Lost in France: The Story of England's 1998 World Cup Campaign. Mark Palmer

Lost in France: The Story of England's 1998 World Cup Campaign - Mark  Palmer


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the new intake. Hoddle put it down to his growing maturity. ‘He’s hit thirty and has had opportunities to learn lessons. Possibly he’s learnt them. I have seen a mature Gazza around the hotel and in his training. It looks as if he’s trying – no, that’s not right, not even trying, it seems more natural than that. He is settling down, on the pitch and off it. He is less hyper, much calmer, much more assured within himself, and that’s what everyone needs.’

      ‘They’re Yugoslavs, aren’t they?’ said a man on the Metropolitan Line on the way to Wembley.

      ‘Nah,’ said his friend, ‘they’re Czechs.’ They are former Soviets actually, from the bottom end of the once mighty empire, sharing borders with Romania and the Ukraine.

      ‘They’ve got to be crap,’ said the first man.

      On the brilliant-to-crap scale, FIFA ranked San Marino 164th in the world. Moldova were 122nd, tucked just behind Burma and Ethiopia but ahead of the Faroe Islands and St Kitts and Nevis.

      There was much tension around the creaking stadium an hour before kick-off. The quality of the football would be crucial but the quality of the minute’s silence was going to be important too. ‘Candle in the Wind’ worked. People stood with dewy eyes and candles held aloft.

      The guest of honour was Tony Banks, the new Sports Minister, who, with immaculate timing, was quoted in the morning papers as saying that England were not good enough to win the World Cup. He was booed as he walked – hurried, rather – along the line of players, shaking hands as the crowd shook its fists. Since his appointment, Banks had been in spectacular form. At his swearing of the ministerial oath of allegiance to the Queen he had kept his fingers crossed and then suggested that one team should represent Britain in international competitions instead of the four separate home nations. He argued that foreigners who play for English clubs should be eligible to play for England, and that ballroom dancing should be made an Olympic sport.

      It was strong, solid booing. Just what was needed – a reminder that the country had not entirely taken leave of its critical senses. And then 74,102 people stood for a minute’s silence and you could hear a tear drop. It seemed fitting that the official period of grieving should culminate in a football match, and that a referee’s whistle would mark the moment when life would return to normal.

      Graeme Le Saux, David Batty, Robert Lee and David Beckham were all one yellow away from missing out on the Italian game in a month’s time. You play your strongest side available because the cliché says there are ‘no easy games at this level’ was the general consensus. Then news came through that little Georgia had held Italy to a draw in Tbilisi. Hoddle rested Le Saux and there was no place for Robert Lee. But Beckham and Batty played. The team was: Seaman, G. Neville, P. Neville, Batty, Campbell, Southgate, Beckham, Gascoigne, Ferdinand, Wright, Scholes.

      England began in lively fashion. In the third minute Gazza was tripped but got up and patted the culprit’s head.

      ‘Gascoigne looks relaxed,’ I said to Brian Glanville, seated next to me.

      ‘He’s a busted flush,’ said the sage who wrote for the Sunday Times for more than twenty years.

      There was no score after twenty minutes, then Gazza cut a swathe through the Moldovan defence and tapped the ball to Ferdinand, who missed from four yards. Eight minutes later, Beckham took a corner which was punched straight back at him. He crossed again towards the head of Paul Scholes, who sent the ball flying into the top right-hand corner. 1–0.

      The injured Shearer spent the game in the Sky TV glass box. A minute into the second half, he watched Wright score his first goal for England at Wembley after a clever interchange with the busted flush. Two up and time to take off Beckham. Stuart Ripley came on for eight minutes and pulled a hamstring. Gascoigne wanted to get on with the game. He wanted to score because so many other people had made statements during the week and he needed to make his. Gascoigne must have felt a degree of sympathy with Diana. She was troubled. She was forever being chased around by photographers. And she, like him, courted publicity – and then complained about it. Gazza wanted publicity now and time was running out. Then, in the eightieth minute, he found the ball at his feet just inside the Moldovan half, trundled past two defenders, gave it to Wright, got it back and steered it past the goalkeeper. Glanville hardly stirred.

      Sitting ducks now. Wright scored just before the final whistle to make it 4–0, and the Wembley crowd that fell silent at 8 pm in memory of Diana was now on its feet in anticipation of the Battle of Rome on 11 October.

      ‘Are you watching,

       Are you watching,

       Are you watching I-T-A-L-EEEEEEE,

       Are you watching Italee.’

      The England fans were not the only ones who seemed happy with the result. The Moldovan manager was remarkably jolly as he sat in Wembley’s gloomy interview room below the medical centre beside his interpreter. ‘The result was never in doubt,’ said Caras. ‘I always expected an England victory. It was only a question of whether the floodgates would open. England have shown that they are one of the superpowers of world soccer.’ After beating a team ranked 122nd in the world. ‘I hope and pray you qualify,’ he went on. ‘You are a great footballing country.’ After Caras had left the room, his interpreter rose to his feet. ‘Off the record,’ he said, ‘I can tell you that Mr Caras is a great supporter of English football.’

      Hoddle was pleased with the evening’s work. ‘Everything went to plan. I was delighted with Paul. On the ball he was as good as he has been for some time. But we know that in Rome we will face a battle.’ What sort of battle? ‘Titanic.’

       Chapter 2 Who’s Got the Key to the Changing Room?

      It was entirely appropriate that five days before the England-Italy showdown I found myself heading for Wembley Arena to catch a glimpse of the man who only a few months earlier had been Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door following a contretemps with an infected chicken. For me, my teens were Bob Dylan and football.

      Big week, even though at the end of it there was no guarantee we would be any clearer about England’s summer plans. The hype began to percolate on Sunday, with papers producing mini-sections on what everyone agreed was a massive football match. There were the ubiquitous man-by-man assessments, and sermons galore from the experts. Patrick Barclay in the Sunday Telegraph had interviewed Paolo Maldini, the Italian captain and son of Cesare Maldini, the coach, and was impressed. ‘His smile’, wrote Barclay, ‘greets a familiar list of additional endowments: talent and temperament in such measure that he is surely the finest left-back of all time.’ High praise from Barclay. I played on the same side as him at Wembley during a media tournament when I was on his paper. It was a shock watching him – one of the fiercest critics of hustle-and-bustle-style English football – scampering back and forth on the wing with no compass whatsoever.

      Reports elsewhere gave the impression that all was not well in the Italian camp. Maldini senior had been hailed as the saviour of Italian football when he took over at the beginning of the year from Arrigo Sacchi, but after the goalless draw in Georgia the knives were out. ‘Maldini, what have you done?’ screamed a headline in Rome’s Corriere dello Sport, while Gazzetta dello Sport concluded that Maldini was ‘living in the clouds’. Italy had never failed to qualify for the World Cup finals, but there is always a first time, and in Rome it might come down to who wanted it most. And England wanted it badly.

      One intriguing development was the news that Roy Hodgson, the Blackburn Rovers manager, was acting as secret agent without portfolio. Hoddle, it was reported, had asked him to compile a special dossier, of which the News of the World had been given an ‘exclusive’ sneak preview. According to Hodgson, Maldini would play with a ‘3–5–1–1 system – three central defenders, two of them as markers, picking up the England forwards, the other playing as a spare man’. According to Hodgson, according to the News of the World, that is.

      ‘There


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