His goal count is significantly devalued by the fact that IMO he should not have been picked in many of the games he has been because he has been picked solely on the ideal that he is the great Wayne Rooney, when in truth for about 3 seasons he has been completely and utterly shit.
Fabian Delph's international debut means Aston Villa have produced more England internationals than any other club: 72nd to be capped.
The depressing thing for me about last night was that Sterling looked great when he moved infield,the team looked better after the substitutions, yet Wilshire and Rooney will both start the next game.
Quote from: paulcomben on September 04, 2014, 10:34:26 PMFabian Delph's international debut means Aston Villa have produced more England internationals than any other club: 72nd to be capped.Although, we had done so even before Delph had been picked. And will carry on doing so until Spurs make up about ten or so on us I believe. Presumably Eric Dier will be the next one that starts eating back into our lead. Plus I think it's 73. The 72 doesn't include Scott Carson who we had on loan when he did his England stuff.
Quote from: ACVilla on September 04, 2014, 10:35:02 AMQuote from: PeterWithesShin on September 03, 2014, 07:52:07 PMWembley looks as empty as it used to be in the 80s for friendlies. And home internationals against Wales and N Ireland.40,000 for an England game, 28,000 at the Villa.Bubble well and truly bursting I reckon.......what's that, Rooney and Falcao on £300,000 a week......hhmmmmm.I am going to take my lad to the Slovenia game in November. Family tickets still available - £20 adults , £10 kids. http://ticketing.thefa.com/?utm_source=AMS&utm_medium=Clicktracker%2004&utm_campaign=CLICKTRACKER%20CAMPAIGN:%20Autumn%20Qualifiers%202014
Quote from: PeterWithesShin on September 03, 2014, 07:52:07 PMWembley looks as empty as it used to be in the 80s for friendlies. And home internationals against Wales and N Ireland.40,000 for an England game, 28,000 at the Villa.Bubble well and truly bursting I reckon.......what's that, Rooney and Falcao on £300,000 a week......hhmmmmm.
Wembley looks as empty as it used to be in the 80s for friendlies. And home internationals against Wales and N Ireland.
If we are looking for radial thinking then maybe its time to look at the set-up of our game. Maybe there is something in allowing Premier League team reserves play in the pyramid system as they do in Spain and I believe Germany. This would allow players to get the experience of first team football outside of the win at all costs mentality of first teams in the Prem league and away from the baying unforgiving fans. But, despite it being proven to be successful everywhere there is also a tendency for us to think that as we started all this off we'll never change our set-up to ape that of Europe (some of it). Its the last bastion of Englishness and anti-European (or in general johnny foreigner) that we have and no-one is prepared to change.
And what happens to the reserve/U21 teams of clubs promoted and relegated? Going to keep kicking teams out of the pyramid and replacing them with a different club? Basically, yes. That's no difference to promotion and relegation. Where do they go? Well they'll replace the 3 clubs that will have left the reserve/U-21 leagues to come up.And what level of the pyramid do you stick them and at the expense of what other clubs? You can't just expand one division by 20 teams. Well this is where you have to start looking at the pyramid system which is largely unsustainable in its present format. Most of the Conference is professional now yet a level or two below and the standard is no better than before and yet the costs are higher. Its a question of what we want. if its a successful England team we have to look at younger players being given a berth lower down the leagues. We want our players to go out on loan as it is having a team there that can afford to be there costs wise is one issue, allowing your players develop and having a season of competitive football where they are not under nthe pressure of success or failure can only help their clubs first team, and ultimately England.How far up the pyramid do they go? No higher then ChampionshipIf you can work out the logistics of 20 team suddenly joining the pyramid, no use dumping them low down as most will be way better than the non league sides they'd be facing. Plus it's U21 now, I don't fancy a Villa side made of 17-20 year olds going up against a bunch of 25 year old lower league/non league players week in week out. Division Four, League Two can become a North and South divide once mofre - not ideal but an aoption and a way of fighting 20 new teams into the pyramid.As for the final point the younger players - 17 or so, will only play of they're at the standard deemed good enough. They'd only be playing reserve football if good enough as it is anyway. Those that are close enough to the first-team squad play against 25 year-old lower league players as it is. What better than for Donacien, Johnson, Bennett, Grealish (of last season) to play still for Aston Villa at Notts County, Tranmere, Chesterfield etc and develop within their own environment The current loan system allows them to 'grow-up' away from Villa PArk but they're still thrown into the succeed or fail culture as dictated by the clubs and their fans, who they go out on loan to.It's an option that should be considered and not merely thrown away because its simply just been the way we've always done it. See also: break, Winter.
Quote from: ozzjim on September 03, 2014, 10:03:50 PMDid anyone else think Sterling and Sturridge are determined to only pass to each other?Not so much Sterling, I think he's a smarter player than that, but I thought it was obvious that Sturridge was only ever interested in passing if it was to Sterling. Sturridge always frustrates me because he frequently makes the wrong choice in possession - has an extra touch, picks the wrong pass, often he just shoots when someone else is better placed. I'm not sure he's got any footballing brain at all. I think tonight he only passed when he heard Sterling chirrup for the ball. (I don't think Sterling shouts for the ball, I think it's too weedy to qualify as a shout, it's more a sort of yelp, like a sparrow might make if you stood on his toe).
Did anyone else think Sterling and Sturridge are determined to only pass to each other?