Sunday 3 June 2012

FIVE Reasons Why England WILL Win Euro 2012


1. No Expectations

Between 1996 and 2010, the confidence among the English press and public was unmatched by any other nation. We were going to win every tournament because we had the best players, the luckiest managers, David Beckham's right boot, Wayne Rooney's fearlessness, Rio's braids, Peter Crouch's hair pulling abilities etc. The golden generation was born, but failed to achieve again and again and again. And now they are no more.



A new generation is born, made up of some of the old: Liverpool legend Steven Gerrard and Chelsea's disorderly duo John Terry and Ashley Cole; some of the new: the much maligned Jordan Henderson and the much hyped Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain; and some true English grit: Tottenham's Scott Parker and City's James Milner.

It's not as attractive on paper as it was 10 years ago, but this is a good thing. This new generation can be fearless. No-one (apart from me) reckons they can go beyond the quarter finals. It's a 'win-win' situation (unless they get humiliated by Ukraine, in which case it's very much 'lose').

2. Anti-Football is the New Football

If England win every game of the Euros 1-0, no-one will complain. Roy Hodgson will have his side so gloriously organised, that the likes of Franck Ribery, Arjen Robben and Andres Iniesta will dread playing England. Seriously. Imagine having James Milner and Scott Parker harassing you every two minutes, and that's before John Terry's even within 10 metres of you.


The Belgium game has taught us that England will sit and frustrate the opposition, and then use the likes of Young, Welbeck, Oxlade-Chamberlain, Walcott and Defoe to counter-attack, grab a goal and then defend, defend, defend. Gloriously.

I might put a bet on England winning every game 1-0.

3. The Chelsea Factor

If it can work for Chelsea, it can work for England. I still lie awake some nights wondering how exactly they beat Barcelona. It defies logic. But on that fateful night at the Nou Camp, Di Matteo got his tactics spot on. And they did it again in the final. Football isn't about possession, chances created, corners won etc, it's about who gets more goals.

If England get injuries and/or red cards, the Chelsea lads can remind the side what their 10 men did against Barca, or what their depleted squad managed against Bayern.


The likes of John Terry and Ashley Cole can bring their winning mentality to the national team. If it goes to penalties, England will win. Even against Germany.

4. Steven Gerrard Will Inspire, Wayne Rooney Will Return

With the unfortunate departure of Frank Lampard and Gareth Barry due to injury, a HUGE responsibility has been placed on the shoulders of our favourite Scouser (Gerrard, not Rooney). Luckily, Stevie G LOVES responsibility. Remember in 2005 when he won the Champions League single-handedly for Liverpool? And don't tell me Traore, Smicer and Luis Garcia had anything to do with it.

Now Liverpool are rubbish, and Stevie probably won't get another opportunity to lift a proper trophy (perhaps the Capital One Cup – COCup?), so now is his time to take the proverbial bull by the horns and lead England to glory.



Meanwhile, while England bravely and stubbornly hold France and Sweden to 0-0 draws, Wayne Rooney sits and ponders that time he kicked a Montenegrin, and prays that the Montenegrin-kicking incident won't be detrimental to England's hopes of qualification. Wazza returns for game three against the mighty Ukraine, and following a great season at United, he shall come into the side and inspire England to a glorious 1-0 win (Jordan Henderson with a 93rd minute winner).

We therefore qualify for the knock-out rounds, beating Spain in the quarters, Holland in the semis, and then Germany in the final. Easy. Rooney with the winning penalty. A statue of Rooney is later unveiled outside Wembley.

5. It's been one of the years

I can't recall a season as bizarre as this one has been. The Premier League has thrown up some, quite frankly, ludicrous scorelines and situations, and if that wasn't enough, the 'Hollywood couldn't have made it up' end to the season eclipsed every other final day. And then the Chelsea thing happened. Crazy. I'd love to travel back to August and tell a group of football fans what's to come, and then see their reaction.


Well, guess what? It's not over yet. There's still a European Championship around the corner, and I can't accept that it will be a predictable tournament. Spain, Germany and Holland are the three favourites, but this is the year of weird. Something odd is going to happen. I can feel it.

England – Euro 2012 Champions.