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It’s a new campaign but the same old Croatia, which is bad news for England.
The Croats have one of the most settled squads in Europe and always seem to
use more or less the same team. They will be just as dangerous as in Euro
2008 qualifying, and they’ve got high technical standards and great unity of
spirit. Go through their players one by one: they are strong. At least
everybody appreciates that now, and there will be no underestimating of
Slaven Bilic and his men. Fabio Capello has a big task on his hands.
Only the winners of the nine European groups are guaranteed to go to the World
Cup, with the eight strongest runners-up competing for four remaining
places. I don’t think Ukraine are good enough to threaten England’s chances
of finishing in the top two but Capello will want to avoid the perils of the
playoffs by coming first. Croatia showed last time that they don’t drop many
points against the average teams so getting the better of them head-to-head
is crucial. There can be no repeat for England of the disaster that occurred
the last time they played in Zagreb.
Steven Gerrard, out with a groin injury, will be missed but Croatia are
without Niko Kranjcar, who is recuperating from ankle surgery, and that is
serious for them. The upside of Gerrard’s absence is that Capello will be
spared that old headache that for England managers never seems to go away:
how to accommodate Gerrard and Frank Lampard in the same midfield.
The loss of Kranjcar will give Bilic a headache because the player was central
to the change of formation Bilic made at Euro 2008 and might have been
planning to persist with. Bilic altered his system from 4-4-2 to 4-5-1 at
the championships, bringing Kranjcar from his former left-sided position
into the middle to operate as a No 10, and it worked, with Croatia
unfortunate not to progress past the quarter-finals, where they conceded a
goal to Turkey in the final minute of extra-time before losing on penalties.
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Bilic must decide whether to stick with 4-5-1 and move Luka Modric or, more
likely, Schalke’s Ivan Rakitic into the No 10 position, but that would
involve reshuffling his midfield and defence. He may prefer to return to the
4-4-2 used in qualifying for Euro 2008. If so, two of my own players would
comprise the forward line John Terry and company would face.
Ivica Olic was already Hamburg’s main striker when I arrived as manager in May
and one of my summer signings was Mladen Petric, from Borussia Dortmund.
They are a good combination, as England discovered in the 3-2 defeat at
Wembley. Olic scored Croatia’s second goal and Petric, after coming off the
bench to join him, got the winner. Petric has not played many minutes for us
yet because another forward, Jose Paolo Guerrero, has been doing so well,
but he has the talent to become an important member of our side. He’s a very
technical footballer, left-footed, tall, versatile and good with his head.
He likes to drop off but he’s not quite a No 10, more a second striker, much
like Robbie Keane. He and Olic are great friends, although the Croats are so
close I’ve noticed that they all seem to be pals with each other. Ask Olic
about Kranjcar and he’d say: “Boss, you should sign him, he’s my best mate.”
If I mentioned Rakitic it would be: “Boss, that’s my best mate, buy him.”
The players also consider Bilic a friend. It’s nice and, of course, a great
source of strength for the Croatian side.
As an athlete, Olic is freakish. He runs and runs and runs. And runs.
Sometimes he will tire himself out by the 70th minute and need to be
replaced but you always know he will use every single ounce of energy he
possesses out on the pitch. He’s bright enough to know his strengths and his
limits and that fitness is crucial to his game. After Euro 2008 I told him
to rest and report back to training on July 13 but by July 4 he had come in.
I said: “No, you don’t train with the squad.” So he shrugged and started
training by himself, disappearing for long runs into the woods. By July 8 I
said: “Okay, you can join us.” He’s a marvel-lous professional.
What makes him dangerous as a forward is how he uses all that energy. Olic
plays high up the pitch and always stretches a defence by running across the
line and into channels. His timing is great and he is rarely caught offside.
When the opposition get the ball he is a first line of defence. He doesn’t
tackle, he’s an expert at chasing a defender, putting them off balance and,
just when they try to get rid of the ball, sticking out a foot to intercept
it. He’s not a prolific scorer but gets a decent amount of goals; he was our
top scorer last season with 14. Petric is similar. And the movement into
space of Olic, whatever system Bilic plays, makes Croatia deadly on the
break.
Counter-attacks will be the main threat to England in Zagreb. Although Croatia
are at home they will play their normal style, which is to invite their
opponents to play in their half before looking to win the ball and send a
quick pass forward to Olic. England must not give Olic space and have to
keep their shape better than they did against the Czech Republic, after
which Capello said his players had not coped well with counter-attacks. He
is considering using 4-5-1 which, if Croatia reverted to 4-4-2, would give
England a spare man in midfield, but Wayne Rooney up front alone is not the
answer. England’s best performance in recent times was beating Russia 3-0
last September when Emile Heskey came in to partner Michael Owen. Using
Rooney and Heskey together in a 4-4-2, or Rooney and Jermain Defoe, is
Capello's other option. It would be easier for him because he doesn’t have
the Gerrard-Lampard problem. England have been predictable for some time and
need to try new things. One might be starting with Stewart Downing while
using Heskey up front in an attempt to get some real wing play and crossing
into the attacks. I like the selection of Jimmy Bullard because he is
something different. For me he’s not a typical English 15
England’s world ranking. Croatia, their opponents on Wednesday, are fifth in
the Fifa rankings, while Andorra languish in 186th place.
Euro 2008 winners Spain are the world’s top-ranked international team player.
He’s a talented footballer who I would back to play in any position in the
midfield and his enthusiasm is infectious.
Leaving out Owen was controversial but I understand Capello’s reasons. He has
played just one full game this season and if Capello does not feel he is fit
enough to start for England, why take him? English people will always say,
“Yeah, but it’s Michael Owen, he could come on as a substitute”, but I’d
never choose a player on the basis he could be useful for just a few
minutes. If the squad is right there should be players other than Owen
capable of coming off the bench and scoring if England need a goal in Zagreb.
England should forget what happened on their last visit. With that in mind, it
makes me happy that Paul Robinson is in the squad. Paul was England’s No 1
and a great goalkeeper for Tottenham before his mistake in Zagreb in October
2006. He lost confidence after that but is rebuilding his career at
Blackburn. He’s a good professional and it is great to see him back.
Martin Jol was manager of Spurs from 2004-07 and now coaches Hamburg in the
Bundesliga