11/27/2007

Platini backs English coach for England job

England soccer manager Steve McClaren (L) and assistant coach Terry Venables attend a team training session in London Colney, north of London, Nov. 20, 2007.


BEIJING, Nov. 28 -- UEFA president Michel Platini believes an Englishman should be the new coach of England and that Premier League clubs should have more home-grown talent.

Debate about the state of English football has raged since a 2-3 defeat by Croatia knocked England out of Euro 2008 and cost coach Steve McClaren his job.

The Football Association has said nationality will not be an issue in recruiting a new coach.

"England is such a strong country that they have to take an Englishman," Platini told British newspapers yesterday. "It's your national team and an English coach is better. English coaches need to be given more chances.

"If I am looking for the manager of England, I would try to find a good English guy who everybody trusts to make a good team. You have good players."

Platini said until leading English clubs start to use more English players the national side would be at a disadvantage.

"If you do not have so many players what can you do? There are 95 registered Brazilian players in the Champions League, 94 French players and 45 English players," he said.

"When you have twice as few players as other countries it is difficult. I like your football, I like the fans and the passion, but I don't like the fact that it is too open (to foreigners). "English football is ultra-liberal and it's not so good for me. Many people are coming into your league. You sell your clubs to foreign people.

"It is my philosophy to protect the identity of the clubs and the country. Manchester United against Liverpool should be with players from Manchester and Liverpool, from that region.

"In Arsenal now you don't have an English coach, English players, maybe not an English president soon."

Platini said UEFA was powerless to intervene but said politicians and the Football Association should push for stronger regulations on foreign players.

Elsewhere, former England manager Graham Taylor says he does not expect to see England win another major soccer tournament in his lifetime.

"Our failure has been going on for years and years. Why do people expect England to get to the finals or win these major tournaments?" said the 63-year-old Taylor, who managed England from 1990 to 1993. "I don't think I will live long enough to see our country crack it at international level - and oh how depressing is that?"

"We won the World Cup once when it was at home, we made the semifinals once in 1990, and the semifinals of the European Championship in 1968, then in 1996 when it was also at home. We have no record over the years of success but we really hate facing up to the truth.

"We have an arrogance about ourselves and because of that we have made some enemies. We were too arrogant to enter the first World Cup in 1930. When we did enter it in 1950 we lost to the United States and the failures have gone on and on."


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