Jamie Redknapp"s weekend watch: Carlos Tevez joins the 100 club

Weekend watch: Tevez joins the 100 club

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UPDATED:

21:57 GMT, 26 August 2012

Carlos happy and focused

So that's 100 goals for Carlos Tevez in English football . . . and it's been some journey. You are never quite sure how long he will be hanging around, but right now he looks settled at City and his goal on Sunday earned them a point they hardly deserved. Tevez seems focused and happy and said so in a Sky interview. Let's hope it lasts.

Hot shot: Carlos Tevez scores against Liverpool

Hot shot: Carlos Tevez scores against Liverpool

Allen the pass master

I picked out Joe Allen as one of my players to watch because he plays in my old position and I like the habit he has of giving the ball to a team-mate. Yesterday we saw how he slides the ball in to a red shirt. The weight he puts on a pass is delightful and the Liverpool fans will grow to love him. He's their kind of player.

Laudrup lording it

I like what Michael Laudrup is doing
at Swansea. He's showing that a new manager doesn't need to go in with a
bulldozer when joining a new club. He has made subtle changes, a few
tweaks and has applied the old adage: 'If it ain't broke, don't fix it'.
It's a mature approach and the Dane has two wins and a plus-eight goal
difference.

Impressive start: Swansea boss Michael Laudrup

Impressive start: Swansea boss Michael Laudrup

Dyer delight

One of the delights of Swansea's start has been the impressive form of Nathan Dyer. I wonder if he will get an England call-up when the squad is named on Thursday. His intelligent runs off the ball show that he is more than just a speed man. He's a smashing lad too and deserves his recognition. He had too much for West Ham.

Back at home

There
has been a lot written about Marouane Fellaini in Everton's impressive
start, but I want to recognise the role of Steven Pienaar. That was a
delightful goal he scored at Aston Villa and shows the confidence he has
at Everton, where he has freedom to play as their main man after
injuries impacted on his time at Spurs.

Freedom: Everton's Steven Pienaar

Freedom: Everton's Steven Pienaar

Villa chiller

Aston Villa are in for a difficult season. They have been in decline for years and it shows that you need more than a change of manager to have a change in fortune. Who will create and score their goals Since Darren Bent was injured last February, only 10 goals have been scored. Now he's back, they need to give him more ammunition.

Star man: Prince Ince

Ian
Holloway will be a nervous man before the window closes. His main
goalscorer Matt Phillips remains a target, but winger Thomas Ince has a
growing reputation too. Four goals in three games has taken Blackpool
top of the Championship and young Ince was involved in five of their six
against Ipswich. He can play, too.

Tasty: Thomas Ince of Blackpool

Tasty: Blackpool's Tom Ince

Two good deals

I do like the business carried out by Martin O'Neill in recruiting Adam Johnson and Steven Fletcher for Sunderland. They might be two of the smartest deals in the transfer window. O'Neill has always liked a target man (Chris Sutton and John Hartson were excellent at Celtic) and Johnson can walk past defenders.

Euro 2012: Danny Welbeck and Wayne Rooney must start against Ukraine – Glenn Hoddle

Glenn Hoddle: Sorry, Andy, but it must be Rooney and Welbeck for Ukraine showdown

PUBLISHED:

22:00 GMT, 16 June 2012

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UPDATED:

22:00 GMT, 16 June 2012

The old adage that you shouldn't change a winning team doesn't apply in modern international football because managers have to study the opposition and pick players who exploit their weaknesses.

I started the 1998 World Cup with Teddy Sheringham up front but always planned for Michael Owen to face Colombia in our final group game because they defended square and a quick striker would be able to exploit the space behind them.

Roy Hodgson won't have any hesitation in bringing back the suspended Wayne Rooney to face Ukraine on Tuesday night, even though he has been suspended for England's successful opening group games.

On target: Welbeck scored the decisive goal in England's win over Sweden

On target: Welbeck scored the decisive goal in England's win over Sweden

Euro 2012 email button

He is our classiest player and we'll need him as the tournament gets tougher.

Importantly, Roy will want him to recover some match sharpness before a possible quarter-final against Italy, Spain or Croatia.

The big conundrum is who plays alongside Rooney: Andy Carroll or Danny Welbeck, who each scored important goals and played very well in the 3-2 win over Sweden on Friday night.

International managers are paid to make big decisions and this is a really tough call for Roy.

Head boy: Carroll opened the scoring with a stunning goal

Head boy: Carroll opened the scoring with a stunning goal

Whoever misses out will be disappointed and Roy will have to sit down and explain the decision properly to them, as I did with Sheringham in '98.

I always told my substitutes they needed to stay concentrated because the team who finish the match is often more important than the one that starts, as Theo Walcott showed against Sweden.

Roo beauty: The United star will return to the starting line-up

Roo beauty: The United star will return to the starting line-up

Carroll and Welbeck both have strong cases to stay in the team after their displays in Kiev.

When Carroll joined Liverpool, he almost tried too hard. Against Sweden, he was excellent. The goal was the crowning glory, a beautiful ball from Steven Gerrard and a stunning header from the big feller. If Mario Gomez had scored that for Germany, we would be purring about it.

Welbeck's back-heeled winner was the cutest you'll ever see. It was something you might have expected from the opposition forward Zlatan Ibrahimovic but Welbeck has shown us on more than one occasion that he has some exceptional skills, too.

What impresses me above all is his confidence. For a young player, he behaves on the pitch as someone already at home on the international stage. Welbeck should get the nod for Ukraine in my view because of his relationship with Rooney, a cornerstone of Manchester United last season.

Rooney is at his most effective when he's got little pockets of space to work with and Welbeck can provide that by running in behind defences and stretching them. He is a flexible player, too; he has strength and technique to receive the ball, allowing Rooney to run in behind on occasions.

Cute finish: Welbeck scored the winning goal in Kiev

Cute finish: Welbeck scored the winning goal in Kiev

It's a good position for Roy to be in. If plan A doesn't work, Carroll is full of confidence if called upon. And, by the way, Rooney will also feel he has something to prove now.

If Roy brings him into a winning team, he has to justify that selection. I think England will beat Ukraine. The hosts didn't offer much when I saw their game against France on Friday. And from there the whole tournament could snowball.

Welbeck winner against Sweden was the cutest you’ll see

England may end up facing Spain but the world and defending European champions are not without weakness. Croatia and Italy are beatable quarter-final opposition and Roy has the options to change the team again to suit the opposition.

It might be that Carroll, perfect for Sweden, could be effective in physically disrupting Italy's three-man defence. Where Roy's squad are good is that he has strikers who all offer different solutions, including Jermain Defoe.

Overall, England were better with the ball against Sweden than against France. When you string four or five passes together, it gives Gerrard time to get himself forward and support the front two. It was a massive plus to see Gerrard as a threat against Sweden, pushing on even in the last minute to nearly score a fourth England goal.

Impact player: Milner should retain his starting berth over Walcott for the Ukraine clash

Impact player: Milner should retain his starting berth over Walcott for the Ukraine clash

The next stage in England's development is to carry that threat against better teams than Sweden.

Walcott made an impact against Sweden but I think he's currently better as a substitute than a starting player.

At the start of games, defenders are fresh and keep things tight. But he is the type of player they hate facing when they are beginning to tire.

Because England have only to draw against Ukraine, James Milner may be a good option to offer solidity. But I think Ashley Young needs a good performance with Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain already showing in this tournament he can play at this level.

One thing I'm sure Roy will be fine-tuning before Tuesday is defending from set-pieces. England defended tightly in free play but we were all over the place for Sweden's second goal.

It looked to me as if some players were going man-to-man and some defending zonally when Seb Larsson played in a beautiful free-kick to Olof Mellberg.

We didn't have a big voice screaming to hold the line, because the deeper the defenders drop, the more inhibited Joe Hart is to come out to claim the ball.

Why the absence of King Carles could cost Spain their crown

If Spain win a third major trophy in a row, it will create history and make our sport rightly proud. But I think there is some evidence to suggest it might not necessarily happen.

When you gaze down their 23-man squad, they look hard to beat. And they have the option to be an even better attacking team than they've shown so far, by playing Cesc Fabregas and Fernando Torres together.

Fab option: Cesc Fabregas (left) could thrive with Torres

Fab option: Cesc Fabregas (left) could thrive with Torres

But defensively, I have seen signs that they are less efficient than two years ago when they won the World Cup. Even an outclassed Republic of Ireland team got behind them at times on Thursday night. I feel they aren't as secure without Carles Puyol, the captain of Barcelona who was also Spain's real leader at the back. Without him, I think the right team could pick them off, maybe Germany.

When the full-backs go forward, I sense you could catch them out. They have enough attacking talent to make a mug of me but Spain definitely have an achilles heel in my opinion and as they push forward later in the tournament to break teams down, they might get even more vulnerable.

Stat's interesting

Euro 2012 has produced some interesting trends. Not one of the 16 teams entered the last group games guaranteed a quarter-final place.

Not one penalty has been scored entering this weekend, Greece missing the only spot-kick so far, awarded in the opening match. There have been plenty of killer passes but not many individual defensive errors, Richard Dunne of Ireland's against Italy excepted. That has led to close, exciting games, with good attacking and defending. No wonder we're all enjoying it.

NextGen clubs following Barcelona"s blueprint

Clash of the talent schools: How top clubs are following Barcelona”s brilliant blueprint

When Barcelona outclassed the South American champions Santos to lift the Club World Cup in Japan earlier this month, it showcased a remarkable achievement.

Not so much Pep Guardiola’s 13th trophy in three years or his side’s fifth of the calendar year. Barca won with nine homegrown players in their starting XI and two more coming off the bench.

It is little wonder every club are scrambling for the blueprint of the blaugrana, the secret of their success. Indeed, when Barcelona’s B team play in Spain’s Segunda Liga it is the norm to have 18 scouts or more watching, all hoping to discover a gem of a player who Barca don’t need.

Setting the standard: Barcelona won the Club World Cup with nine homegrown players

Setting the standard: Barcelona won the Club World Cup with nine homegrown players

QUARTER FINAL DRAW

Aston Villa v Marseille
Barcelona v Ajax
Sporting v Inter
Spurs v Liverpool

Ties to be played over one leg, dates TBC

Jordi Mestre is the Barcelona board’s director of youth, one of the key personalities behind the most successful modern football machine.

‘People talk of Barcelona as a sort of phenomenon because of our success but they don’t always realise that this has been 25 to 30 years in the making,’ said Mestre.

‘It is the product of a lot of hard work from the days of Rinus Michels before Johan Cruyff, to what we have now. The model has been shaped and developed so that everyone is taught what is required to become a Barcelona player.

‘Everyone from the age of 10 is taught to play the same way. Even our women’s teams play the same style.’

Mestre rarely gives interviews. At Barcelona it is not their way to boast or gloat. As the adage goes, they let their football do the talking.

But Mestre has been excited by the development of the flagship NextGen Series, the Champions League-style tournament developed for Under 19s in which Barca, unsurprisingly, are through to the quarter-finals against another great exponent of youth development, Ajax.

Stars of the future: Barcelona have also made easy work of their fixtures in the NextGen series

Stars of the future: Barcelona have also made easy work of their fixtures in the NextGen series

‘The NextGen Series has been a very important experience for the players and coaches to match themselves tactically and competitively against other great clubs at this level,’ said Mestre.

‘It has broken the routine, bringing European competition to our younger players. It’s another challenge, another step in experience. It gives the coaches another insight into their development.’

But what is the Barcelona prototype for a player

‘Above all it is about the talent,’ is Mestre’s answer. ‘At Barcelona 75 or 80 per cent has to be about control of the ball, technique, because we play a style that keeps possession. Only a small percentage is emphasised on physical. We have athletes, too, but the physical side comes later for us. It’s not about the size. Xavi, Iniesta, Messi and Pedro weren’t big physically and even Gerard Pique was not strong when he came to us. It was all about their ability on the ball.’

So does Mestre expect the next Messi or Iniesta to show soon

‘It’s too early to say how many of this squad will make it to the first team but they are making good progress.

‘Our philosophy is that we invest a little money, yes, but more so our time. We have a structure that teaches players not only to become Barcelona players, but to grow as good men.

No room: Oriol Romeu (right) left Barcelona in the summer to join Premier League club Chelsea

No room: Oriol Romeu (right) left Barcelona in the summer to join Premier League club Chelsea

‘It is a model of principles for sport and life. Education; we teach not only football.’

Indeed, eight of Barcelona’s B team go to university.

‘We are very proud of our first team. We have nine players in a world championship team and two on the bench who came through our system, and our B team finished third in the second division last season with an average age of 20.’

Guardiola showed his faith in the club’s latest fledglings by playing nine of the B team in the Champions League against Bate Borisov on December 6. They won 4-0.

However, taking that step to the first team is not easy. The frustrations of some helped Barcelona recoup an impressive 20million last summer as players such as Bojan Krkic and Oriol Romeu left.

‘It’s very difficult if you want to progress but see Lionel Messi or Sergio Busquets in front of you,’ said Mestre. ‘But we work on that. Their motivation may not always come easy but we teach them to be realistic.

‘What happened in Japan is our dream turning to reality. We have to perpetuate that dream.’

World be warned. Mestre and his colleagues are making global domination seem like child’s play.

CASE STUDY 1: ASTON VILLA

‘We are ready. If the rules were enforced across Europe we’d be ready.’

Like the trust that has been placed in him, Kevin MacDonald has unswerving faith in Aston Villa’s development of players.

‘Prepared’ is the motto on the club’s traditional crest and with the financial climate biting, Villa, like most clubs, are having to look to youth rather than their cheque books.

Premier League clubs must have eight ‘homegrown’ players in their 25-man squad, with no restriction on Under 21s.

The move was made despite FIFA scrapping plans for clubs to field a minimum of six homegrown players in their starting line-ups. But now UEFA president Michel Platini wants to push through a plan of nine homegrown players in each 18-man playing squad.

Villa have a much-lauded set-up which has seen Marc Albrighton, Ciaran Clark and Chris Herd come to the fore and first-team coach MacDonald says there is more to come.

‘Due to financial constraints the players have to develop more quickly rather than the club pay top dollar,’ he said. ‘Players get a chance here and that can help when you are trying to attract young talent to the club.

A star is born: Gary Gardener has emerged as one to watch at Aston Villa

A star is born: Gary Gardener has emerged as one to watch at Aston Villa

‘We had young Danny Johnson on the bench against Liverpool and Derrick Williams against Arsenal. There’s pressure on managers to get results so you have to be careful when you introduce them but they’re doing well.’

Villa have used the NextGen Series to accelerate their players’ development. After an inauspicious start, they won their group ahead of Ajax, Fenerbahce and Rosenborg and face Marseille in the quarter-finals. ‘We’ve looked at the NextGen Series more as our reserve side this year and it’s been very beneficial,’ said MacDonald.

‘At various stages we’ve had to match together 16-year-olds and a schoolboy such as 15-year-old Jordan Graham with players like Gary Gardner, who has just been called back from a loan at Coventry because we need him in the first team. It’s helped the lads become more streetwise.

‘In terms of attributes we base a lot on the technical side but our players have to have more physical ability due to the nature of the English game. Yet we’ve seen players grow and develop quickly because of this experience. We lost away to Ajax and you could see they were intimidated by the whole Ajax aura but by the end of the group stage they’ve played Ajax at home and beaten them.

‘There are different physical demands. They couldn’t fly back the night of the Ajax game so stayed over and trained the following day. When they went to Turkey for Fenerbahce they had to spend three or four hours on a coach going through the city before they got to their drop-off point. It’s all part of their development into young professionals so when the manager needs them they are ready.’

With reinforcements needed, Villa manager Alex McLeish may be glad of that.

Conveyor belt: Nani at Sporting Lisbon

Conveyor belt: Nani at Sporting Lisbon

CASE STUDY 2: SPORTING LISBON

The mantra at Sporting Lisbon is to catch them young. Finance dictates the club can’t compete with more wealthy rivals Benfica and Porto.

‘We recruit players between the ages of seven and 14,’ said Diogo Matos, director of the club’s famed academy. ‘Sure we make some mistakes, but we try to accumulate enough of the best raw material and then give them the benefit of seven years of coaching. At 14 to 19 it is difficult for us to scout players and compete because we don’t have the funds of other clubs.’

As a result, Sporting often recruit from the streets where youngsters strive for football success as a necessity, to provide for their families. Manchester United’s Nani is one such graduate who followed in the footsteps of Cristiano Ronaldo, Ricardo Quaresma, Luis Figo and Paulo Futre.

‘Imagine if we had been able to keep all those players What a team we would have had,’ said Matos, himself a former Sporting midfielder.

‘When Portugal played Bosnia in the European Championship play-off, seven players in the national team had come from Sporting’s academy.’

The coaching is obviously still working as Sporting’s sparkling Under 19s swept aside Liverpool in the NextGen Series, winning 3-0 at Anfield and 5-1 at home, ahead of finishing top of their group.

‘For us, potential is more important than performance,’ said Matos. ‘We encourage them to express themselves because the bigger prize is the player we have in the long term. Having them young means there is a greater emotional connection with the coaches and they listen, meaning we can educate them quicker.

‘That way, when the coach needs to turn to the reserves or academy he knows the player is ready.’

SIX TO WATCH

Raheem Sterling (England) Liverpool

Sterling, 17, is lightning quick and plays mainly as a winger. He joined QPR aged 10 but was bought by Liverpool for 600,000 — a fee that could rise to 5million depending on first-team appearances. Has been hailed as the next Theo Walcott and Sporting Lisbon’s Diogo Matos says he would get in any team.

Destined to shine: Raheem Sterling has impressed as Liverpool qualified for the quarter-finals

Destined to shine: Raheem Sterling has impressed as Liverpool qualified for the quarter-finals

Gary Gardner (England) Aston Villa

Younger brother of Sunderland’s Craig, Gary, 19, is an attacking central midfielder who has played
for England at all youth levels. Scored for Coventry while on loan in November.

Dutch of class: Davy Klaassen could be the next star to emerge from Ajax

Dutch of class: Davy Klaassen could be the next star to emerge from Ajax”s famed academy

Davy Klaassen (Holland) Ajax

The 18-year-old striker played in two group-stage Champions League matches this season.
He scored his first league goal on his debut last month, one minute after coming on as a substitute.

Jean Marie Dongou (Cameroon) Barcelona

The 16-year-old, scouted for Barcelona by the Samuel Eto’o Foundation in his homeland, is a prolific
scorerfor the club’s youth teams and fired a hat-trick against Celtic earlierthis year. His coach Oscar Garcia said: ‘There is no limit to what he can achieve.’ No pressure, then.

Souleymane Coulibaly (Ivory Coast) Tottenham

TheSpurs centre forward, 16, won the golden boot at the FIFA Under 17 World Cup with Ivory Coast after scoring nine goals in four matches. Hasbeen linked with moves to Manchester United and Real Madrid.

Oumar Diop (Senegal) Marseille

The17-year-old has a good first touch, is quick and strong and likes to take people on. Marseille coach Jean-Luc Cassini says he is the prototype of the new attacking midfield player.