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In Defense Of Danny Murphy

Started by WhiteJC, October 21, 2010, 09:41:34 AM

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WhiteJC

http://football-talk.co.uk/8561/defense-danny-murphy/?

In Defense Of Danny Murphy
Written by Alex Corrigan.

The predictable self defense mechanisms were put up in response to Danny Murphy's more than reasonable examination of the uber physical nature of the Premier League. The media, managers and players have attacked Murphy the same way in which they will attack whoever is scapegoated for England's early exit from Euro 2012; rather than accept the country's glaringly obvious failings, those in positions of power go into extreme denial and choose to point fingers as opposed to addressing the issues Murphy raised. Even the most ardent believer in the English way being the right way would have struggled to not see the irony of Kevin Davies being thrown on to the Wembley pitch to in a last ditch attempt to beat the mighty Montenegro, within a week of Murphy's comments.

Those who feel Murphy's comments were in some way below the belt, are likely to have only one response; 'isn't the physical nature what makes our game so great?'. According to you people, apparently so, but it is also to blame for the England national team being light-years behind the world's leading footballing nations. Murphy didn't directly accuse these teams and managers of being dirty, he just touched upon the subject of the 'no brain' physical approach these teams adopt, and it applies to countless teams down the years who have also adopted this approach; despite the hustle and bustle of the Premier League being one of its infamous qualities, it should never be a substitute for skill and technique, something it has unfortunately become. And for this precise reason, England embarass themselves regularly on the international front, but the men upstairs, the brains behind these English failings continue to rely on out-powering our opposition, whilst our opposition continue to out-football us. Steve Bruce put it better than I ever could when he recently jumped on the media band-wagon and attacked Murphy;

'If we take competitiveness away, we will end up like France and Spain and Italy where it is just all technique.' Who would want England to be like three of the last four World Cup winning nations?

A brief scan through England's record in the knock-out phases of major competition since 1966 makes for interesting reading; Spain, on home turf, are the only major scalp, whilst Paraguay, Denmark, Cameroon and Denmark make up the rest of England's wins in the knock-out phases of World Cups and European Championships. Bafflingly, England are still classed by many as a footballing super power, but the truth is our international counterparts are striding further and further ahead into the modern game, whilst England stay rooted in old fashioned tactics that become more inappropriate with every game played. Our supposed 'rivals' have been developing facilities and technical training from a young age for years, and offer proof as to how far England are lagging behind the international elite. The amount of UEFA coaches qualified to the highest standard in Spain, Germany and Italy stands at 34,970, 29,240 and 23,995 respectively. In England it stands at the genuinely shocking number of 2, 769.


The criticism Murphy recieved suggests that the English mentality won't be changing any time soon and appears to be on the brink of not even having the ability to evolve. A footballing revolution may be in order.

AlFayedsChequebook

This couldn't be more correct if it tried.

The Equalizer

Quite simply - he nailed it. Excellent article.
"We won't look back on this season with regret, but with pride. Because we won what many teams fail to win in a lifetime – an unprecedented degree of respect and support that saw British football fans unite and cheer on Fulham with heart." Mohammed Al Fayed, May 2010

Twitter: @equalizerffc


Lighthouse

Two things have made me remember that life is full of hopelessness and decay. One being the Offside rule. We should all be demanding a better rule that everybody understands. Second is the reaction to out Captains remarks. It really is sad when you have to pick the bits you want and ignore the rest.

I still blame the last Labour Government.
The above IS NOT A LEGAL DOCUMENT. It is an opinion.

We may yet hear the horse talk.

I can stand my own despair but not others hope

WhiteJC

Quote from: Lighthouse on October 21, 2010, 10:55:14 AM
Two things have made me remember that life is full of hopelessness and decay. One being the Offside rule. We should all be demanding a better rule that everybody understands. Second is the reaction to out Captains remarks. It really is sad when you have to pick the bits you want and ignore the rest.

I still blame the last Labour Government.

I blame the parents








and the Germans, they bombed our chip shop you know  :036:

Lighthouse

And the DO GOODERS.


AND Society



The youth culture


:dft002:   and those little smiley face things that seem to say so much but say so little.  
The above IS NOT A LEGAL DOCUMENT. It is an opinion.

We may yet hear the horse talk.

I can stand my own despair but not others hope


jarv

Answer to Mr. Bruce. I am certainly not a fan of Italian football, but watch a German game live, full stadium, fast pace, excellent football. French and Spanish is excellent too except the French do sometimes have half empty stadiums. (Sorry, forgot about Wigan, Blackburn, Middlesboro before they went down).
Here in USA we get Argentine games too. Empty stadiums but very good football. Maybe that's why their national team is not too bad either.
Final comment, German games, great price, some cheaper than watching a conference game.