Friday, 1 January 2016
312 England Internationals
First viewed : 16 November 1977
This is where my interest in football finally blossomed , watching England's World Cup Qualifier at home to Italy in November 1977. Though my interest in football away from Rochdale FC has ebbed and flowed over the years, I've always known who's gone up or down in the domestic divisions and who the top players are from this point on
England won 2-0 with goals from Kevin Keegan and Trevor Brooking but it was a pyrrhic victory as Italy only had the formality of beating Luxembourg in their final match to go through. England's earlier failure. Don Revie's incessant tinkering and then Ron Greenwood's conservatism had meant that England had failed to match Italy's convincing scorelines against Finland and Luxembourg in earlier games and so they were out of their second successive World Cup Finals.
Despite this background it was a encouraging performance. Stung by criticism for playing five Liverpool players including 35-year old Ian Callaghan in his previous game against Luxembourg , Greenwood handed out new caps to Everton striker Bob Latchford and the two Manchester wingers , United's Steve Coppell and City's Peter Barnes. I can still tell you the team without looking it up - G : Ray Clemence ( Liverpool ) D: Phil Neal ( Liverpool ) , Trevor Cherry ( Leeds) , Dave Watson ( Man City), Emlyn Hughes ( Liverpool ) M: Ray Wilkins ( Chelsea ) , Brooking ( West Ham ), Barnes, Coppell F : Latchford, Keegan ( SV Hamburg ) . I'd never actually heard of Cherry, Wilkins or Brooking before that night.
The scorers , Keegan and Brooking, would become the cornerstones of England during the Greenwood era, rescuing the next World Cup qualifying campaign against Hungary in 1981 and they were badly missed when they picked up injuries before the Finals in 1982. The other encouraging sign was the performance of Peter Barnes who went on some thrilling runs despite Italy's man-marking system.
Barnes became my favourite England player as I had a real soft spot for City but Greenwood failed to stick with him as we went into the eighties and I was never as enthusiastic about the England team after that as mundane players from teams I hated such as Arsenal, Ipswich and then Watford got the nod instead. Then Ipswich's manager got the job and started picking Barnes although it was Watford's John instead. By the late eighties I was supporting Eire instead.
Now I realise that Barnes was something of his own worst enemy, a lazy player who didn't want to fully develop his game and gradually became less effective as the years went by. His refusal to track back made him unpopular with other players and it has been suggested that Greenwood bowed to player pressure from the other England players in removing him from the team. He also made a bad move to Leeds in 1981 who played him as a striker and were relegated at the end of that season. He briefly returned to the top flight with Ron Atkinson's Manchester United but he was one of the first players unloaded by Alex Ferguson and he quickly dropped through the leagues after that , ending up at non-league Mossley FC.
Outside of World Cup and European Championship Finals it's hit and miss whether I bother to watch England games. The last one I remember watching was the game ( in a pub where my pop quiz team was playing ) was the game against Sweden where Ivanisovic capped his four goal performance with that astounding overhead volley from thirty yards out.
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Prior to signing for United, Barnes had played the previous season in Div 1 for Coventry. For us, according to people older than I, he looked amazing at first, then seemed to lose his nerve along with the rest of team... this being the season we won the first ten, then wound up playing like relegation candidates.
ReplyDeleteAs for England, I remember being excited for the 1990 World Cup, aided by the top-notch song, but little so since, to the degree my main hopes are that United players don't get injuries of the ilk that pretty much ended Coppell, Gary Bailey and Neil Webb.
Was he not the first victim of Fergie's clear-out ? I seem to recall an anecdote from Gordon Strachan that he once submerged himself in the bath to avoid the manager's wrath.
ReplyDeleteThat ten game run was ended the same Saturday we played away at Swindon, my first non-local away game. I recall some guys on the coach gaining some consolation from the United result -was it Sheffield Wednesday ? - after we'd been hammered 4-0.
Neil Webb was very nice about us on Kick Off when we played Palce in the Cup so it was a shame his career went belly-up. Haven't seen his wife on telly for a long time- whatever happened to her ?
The ten match winning run ended with a draw at Luton, but Sheff Weds was our first defeat, a month later.
ReplyDeleteBarnes was the first out of the door, yes. Quickly followed by Mark Higgins, if I recall right. Barnes did play in Fergie's first few matches before being swiftly moved on back to City.
Oh well nearly right.
ReplyDeleteI seem to remember Higgins playing against us in the FA Cup Third Round tie in 1986 but he couldn't play in a League game unless he paid back the insurance money he'd collected on his retirement. I guess he enjoyed it so much he decided it was worth the gamble.
Higgins did indeed make his debut against Rochdale, and played seven more games that season. He frequently makes "worst ever" lists from older Reds I know, but managed to eke out a few more years with Bury and Stoke before he retired, so hopefully he made back the money lost from the payout.
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