but, to a large degree, left their footballing ability back in the dressing room.

Don’t get me wrong, I know that if Wales had gone out to take England on in a game of pure football, they would have. almost certainly, lost, but we needed to respect possession a lot more than we did – unfortunately, although England had one or two who wilted on the day when it came to playing to their potential, Wales had more.

During the first half, which ended with us in the lead courtesy of another unlikely free kick from Gareth Bale, Wales were able to keep England at arm’s length to a large degree, but the writing had been very clearly on the wall for much of the time as they were, almost completely, unable to play what I call joined up football.

With Wayne Hennessey back in goal, Joe Ledley in central midfield and Hal Robson-Kanu leading the line, I think it’s fair to say that Chris Coleman was able to field what he would regard as his first choice starting eleven. In the past, this team, and variations of it, have been able to pass the ball accurately and progressively as they gradually work the ball up the field (a good example of this being the winning goal against Slovakia), but, for some reason, they couldn’t do it yesterday.

The strange thing was that when they got into the game, the three players charged with mostly attacking functions (Bale, Robson-Kanu and Aaron Ramsey) all looked like they were able to cause problems for the England defence, but it was always on an individual basis – there was little or no link up play between them.

Worse than that though, there appeared to be an almost complete breakdown between those three and the rest of the team – whether it was via longer or shorter passes being attempted, it made no difference, the link between the three attackers and the other seven outfield players was virtually non existent.

Against Slovakia, wing back Chis Gunter and Neil Taylor were able to provide support for the attacking trio as we made good use of diagonal passes played into spaces for them to exploit, but that never happened yesterday – indeed, England’s two full backs, ostensibly, part of a normal, flat, back four, made for far more effective wing backs than our pair who were too preoccupied with defending.

I should say here that credit needs to be given to our opponents for the part they played in making it so hard for Wales to find any rhythm to their passing. England surprised me with their very effective pressing of the ball and I’d say that this was the most impressive aspect of a performance that was far too good for Wales on the day, but still some way short of what I would term a complete display.

It was tough for Wales to impose themselves in the battle for possession then, but I still feel that they are capable of a lot better than they showed. If Bale’s muted display on Saturday could be put down to a combination of playing in an unfamiliar position and an inability on his part to impose himself on proceedings, that was not the cause of his lack of real impact, his goal apart of course, here – he looked more like his normal self when in possession in the right areas of the pitch for him, but his team mates just weren’t able to ensure that happened often enough.

Our front three may as well have been isolated lone strikers in much the same way as Kyle Lafferty was for Northern Ireland in their first match against Poland for all of the good they were able to do as a threesome – just as all over the pitch with this Welsh team, the teamwork was there when we didn’t have the ball, but notably absent when we did.

So it was that Ledley and Joe Allen, and to a lesser degree, Gunter and Taylor, could be complemented for the defensive side of their game, but not for what happened in the other facets of the sitting midfield role.

Hardly surprisingly, us mug punters tend to look at what players do when they have the ball first when forming our opinions on them, but the passing of time, along with being told by pundits how good someone is at the “unseen” things in the game has meant that there is more recognition now that what someone does without the ball is a huge factor in determining how good or bad they are. Nevertheless, any midfield player especially has to be able to contribute with the ball to a level which is consistent with what should be expected at the standard of football they are performing in and, for me, Allen and Ledley came up short in that respect.

Roy Hodgson’s decision to persevere with Kane and Sterling (the first drained of energy after carrying a very heavy workload in Spurs’ very physically demanding style of play and the second still unable to reach former heights following the move he and his agent(s) instigated last summer) helped in us surviving the first half fairly comfortably, but if anything emphasised the disparity in resources, which will always be there, between the two countries involved, it was that he could turn to Vardy and Sturridge to replace them at half time.

Although Daniel Sturridge is lucky in some ways to even be at Euro 2016 given the injury issues which have followed him throughout his career, I still felt a sense of foreboding when I saw him coming on at the start of the second half because I've always thought he was the most natural and instinctive of England's strikers - this goal which denied Wales may have looked simple, but I'm not sure that some of the other multi millionaires in white would have been able to score it*.

Although Daniel Sturridge is lucky in some ways to even be at Euro 2016 given the injury issues which have followed him throughout his career, I still felt a sense of foreboding when I saw him coming on at the start of the second half because I’ve always thought he was the most natural and instinctive of England’s strikers – this goal which denied Wales may have looked simple, but I’m not sure that some of the other multi millionaires in white would have been able to score it*.

As it turned out, Vardy did nothing except net an equaliser for which he was praised by the critics for his goalscoring instincts, when it seemed to me that all he did was “goal hang” like I used to do in the schoolyard and got lucky because the ball deflected off Ashley Williams’ head  to legitimise a goal, which would have been disallowed for offside otherwise.

Similarly, Sturridge didn’t do a great deal else beside score, but, this time, we saw the sort of instinctive striker which Wales just do not have at work, as his shot was taken so early and with so little backlift that Hennessey was blameless, despite being beaten on his near post.

With Rashford on as well to prove what a plethora of good strikers England have, it is easy to feel sorry for ourselves when you compare our resources to their’s. Indeed when Jason Mohammad interviewed Ian Rush before the game and asked him if he was wishing he was still able to play on a occasion like this, I found myself thinking that this Welsh side with Rushie in it could go a very long way in this tournament, but what happened in the ninety minutes which followed made me realise that we could have had Rush, Hughes and Giggs in their prime playing for us up front yesterday, but it would have made no difference because we never found an effective way to service our front men.

So, we now face Russia (who were beaten 2-1 by Slovakia on Wednesday) knowing that a draw will, almost certainly, be enough to put us in the last sixteen. There is a part of me which fears that England and Slovakia (who play at the same time as us) may not chase a victory too hard as they decide a draw will suit their purposes fine, but that would be a risky strategy for the latter in particular.

Does the knowledge that a draw will do mean that we will sit back and play for a point on Monday? I hope it doesn’t and, more than that, it, surely, would be the wrong policy given what we saw yesterday and have seen from the Russians in their two games so far.

Our next opponents have been very unlucky to be missing important players with injuries sustained in the lead up to the tournament and, without them, they have looked a limited outfit which lacks pace in many areas and has an aging pair of centrebacks against whom you could imagine Gareth Bale, for one, having a field day.

However, there is a doggedness about the Russians that has seen them scoring late goals in matches in which they finished the stronger, despite having been outplayed for much of the time. If Monday’s match goes into it’s final stages with us clinging on to a point, Russia will have the evidence of their previous matches and what happened to us yesterday to make them believe they will win the game in it’s last few minutes.

However, as long as we can remember to take our footballing ability out on to the pitch with us this time, I’m confident we can qualify – for the last two years Wales have shown in their competitive matches that they have it in them to succeed in the sort of challenge they face on Monday.

Finally, it would appear that the three days which saw English, Russian and Welsh fans all staying in Lille amid fears of an escalation in violence have passed off without major problems. Well done to the those who are in France supporting Wales – you have done our country proud so far, as indeed has the team, despite the result and performance against England.

*pictures courtesy of http://www.telegraph.co.uk/

 

 

 

 

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