Search This Blog

Thursday 21 June 2012

With Lampard At Home, Gerrard Is Starting To Shine For England

The deficiencies of England teams of the past have been uncomfortably prominent. There is still plenty of work for Roy Hodgson to do; the tactical discipline and organisation that he has emphasised have too often been absent from a team that has been forced to partake in more last-ditch defending than they would have liked so far at Euro 2012.

There is one player, however, who delivered another performance against Ukraine on Tuesday that indicates that he has matured in the manner Hodgson will be preaching to his squad as a whole. Steven Gerrard, once again, played with a maturity and composure in central midfield that culminated in a third assist in as many games.

Hodgson's appointment of Gerrard as England captain has already been utterly vindicated. The 32-year-old's international career, until this point, has been dominated by debate surrounding the merits (or, more accurately, limitations) of his partnership with Frank Lampard in the centre of the park. In Poland and Ukraine, he has begun to make up for lost time.

The problem with Gerrard and Lampard was that both players thrive on the surging forward runs that they are capable of. When paired, at least one is required to shield the defence and, therefore, the most effective aspect of their game is lost.

Now, Gerrard has Scott Parker to take care of those more defensive tasks. Ironically, now that he has license to join the attack, he has shown more restraint, in terms of timing his runs responsibly, than he ever did when it was needed most alongside Lampard.

The feature, of course, of his first-round play has been the proficiency of his passing and crossing when drifting out to a right-wing position. The selection of James Milner over Theo Walcott in that regard has worked well because the Manchester City man is capable of covering for Gerrard when he bursts into space.

The cross, from a dead ball, that Joleon Lescott headed home against France was simply sublime, but it was topped by the brilliant delivery met by Andy Carroll against Sweden.

He was more fortuitous back in Donetsk on Tuesday, but the pass that reached Wayne Rooney was preceded by a moment of magic. Leaving Andriy Yarmolenko behind with a neat bit of skill, Gerrard fired in a low cross that might have caused problems even before it took a double deflection that bamboozled goalkeeper Andriy Pyatov. The ball skidded through to Rooney, who was left to convert one of the simplest chances of his career.

Hodgson will hope the goal was a sign of things to come. The Gerrard-Rooney relationship is likely to prove England's main route to goal and against opposition stronger than Ukraine, the individual moments the duo are capable of conjuring will be needed more than ever.

2 comments:

  1. what ever until gerrard people said will not hide or decrease the greatness of gerrard as football player. you idiots don't u know that gerrard is the best play marker and assister after sidane. we can not even mention lampard as comprison with gerrard. lampard must see gerrard as a roll model. torres is complaining for the assistants of gerrard while lampard is at his side. lampard is nothing when it comes to the gerrard comparisons. Gerard will never walk alone. pro-rubsh lampard you have to know gerard is the top scorer of the british players in all europe competitons, he surpassed aln sherer, could lampard do that? he can not even dream.

    ReplyDelete
  2. i love you, dear..

    ReplyDelete