Football: Euro 2020 deferment a blessing in disguise, says Southgate

Gareth Southgate, who has experience of playing in a home tournament at Euro 96, is hoping his side will benefit. PHOTO: REUTERS

LONDON (AFP) England manager Gareth Southgate believes the year-long delay to the Euro 2020 could benefit his side as key players will be fit and rising stars mature.

The European Championship, originally due to begin on Friday (June 12), was moved back 12 months because of the coronavirus pandemic.

England captain Harry Kane (hamstring) and Manchester United striker Marcus Rashford (back) would have been major doubts for the initial dates due to injury.

Rashford was one of four English players named among the top five most highly valued players in the world by the CIES Football Observatory on Monday.

The 22-year-old is rated at £136 million (S$240 million), behind the leader, Paris Saint-Germain's France forward Kylian Mbappe (£231 million).

The others are Raheem Sterling (£173 million), Jadon Sancho (£159 million) and Trent Alexander-Arnold ( £152 million).

"At one point we were possibly looking at being without Marcus Rashford and Harry Kane, or at the very best both of those not having a lot of football," Southgate said on Sky Sports' Football Show.

"The age of the team you would hope would be better in a year's time but we have to go and prove that on the pitch."

If the tournament maintains the same format across 12 cities in 12 different countries, England would play all of their group games at Wembley and also the semi-final and final there if they get that far.

Southgate, who has experience of playing in a home tournament at Euro 96, is hoping his side will benefit.

"We have an advantage in our group matches," he said. "But so do Italy, who play their games in Rome, Spain play in Bilbao, the Netherlands play in Amsterdam.

"It's only a true advantage in the latter stages of the competition, semi-final, final, if we are good enough to get to that point. But without doubt we have to view it positively."

He led England to a first World Cup semi-final for 28 years in 2018 and has been linked with a return to club management at Tottenham and United over the past two years.

In his first managerial job, Southgate was sacked after three years at Middlesbrough in 2009 and admitted he will be far better prepared for the club game when his time in charge of the national team is up.

"I am not going to be England manager for 20 years," said the 49-year-old, who signed a new contract in 2018 that will see him remain as boss until the World Cup in Qatar in 2022. "I would like to coach and manage for a reasonable period, I don't know how long exactly.

"At some point that decision will be ahead of me. I don't see it in the near future... When you have been manager of England, you are not going to have a more pressurised role."

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