Although Manchester United may have won the Champions League in 1999, before that, England’s outstanding side crashed out to Galatasaray, IFK Goteborg and Monaco. It’s an overgeneralisation, which does a disservice to some great players and teams from that period, but there’s a reason why it exists. In comparison to Europe’s top leagues, some of the football could be crude and unsophisticated, relying more on physicality, team spirit and exceptional individuals rather than well-honed technique, tactical systems and patterns of play.
People stuck to what they knew and were resistant to change. Still a rather insular country with few foreign players, there was an unhealthy scepticism about new approaches to training, diet, fitness and tactics. This was partly due to some of the old-fashioned attitudes that prevailed in England.
English strikers were scoring regularly, but they weren’t being tested against the best defenders.
In 1995, it was ranked as the fifth strongest league in Europe according to UEFA’s coefficients, trailing behind the top divisions of Italy, Germany, France and Spain. The best place to start could be the relative weakness of the Premier League. So, what was the problem? Why couldn’t Cole, Fowler, Ferdinand and the rest perform for England? In total, they won 209 caps and scored just 63 goals, almost half of those coming from Shearer. Even now, their failure to do so remains something of a mystery.ĭespite outstanding domestic records – six of the eight registered more than 100 Premier League goals in their careers – success with the national team typically proved elusive. Yet, with the notable exception of Shearer, who was going through a lean spell for England himself in the run-up to Euro 96, they all struggled to replicate excellent club form on the international stage, to varying degrees. More of a maverick playmaker than a conventional striker, he still notched 19 goals. All featured in the division’s top 10 scorers, alongside Southampton’s Matt Le Tissier. In this respect, the 1994-95 season can be seen as the pinnacle, when the aforementioned group of eight strikers bagged 177 league goals between them, an average of 22 each. The England ranks had incredible, almost unparalleled, strength in depth up front. He typically paired Alan Shearer with Teddy Sheringham, but Robbie Fowler, Andy Cole, Stan Collymore, Les Ferdinand, Chris Sutton and Ian Wright were also scoring for fun. In the mid-90s, Terry Venables had an embarrassment of attacking riches to call upon. Perhaps unsurprisingly, there was an abundance of prolific English strikers as a result. This trend is far removed from the early days of the Premier League era when 4-4-2 still dominated and strike partnerships were king. Fluidity is key, leading to the rise of versatile wide forwards. This is indicative of the way modern football continues to develop, with old-fashioned centre-forwards in general decline. At the Euros, it was Dominic Calvert-Lewin. The latest squad, which scored 15 goals without reply against Albania and San Marino, contained just Tammy Abraham as an obvious alternative to Kane. There are few options to play as a focal point in his absence, with Gareth Southgate placing much greater emphasis on multi-purpose attackers like Raheem Sterling, Marcus Rashford, Phil Foden and Jadon Sancho. Aside from the relentless Harry Kane, top-class strikers are in short supply for England at the moment.