Football

Aidy Boothroyd hopes Under-21s can smooth path to England domination


At St George’s Park, where England’s Under-21s have spent the past three weeks preparing for the European Championship, Aidy Boothroyd is talking world domination. Hubris and England head coaches often make an uncomfortable pairing but Boothroyd is outlining an aspiration of the Football Association. On display nearby are the Under-17 and Under-20 World Cups. The aspiration has substance, and the Under-21s aim to add another layer over the next fortnight in Italy and San Marino.

England won the two World Cups in 2017, the year Boothroyd and his Under-21s suffered the agony of a penalty shootout defeat by Germany in the Euro semi-finals. The head coach remains determined to increase the trophy collection at St George’s Park and to do so in a style that England fans can identify at every age level.

“I daydream a lot [of adding to the World Cup successes] but they’ve gone really,” says the former Watford manager, who has been part of the England set-up since 2014. “I am very much thinking about the next one rather than wallowing in what has gone on before but, yes, that would be lovely. That is what we are aiming to do, but you need a vision of where you want to get to and that is having a legacy in English football of winning things over a period of decades.

“We want to be thought of as the leading team in the world and to do that you have got to be winning consistently. I think there is also a bigger picture for us in the way we want all our teams to play. The average guy or girl who watches football wants to win, but they want their team to play in a way that is attractive and entertains them. That is the world we live in and that is what we try to do.”

England have not won the Euro at Under-21 level since 1984. Their latest pursuit of a third title – Italy have won it five times and Spain four – starts on Tuesday against France in Cesena. With the three group winners and best runner-up comprising the semi-finalists, the opening game could prove decisive in a section that also includes Romania and Croatia. Boothroyd is well aware the FA’s ambitious target brings no guarantees, but neither does it allow for a comfort zone.

Aidy Boothroyd, the England Under-21 manager, says: ‘We are expected to do well and I am not afraid of that.’



Aidy Boothroyd, the England Under-21 manager, says: ‘We are expected to do well and I am not afraid of that.’ Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA

“You would have to be pretty special to be an all-domineering world power so we know that, realistically, that might not happen over a period of time but we have always got to strive to be that,” he says. “We have to push ourselves to a point where we are disappointed if we haven’t gone past where we have been before.

“We can’t wallow in the wins because those trophies out there will go rusty. We need new ones to shine. Now we are expected to do well and I am not afraid of that. It would be lovely to have world domination but I think we have always got to be striving for it. There will be ups and downs. There always are.”

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Only three players remain in Boothroyd’s squad from England’s last shot at the Euros in 2017 – Tammy Abraham, Demarai Gray and Angus Gunn – but several of the group could have been considered for senior duty in the Nations League. He laughs at the suggestion James Maddison, Aaron Wan-Bissaka and Phil Foden are off to Italy because of his close connection to Gareth Southgate.

“I’m only smiling because I’m thinking about all the players who have gone up and he’s stolen from me,” says Boothroyd. “My job is to feed players through to the senior team and to help improve our chances at senior level. What we’re expected to do is develop those players who don’t quite get into the senior team to win our own games as well. A winning environment breeds a winning environment.

“Gareth has dispelled the myth you have to have 100 Premier League games under your belt before you play. That’s never been further from the truth. It was smart thinking and we’re now in a position where we have a group of 2000s in the Under-21 team and players born in 1997 in the senior team. We are very young and with that comes freshness. With the freshness comes a brand of football everyone is excited about.”



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