Even then the win against Sweden
had me squawking like an angry macaw at the bastards in navy blue with sky blue
trim (and how weird does that kit look, eh?). First 45 minutes, all fine. We
can’t keep the ball but neither can Sweden. It was like they were all playing
for charity. Still it’s a short journey from Gerrard’s Cross to Carroll’s
Noggin and England go 1 up.
Ten minutes into the second half
England give the space of Hyde Park to rampaging Viking Incarnate Olaf Mellberg
and we’re 2-1 down. Cue Wearguard Woy being decisive and positive: Milner goes
off having played like a cotton town on its last legs (bags of industry, no end
product) and on comes Theo Walcott, who reminds me of one of them Mazda sports
cars: he’s fast, smooth, difficult to catch but everyone knows it’s not a real sports car.
Now once I’d recovered from
chewing fingernails, fag-ends and a good proportion of the rug in the front
room, I started to get that awful feeling again. You know the one? When images
borne on sun-kissed clouds waft across the windows of your mind. Images
of white-clad lads, lions in triplicate about their stinking nylon shirts,
holding aloft some kind of bauble or trinket. They are smiling, they are triumphant,
and fuck me, they’re English!
Before the Sweden game I looked
at the England subs bench and it could not have looked thinner if it had been adorned
by cover models for Vanity Fair. There are still obvious problems with the
team: John Terry could be out sprinted by a broken-winged swallow at the moment
(I’d be playing Jagielka meself); Gerrard feels wasted playing deep; and Ashley
Young looks more nervous than a stray Corgi in a Korean kebab shop.
Then again, the upside is that
England scored three without their ‘talisman’ (ridiculous football-speak
meaning ‘best player’ which in Rooney’s case isn’t backed up by
recent performances in an England shirt); the scorers were all between 21 and
23 years of age; and hellfire we’ll have Spain in the quarters so really it’s
not that important what happens so long as these young lads keep getting a
kick.
So, yes, low expectations, but
no, not remotely downbeat. I think the FA have to be congratulated on not going
for Redknapp who, given the strange bumptiousness of his departure from White Hart
Lane, was probably going to be the right man at the wrong time. Certainly the
media would have been jollied up and over-optimistic, 'Arry would've been unable to resist givin' it large and we’d have never had
this quiet acceptance of over-achievement by modest players.
As for the rest of the
tournament, I think you’ll find I’d pointed y’all in the direction of Russia’s
inevitable demise. Germany continue to feed the posse of pundits with the usual
clichés. They know how to win, they’re never beaten, they’re organised,
efficient… they also happen to be really bloody good but let's not let that get in the way of an old-fashioned stereotype. Hellfire even Vieira was joining in with it. (Disappointing to see Keane and Vieira sharing a TV studio without anyone having the wit to order some pizza at half-time).
Spain’s little ninety-minute
keep-ball session against Ireland was one of the more one-sided affairs I’ve
ever seen in world football. And with Torres looking more confident they might yet have
someone who can finish of all the pretty patterns with a proper punch. I know
the stats for Xavi are always amazing but we have to remember that he never passes
it more than ten yards. And given the way he shoots I sometimes wonder whether
he can kick it much further.
Holland left in trudging
oblivion. Good. I still haven’t forgiven Van Marwjick for
besmirching the good name of Dutch footy with that cloak and dagger clobbering
they tried to give Spain in the World Cup Final.
Portugal and Germany are shoo-ins
for the semi-finals now; Spain’ll join them, as will France or Italy; all of
which makes for a bleeding wonderful spectacle for us. My only fear is that the
closer the final, the worse the theatrics.
It hasn’t been too bad – indeed Gerrard’s
star jumps have been up there with the best – but there are some knobheads who
roll around the floor like they’ve injured themselves in an accident at a
timber yard. I mean that old duffer who Nalbandian scarred at Queen’s Club
yesterday would’ve been doing sixteen somersaults around the park had he been
wearing a Croatian football shirt.
The greatest disappointment thus
far has been the bottling of it by Poland, both in their first game and their
last. Neither the Czechs nor the Greeks could intimidate a flock of sheep, and
yet the Poles wilted under the weight of expectation in a way England’s golden
generation could only sit back and admire.
The golden generation has of
course pretty much gone. At last. This new generation needs a less blingy
epithet – one more in keeping with Cameron’s England. It’s the Tinfoil
Generation; shiny, modest and surprisingly useful.
