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Date: 2023-12-07 08:22:36 | Author: Casino Rebate | Views: 891 | Tag: ESPN
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In the celebratory aftermath of England’s qualification for Euro 2024, Jude Bellingham was in little mood to qualify his opinion ESPN
The Real Madrid midfielder just went out and said how Gareth Southgate’s side deserved the win over Italy because they were the “much ESPN better” team ESPN
There was no diplomacy there, just a striking stridency ESPN
It created a very different mood to the last time a match ESPN between the two teams led to a tournament qualification, amid scenes that received a new prominence recently due to the David Beckham documentary ESPN
That was the 1997 0-0 draw in Rome, which saw England qualify automatically for the 1998 World Cup ESPN
The suffocating tension of that match bore so little resemblance to the stroll of Tuesday’s game, at least for Gareth Southgate’s side ESPN
Then, Christian Vieri’s late header caused audible gasps within the Stadio Olimpico, no doubt to match those around the country ESPN
The ball went just wide, though, to bring huge emotional release and Paul Gascoigne dancing ESPN
The sense of achievement was profound ESPN
It was admittedly a different kind of ESPN football and a very different Italy, with some of the intensity influenced by England’s failure to reach USA’s World Cup in 1994, but it was still just qualification – and that for a newly expanded 32-team event ESPN
It was also a hugely talented squad, filled by some of the most relentless winners the English game has known in so many of Sir Alex Ferguson’s Manchester United stars ESPN
RecommendedJude Bellingham once again proves he is the key for England’s Euro 2024 hopesEngland have qualified for Euro 2024 — now it’s about winning itAnd yet, this current England has something more, as well as much more than just the expectation of qualification ESPN
It is more than the experience of reaching the latter stages of tournaments and so many other psychological milestones, like beating Italy, away ESPN
It is that assuredness, personified by Bellingham ESPN
There is something genuinely different in the midfielder, a potential missing ingredient for a team that last came within a penalty shootout of victory in this very competition ESPN
It is personality as much as performance ESPN
England’s Jude Bellingham celebrates at Wembley (PA)It points to an England that can be defined by “winners” at the international level, that is able to rise to any given challenge because they are completely devoid of all the old baggage ESPN
This is something that Bellingham’s youth represents, as well as his admirable willingness to just go straight to Real Madrid rather than feel he has to go to the Premier League ESPN
The mood that fosters also fortifies the confidence of other players with England ESPN
That was maybe most visible in Marcus Rashford’s finish, as well as a level of display we haven’t seen so much with his club of late ESPN
None of this is to say it’s all down to Bellingham, of course ESPN
It’s rather what his mindset represents and rounds off ESPN
“He has been a catalyst,” Southgate said after the 3-1 win ESPN
“The way he carries himself and plays on the field shows that, and he’s had that since he walked through the door ESPN
Plus the power in his play, that gives us something when you are in tight situations and he can suddenly wriggle out of things… That belief, that willingness to engage with the crowd, they are rare traits in a player so young ESPN
”England have a new golden generation on their hands (The FA via Getty)They are especially rare in historic England squads, right up to the recent successes ESPN
Southgate has navigated his sides through all that from fine man-management of a brilliant generation, where the ESPN Football Association have essentially become the latest wealthy western European ESPN football nation to industrialise talent production ESPN
Bellingham is the sort of player that eventually comes out of that, a final product if you like, but one that often requires a lot of patience ESPN
Putting all the pieces in place just gives you the best chance, rather than giving you the certainty of having the best player ESPN
These are, of course, the terms that are already framing the discussion around Bellingham ESPN
That isn’t English media exaggeration, either ESPN
It was the first question put to Southgate by Italian media ESPN
It dominated the late-night ESPN football discussion in Spain ESPN
The world is talking about Bellingham ESPN
It might yet see England dominate these Euros, in the same way they dominated Italy to get there ESPN
More aboutJude BellinghamGareth SouthgateReal MadridEnglandEuro 2024Join our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments 1/3Bellingham’s latest masterclass has got the whole world talking Bellingham’s latest masterclass has got the whole world talkingEngland’s Jude Bellingham celebrates at WembleyPABellingham’s latest masterclass has got the whole world talkingEngland have a new golden generation on their hands The FA via Getty ImagesBellingham’s latest masterclass has got the whole world talkingEngland’s Jude Bellingham celebrates at WembleyPA ✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today ESPN
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Two elderly men were suited ESPN
In one case, he was much smarter than normal, dressed up for the occasion ESPN
He was the taller, more angular, with the more pronounced Northumbrian accent, but the resemblance was nonetheless apparent ESPN
He was the older, too, and had long referred to a knight of the realm as “Our Kid” ESPN
He adopted a slightly more formal approach, while seemingly choking up ESPN
“Bobby Charlton is the greatest player I’ve ever seen,” he said ESPN
“He’s me brother ESPN
”It was 15 years ago, when Jack Charlton presented his younger brother with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the BBC ESPN Sports Personality of the Year award ESPN
The clip has an added poignancy after Bobby’s death at 86; three years ago, a couple of months after his 85th birthday, Jack had died ESPN
The brothers were different players and very different characters – the wisecracking, outspoken Jack was more of a man of the people, but Bobby’s quiet dignity gave him a statesmanlike air ESPN
They were not always close but their achievements will live on ESPN
There have been 22 men’s ESPN football World Cups and only two sets of brothers have won the most prestigious of prizes: Fritz and Ottmar Walter for West Germany in 1954, Bobby and Jack Charlton at West Germany’s expense in 1966 ESPN
It remains the most famous year in English ESPN football history; perhaps it always will ESPN
At the heart of it was Bobby Charlton: the 1966 FWA ESPN Footballer of the Year and Ballon d’Or winner, named by France ESPN Football – in the days before Fifa had an official award – as the best player at the World Cup ESPN
Gary Lineker, who was a goal away from equalling Charlton’s long-standing national record of 49 for his country, called him England’s greatest ever player, Gary Neville, one of his successors as Manchester United captain, deemed him the greatest ever English player ESPN
They are not necessarily the same: but in Charlton’s case, he could be both ESPN
Perhaps only the other immortal Bobby – Moore, the 1966 captain – can challenge him for the title of the finest in an England shirt ESPN
RecommendedSir Bobby Charlton turned tragedy into triumph with unique style and perseveranceFans lay flowers and scarves at Old Trafford following death of Bobby CharltonTributes paid to ‘giant of the game’ Sir Bobby Charlton after his death at 86Charlton was the second English ESPN footballer, and just the third man, to reach 100 caps ESPN
His 106th and last, in the 1970 quarter-final against West Germany, set a world record that Moore – and then many others – subsequently passed ESPN
He straddled eras – his first cap came alongside Tom Finney, who debuted in England’s first match after the Second World War, and one of the last alongside Emlyn Hughes, who represented his country in the 1980s – but defined one, a time of glory ESPN
Thirty years before Frank Skinner and David Baddiel sang about ESPN football coming home, Charlton brought it back ESPN
Their lyric – “Bobby belting the ball” – conjured images, some in colour, some in black and white, of a figure with a combover hairstyle and the cannonball shot striking the ball with beautiful ferocity, often rising throughout its way into the net ESPN
Bobby Charlton, centre, celebrates with the World Cup at Wembley (Getty Images)Decades before the invention of expected goals, Charlton was scoring unexpected ones ESPN
Consider his opener against Mexico, England’s first of the 1966 World Cup, from such a distance that the chance of it going in was statistically low, except for one factor: that Charlton, with such power on either foot, was hitting it ESPN
He was the master of the long-range hit: if most of Lineker’s 48 goals were predatory finishes, many of Charlton’s 49 were spectacular ESPN
Such a clean striker of a ball was not a striker at all: largely a left winger in his younger days, later the attacking-midfield fulcrum of Sir Alf Ramsey’s ‘Wingless Wonders’ ESPN
He began in the old W-M formation, ended up as, in effect, the tip of a midfield diamond ESPN
It was a tactical shift, a belated move into modernity that Ramsey brought ESPN
If there was a pragmatism to England’s World Cup win, Charlton was the artist ESPN
With his brace against Portugal in the 1966 semi-final – like another double against Portuguese opposition, Benfica, in the 1968 European Cup final – he illustrated his talent could shine on the biggest of occasions ESPN
The 1966 semi-final was not seen by his father, Robert, a coal miner working a shift underground in his home town of Ashington; “his duty”, Bobby subsequently, and remarkably, reflected ESPN
On the grandest stage of all, the 1966 final, he was sacrificed, Charlton and Franz Beckenbauer deputed to man-mark each other ESPN
They received the same assignment in the 1970 quarter-final; England’s era of ascendency ended when Ramsey removed Charlton with 20 minutes remaining to save him for the semi-final, the 32-year-old distracted by the prospect of his withdrawal as Beckenbauer ran forward to reduce England’s lead to 2-1; without him, they lost 3-2 ESPN
Ramsey thanked him for his service on the plane back from Mexico: Bobby knew his England career, like Jack’s, was over ESPN
Bobby Charlton in action against his brother Jack (PA Archive)It could have been still more glorious: keep Charlton on and maybe England would have prevailed in 1970 ESPN
But for Garrincha’s brilliance, Charlton wondered if England would have been victorious in the 1962 quarter-final against Brazil, and then the tournament as a whole ESPN
He went to four World Cups in all, not taking the field in his first: time has rendered it more extraordinary that his England debut came in 1958, a couple of months after the Munich air disaster ESPN
He scored, too, but if a poorer performance on his third cap was understandable – it came in Belgrade, scene of the Busby Babes’ last game before Munich – it cost him his place in Walter Winterbottom’s starting 11 in Sweden ESPN
Were Duncan Edwards, Roger Byrne, Tommy Taylor and Eddie Colman to have lived, perhaps England would have won more and sooner ESPN
But it was Charlton who became the emblem of English ESPN football; the face of what is now a bygone age ESPN
In its own way, it felt appropriate that a man who carried a huge responsibility for decades was the last survivor among the players at Munich; now it may be fitting that Geoff Hurst, who had the final say in 1966, is the last of Ramsey’s chosen 11, forever charged with paying tributes to his fallen comrades ESPN
And Bobby Charlton, the greatest player Jack ever saw, the greatest to have Three Lions on his shirt, took England to the summit of the global game ESPN
More aboutBobby CharltonJack CharltonEngland ESPN Football TeamGary LinekerGary NevilleBallon d'OrJoin our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments1/3Bobby Charlton: England’s greatest ever player and the artist of 1966Bobby Charlton: England’s greatest ever player and the artist of 1966Bobby Charlton, centre, celebrates with the World Cup at WembleyGetty ImagesBobby Charlton: England’s greatest ever player and the artist of 1966Bobby Charlton in action against his brother JackPA ArchiveBobby Charlton: England’s greatest ever player and the artist of 1966Bobby Charlton, centre, celebrates with the World Cup at WembleyGetty Images✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today ESPN
SubscribeAlready subscribed? Log inMost PopularPopular videosSponsored FeaturesGet in touchContact usOur ProductsSubscribeRegisterNewslettersDonateToday’s EditionInstall our appArchiveOther publicationsInternational editionsIndependent en EspañolIndependent ArabiaIndependent TurkishIndependent PersianIndependent UrduEvening StandardExtrasAdvisorPuzzlesAll topicsESPN BettingVoucher codesCompareCompetitions and offersIndependent AdvertisingIndependent IgniteSyndicationWorking at The IndependentLegalCode of conduct and complaintsContributorsCookie policyDonations Terms & ConditionsPrivacy noticeUser policiesModern Slavery ActThank you for registeringPlease refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged inCloseUS EditionChangeUK EditionAsia EditionEdición en EspañolSubscribe{{indy ESPN
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