Martin Samuel: Rio Ferdinand, tell us what to do

If this is all wrong Rio, tell us what you think we should do

|

UPDATED:

21:45 GMT, 21 October 2012

Rio Ferdinand is right. We're not going to T-shirt racism in football out of existence. Then again, we’re not going to tweet it into oblivion, either. Education, discussion, action. We evolve from there.

Ferdinand, and other black players, may find the white cotton gesture politics of the anti-racism pressure groups facile, but so is trying to make a complex, nuanced argument in a medium of no more than 140 characters.

Some of us preferred the old days, when Ferdinand conveyed his thoughts with a statement more substantial and eloquent than the odd succinct hashtag.

In the red: Rio Ferdinand did not wear the Kick It Out t-shirt before Manchester United played Stoke

In the red: Rio Ferdinand did not wear the Kick It Out t-shirt before Manchester United played Stoke

We're in: Anderson and Wayne Rooney (right) wore the anti-racism t-shirts during the warm-up

We're in: Anderson and Wayne Rooney (right) wore the anti-racism t-shirts during the warm-up

More from Martin Samuel…

A-levels are hard. Just ask my poor son
18/10/12

Martin Samuel: Cagey Roy faces his moment of reckoning after Poland draw
17/10/12

Martin Samuel: English football can teach Serbia how to tackle racism
17/10/12

Martin Samuel: Plumbing the depths of flood and blunder in Warsaw
16/10/12

Martin Samuel: Let's grow up, and stop treating our managers like children
16/10/12

Martin Samuel: Armstrong's cheating means great British cycling boom feels rotten
14/10/12

Martin Samuel: Rubbish like San Marino must be thrown out
12/10/12

Martin Samuel: Compromised FA can't lecture us on booze and betting
11/10/12

VIEW FULL ARCHIVE

Sir Alex Ferguson may now wish he had
spoken at length with Ferdinand before giving his guarantee that every
Manchester United player would mark Kick It Out’s day of awareness in
the appropriate apparel, but the requirement to talk does not just exist
within the confines of the Carrington training complex.

The Football Association, the
Professional Footballers’ Association, the Kick It Out campaign, the
Premier League and Football League, all have a pressing need to consult
with the disaffected black players and ask: what exactly do you want

For while most would support
Ferdinand’s right not to rally beneath a standard in which he does not
believe, his motivation for losing faith in some very decent people is
rather less clear.

Does Ferdinand truly think racism is not taken seriously in this country That the efforts of the FA are insincere What more does he feel anti-racism campaigners could do

These are questions that need
answers, that demand detail, precise and insightful; a perspective with
a little more insight than the ill-considered retweet with which he
attacked Ashley Cole.

If Kick It Out are failing black footballers, so are many of the highest profile rebels by not framing specific grievances.

The presumption is that black players
were protesting about Kick It Out’s failure to address the lenient
treatment of race-related offences: John Terry’s four-match ban,
Chelsea’s endorsement of him as captain, UEFA’s weakness when
confronting racism in Serbia, the punishment and traducing of victim
Danny Rose.

If so, say it. Say what should have
happened. Offer a way forward. Public discourse over race has rarely
felt less cerebral. It has descended to the levels of pulp fiction. A
never-ending soap opera of snubbed handshakes, costume changes and
soundbites, offering few solutions and creating ever greater divisions.

Domestically at least, the complexities are so much richer than these crude gestures allow.

Take the Terry case, from the point
of view of the FA. They as good as tore up their rulebook to bring a
charge against the former England captain, once he had been found not
guilty at Westminster Magistrates Court.

It would have been very easy, at that
moment, to consider the case closed. Instead, the FA pressed ahead, and
lost Terry’s valuable services as an England player as a result.

Following suit: Rio's brother, the QPR defender, Anton Ferdinand also warmed up without the shirt

Following suit: Rio's brother, the QPR defender, Anton Ferdinand also warmed up without the shirt

Following suit: Rio's brother, the QPR defender, Anton Ferdinand also warmed up without the shirt

The four-game ban, while considered paltry by some, was the result of a three-man commission taking into account the individual circumstances around his offence.

It could be argued that race-related transgressions should carry a statutory 10-match ban, and maybe they will in future, but the hearing worked with the boundaries as they are now. The alternative is to surrender to lynch mob justice, bending to a media or public outcry. We have to be above that, no matter the appeal of easy populism.

Then there is the timing — Terry’s confrontation with Anton Ferdinand has passed its first birthday now — and the widely held view that the case dragged on too long and the FA should have pre-empted the trial by the Chief Magistrate. Luther Blissett said as much only last week.

Yet, once the police had asked the FA to suspend their investigation to let events in court take precedence, what were they supposed to do

What if the FA had pressed ahead and found Terry guilty and his Westminster trial had subsequently been deemed prejudiced The FA would have been blamed and vilified. They had to comply with the police request.

Of course, many aspects of Terry’s case were unsatisfactory, but they certainly do not show an authority who are unconcerned with race issues. Quite the opposite.

When placing any individual indictment under the microscope there will always be flaws. Not every criminal trial concludes in a way that chimes with the public mood, either, but that does not mean the justice system is unconcerned with right and wrong.

You may wish for sterner retribution for miscreants, but that does not make your more liberal local magistrate uncaring or complacent.

Similarly, the FA commission did not ban Terry for four matches because they thought racism inconsequential; they reached what they considered to be a fair punishment in the circumstances. You are entitled to disagree; but there is no conspiracy.

Not on: Manchester City defender Joleon Lescott (centre) had no intention of wearing the t-shirt

Not on: Manchester City defender Joleon Lescott (centre) had no intention of wearing the t-shirt

Standing his ground: Jason Roberts did not wear the yellow t-shirt at Anfield

Standing his ground: Jason Roberts did not wear the yellow t-shirt at Anfield

Red in black: Luis Suarez

Red in black: Luis Suarez

We don’t care about racism Consider
Terry’s true punishment. Not four matches, but a stigma that will remain
throughout his life. Without substantial rehabilitation, it will be
very hard for him to remain in football beyond his playing career and
almost impossible for him to pursue work in the media.

Could Terry be offered the job Gary
Neville has for England, or the position Alan Shearer occupies at the
BBC Not without the same outcry that has accompanied Chelsea’s
decision to retain him as captain.

There would be a chorus of
disapproval: reaction from Kick It Out, furious back page controversy,
negative commentary and analysis, a lightning vox pop of prominent black
players. It would be a circus.

Just as it is for Luis Suarez,
ignominy is Terry’s real sentence, and it is for all time, not four
measly matches. So, yes, we’re damn serious about racism in this
country.

On October 6, Marvin Sordell of Bolton
Wanderers said on Twitter that he, and several team-mates, had been
racially abused by Millwall fans at The Den.

To date, there has been no public
confirmation of this: from Bolton players, Millwall players, Bolton
officials, Millwall officials, police or stewards.

Nothing even from the other players
Sordell named: Lee Chung-yong, Darren Pratley and Benik Afobe. But there
is an FA investigation.

Not to doubt Sordell’s words, but this
is at present a single source story. The Leveson Inquiry would not
approve; nor would any self-respecting GCSE history teacher. Yet the FA
are investigating. As they should: because allegations of racism have
to be taken seriously, and are.

Indeed, the problem English football
seems to have is that, in its efforts to do racism justice, it has
become fragmented in how best to act.

It is the Judean People’s Front,
arguing with the People’s Front of Judea. T-shirts: on or off Hand:
outstretched or by side Four games or eight Punishment or
rehabilitation

Jason Roberts of Reading thinks Kick
It Out are weak and should be an angry, righteous force agitating for
change; former England goalkeeper David James believes Kick It Out are
redundant busy-bodies and simply keeping themselves in employment by
unnecessarily amplifying every dispute.

Last week, it was said that Kick It
Out were under pressure to exclude Terry from Saturday’s T-shirt parade,
if he was available to play for Chelsea against Tottenham. Then Terry
accepted his four-match ban and missed the game.

Immediately, this was reinterpreted as
a snub to an organisation who were, possibly, going to snub him anyway.
The snubbee was suddenly the snubber.

So what was it to be Reject Terry in
protest, include him as a way of showing his contrition, or the Holy
Grail — wait for him to ask to be included, in order to reject him in a
blaze of publicity. Whatever was intended, is this really the best we
can do

When we see what happened to England’s
black players in Serbia, is there not a higher ground, a finer way of
addressing racism than with glorified media stunts

Speaking up: Marvin Sordell was targeted online after claiming to have been racially abused by Millwall fans

Speaking up: Marvin Sordell was targeted online after claiming to have been racially abused by Millwall fans

The most worrying aspect of the
T-shirt protest is that the demand seems to be simply for more
punishment, punishment, punishment, rather than punishment followed by
education and rehabilitation as an example to society.

We presume that Ferdinand is outraged
because Terry was not banned for longer, not because current FA
sentences do not include a process whereby a player can be allowed to
admit his mistake, have what was so wrong explained to him — by his
victim or a proxy — and in time then return to spread the message,
having learned an important lesson.

Punishment followed by banishment is
how we deal with race issues, which is why each malefactor denies his
crime to the bitter end.

This also explains the strange role
reversal in which the offender is portrayed as the real victim, because
the odds are considered to be stacked against him.

Ultimately, instead of bringing the communities together, too much is contentious.

Put it this way: after a year of focus
on race issues are we further advanced If not, then the system is
wrong and the punishment- banishment axis alone is not working.

Even Ferdinand’s collision with
Ferguson has the nuances of the race debate at its heart. Ferguson said
on Friday that his players would support the Kick It Out movement. He no
doubt feels supportive of its good intentions, having endured the
fall-out of the Suarez-Patrice Evra affair.

Maybe he had heard rumours of
Ferdinand’s planned protest and felt by making that statement publicly,
he would box his player into a corner, where he would have no option
but to go along with his manager’s wishes. It was a presumptuous
announcement without consultation, but nobody would dispute Ferguson’s
sincerity of purpose.

In also saying he would back any of
his players who left the field due to racist abuse, he has gone further
than many managers, and certainly further than UEFA president Michel
Platini. Ferguson and Ferdinand are on the same route, but different
paths.

That this will quite possibly play out
as the beginning of the end for Ferdinand at Old Trafford would make
him another casualty of a toxic episode for English football.

‘He’ll be dealt with,’ warned
Ferguson, darkly, which was an unfortunate choice of words to say the
least. Why should Ferdinand be dealt with for sticking to his
principles

Officials stance: Referee Mike Jones and his assistants warm up wearing the anti-racism t-shirts at Swansea

Officials stance: Referee Mike Jones and his assistants warm up wearing the anti-racism t-shirts at Swansea

Did Ferguson not once admire independence of thought as a worker in Glasgow’s shipyards

Whether one agrees with Ferdinand’s stance, or finds it misguided, he is entitled to freedom of expression.

Ferguson may feel the protest a
distraction — and he certainly won’t have been happy that the second
Stoke City goal came straight through the heart of his defence on
Saturday — but surely he should be proud of the fact that his players
are leaders, not followers, in football’s community

Joleon Lescott, now of Manchester
City, has not endorsed Kick It Out in five seasons. He has his reasons
and no manager is entitled to instruct him otherwise.

So Ferguson clearly under- estimated
Ferdinand’s depth of feeling, and in doing so ended up embarrassed when
the player publicly disobeyed him.

Now the issue is one of control. Ferguson does not tolerate dissent, and those who go against him rarely last long at United.

The pair are believed to have talked
yesterday and, short-term at least, their working relationship is
maintained. Ferdinand’s contract is up this summer, however, and at 34
he could be in his final season at the club.

He would have known the potential
ramifications when he made the decision to defy Ferguson and it shows
how deeply he cares. Is it too much to ask, then, that he now
articulates those views, privately or publicly, to the people who
matter, that he discusses the way forward, that he assumes the
responsibility of a man in his influential position

If the FA are to stand accused of not
taking racism seriously, what of those who reduce the subject to a
T-shirt, a handshake, a slogan or a pithy tweet

Roberto Mancini says Joe Hart needs to be cocky

Mancini insists Hart needs to be cocky if he is to continue ascent

|

UPDATED:

23:42 GMT, 19 October 2012

Roberto Mancini accepts that Joe Hart can be ‘cocky’ but insists it has helped the Manchester City goalkeeper become one of the best in Europe.

The accusation was levelled at Hart by television pundit Roy Keane after the 25-year-old keeper held up his hands to the error that led to Poland’s equaliser against England on Wednesday.

It came two weeks after Hart earned rave reviews for a world-class display for City against Borussia Dortmund, and Mancini was quick to defend his player.

Cocky: Joe Hart needs to retain his attitude according to Roberto Mancini

Cocky: Joe Hart needs to retain his attitude according to Roberto Mancini

‘If you want to be a good keeper, you should be cocky,’ said the City manager. ‘Every keeper is like this. It is important because it’s different to another position.

‘Last week, Wayne Rooney said on Twitter that Joe is the best keeper in the world but today he is cocky.

‘It is my opinion that Joe is the best keeper in England and one of the best in Europe.

‘He is strong enough for this. He knows he is one of the best but he wants to continue to work hard.

‘Usually Joe saves everything but anyone can make a mistake. It is impossible to be perfect. Only Mario (Balotelli) is perfect every day!’

Mancini was already frustrated that the international break arrived just when his team’s form was showing signs of improvement.

The 24-hour postponement of England’s World Cup qualifier in Warsaw has given him another headache as City face a difficult trip to the Hawthorns on Saturday where West Bromwich Albion have won all four of their Premier League games this season.

It meant that Hart, James Milner and Joleon Lescott only returned to training with their teammates at Carrington on Friday, and the Italian believes the fixture could have been switched to Sunday.

‘The game after the international
break is always difficult,’ said Mancini. ‘I think that sometimes in
this situation we can move our game from Saturday to Sunday. It’s easy
because we are not on television and we play at three o’clock on
Saturday.

‘I am worried because for Joe, Joleon and James Milner it is the first day they can train and tomorrow we play.’

Nearly there: Mancini says Hart is the best keeper in England

Nearly there: Mancini says Hart is the best keeper in England

The World Cup qualifiers dealt City another blow with David Silva returning to the club nursing the hamstring injury he suffered in the early stages of Spain’s draw with France on Tuesday night.

However scans have showed that it is not as serious as first feared.

Bounce back: Hart made an error for England against Poland

Bounce back: Hart made an error for England against Poland

Roy Hodgson"s England must improve in World Cup dogfight

A dogfight! Hodgson happy to scrap for a place in Brazil, but England need to improve

|

UPDATED:

22:23 GMT, 18 October 2012

Roy Hodgson accepts England are now ‘in a dogfight’ after another poor display left them scrapping for a place at the World Cup in Brazil with teams they should be beating fairly comfortably.

Rather worryingly, England’s manager appears to see this as a ‘good thing’.

‘There’s nothing wrong with that,’ he said after his side dropped two more qualification points here in Poland. ‘We know we can stay and take part in a dogfight. We took part in a few dogfights during the Euros and we certainly dug in against Poland and showed the right sort of character and determination.

Plenty to ponder: Roy Hodgson watched his side drop two more points in Warsaw

Plenty to ponder: Roy Hodgson watched his side drop two more points in Warsaw

'There will be some groups where one team shoots away and others where it’s going to be quite close to the end,’ Hodgson added. ‘I still think we will improve. If you’d said to me that we’d have eight points and be unbeaten, I’d have been happy to accept that.’

Really Eight points Eight points that will probably leave England two points adrift of Montenegro come the middle of next month Eight points that make the trip to Montenegro in March exactly the kind of ‘must-win game’ that Hodgson seems keen to avoid

Is it not time to remind the players of a responsibility that goes way beyond their new code of conduct To remind them how painful it would be to be 6,000 miles away when 32 teams are in a proper dogfight in South America in the summer of 2014

Heads up: Wayne Rooney put England in front against Poland

Heads up: Wayne Rooney put England in front against Poland

Hodgson did not appreciate the question. ‘They know that,’ he said. ‘It would be teaching my grandmother to suck eggs if I was to stand up in front of them and tell them that. They would regard that as slightly insulting.

‘The bottom line is that this is not an easy group. Poland and Ukraine were at the Euros, we know about Montenegro from the previous campaign. We’ve always been aware of that.

‘It would’ve been lovely to have got off to a flyer and be sitting here with 12 points. But you don’t get what you want by asking for it. You get what you want by playing for it. Ukraine played very well at Wembley and deserved their point. Poland played well and deserved their point. We’ve got to be disappointed because we couldn’t produce good enough performances in those games to get six points.

Blow: Kamil Glik scores Poland's equaliser on Wednesday

Blow: Kamil Glik scores Poland's equaliser on Wednesday

‘But sometimes you’ve got to fight for something, rather than just sail through, and that can help. If you look at the Euros, Russia and Holland sailed through but neither of them got out of their group, even though they’d qualified unbeaten.’

Point one — Poland and Ukraine were at the Euros because they were the tournament hosts.

Point two — sailing through qualification is always better than fighting to the death in a group of this quality. It means the team are playing well and it does not ‘help’ when they are performing as they have done against Ukraine and Poland.

But England do have six games in which to improve and two friendlies, against Sweden in November and Brazil in February, that Hodgson can put to good use before returning to the serious business of qualification.

Tough start: Hodgson's England face a fight to make the World Cup finals

Tough start: Hodgson's England face a fight to make the World Cup finals

So what does he need to do

Identify his best players and stick with them.

Hodgson was informed on Wednesday night that, in his 11 games in charge so far, he has used 35 players.

‘That’s a lot,’ he said. ‘But I think we’re quite close to bedding down a team.’

Danny boy: Welbeck in action for England in their World Cup qualifier against Poland

Danny boy: Welbeck in action for England in their World Cup qualifier against Poland

It is time to identify Danny Welbeck as the best option as partner to Wayne Rooney and stick with him, just as it is time to identify Andy Carroll as the best alternative and Jermain Defoe as an option should he need a goal when international defenders are tiring.

Hodgson is right to regard Rooney as a No 10, and he can only hope he does not have too many more games like Wednesday night’s. But it would help Rooney if he builds a partnership with one player, and an understanding with a small group of wingers. Tom Cleverley on the left is not something Hodgson should consider again.

Make the best use of Sweden next month.

Hodgson has suggested that he will take an experimental team to Stockholm, but he must use the game to work on his first team.Rooney has said he wants to play ‘all the games, if that’s possible’.

Hodgson does not seem convinced. ‘I don’t intend to go to Stockholm with a weak team,’ he said. 'But I’m also conscious that a lot of players, the Gerrards and the Rooneys and the Carricks, will be right in the middle of European football and I don’t know how much I can bash them.’

Introduce some younger players, by all means. Bring Arsenal right back Carl Jenkinson into the group. But give the first team 45 minutes, and with it, the opportunity to build a bit of confidence and understanding. It’s Brazil after that, and without the right preparation that could be brutal.

The defence needs work.

It was not an easy night for Joleon Lescott and Phil Jagielka in Warsaw and it was difficult for them against Ukraine, too.

Understandably, England are suffering in the absence of John Terry and Rio Ferdinand. And not just defensively. These are quality players who are comfortable on the ball, and it was the hesitancy that Lescott and Jagielka displayed on the ball that contributed to a stuttering performance from England.

The return of Phil Jones and Chris Smalling could improve things. It would at least create competition for places. But has Hodgson been too hasty in all but ending Ferdinand’s international career I would recall him for Sweden.

Disappointment: England's players after the match in Warsaw

Disappointment: England's players after the match in Warsaw

Jack Wilshere

PEARCE'S PLEDGE TO PLAY JACK

Manager Stuart Pearce is willing to give Jack Wilshere his first taste of tournament football as part of the England Under 21 squad for the European Championship in Israel next summer, saying: ‘It prepares these boys for the senior team.’

On a training pitch at London Colney, a 20-year-old midfielder is working tirelessly to return from a long-term injury. Hodgson does not want to put Jack Wilshere under any kind of pressure.

‘When he broke into the team before, he was a revelation,’ said the England manager. ‘But he’s been out of football for a long, long time. He’s a wonderful talent and, of course, it would be terrific if he could reproduce that form when he becomes involved again. But I’m also keen, like Arsene Wenger, to play down the expectations.’

And rightly so. But the return of Wilshere might just enable England to play with more fluency and finesse. A midfield with Gerrard and Wilshere is a far more balanced one, and Wilshere’s eye for a pass would certainly benefit Rooney.

/10/18/article-0-0B5AEB2500000578-99_634x436.jpg” width=”634″ height=”436″ alt=”The real deal: Wilshere in action for England against Wales last year” class=”blkBorder” />

The real deal: Wilshere in action for England against Wales last year

Joleon Lescott wants England partnership with Phil Jagielka

Lescott keen on long-term England partnership with Jagielka despite Poland blow

|

UPDATED:

00:37 GMT, 19 October 2012

Joleon Lescott wants himself and Phil Jagielka to form England's new first-choice centre-back partnership after the end of the John Terry-Rio Ferdinand era.

Lescott and Jagielka played together at youth level with England and then at Everton before the former made the move to Manchester City.

Lescott has become a first-choice player under head coach Roy Hodgson, starting eight of his 11 matches in charge, and was an ever present at Euro 2012.

Jagielka also now appears to be moving up the pecking order and the pair have been chosen by Hodgson for England's two most testing World Cup qualifiers to date against Ukraine and Poland.

Heads up: Kamil Glik beats Joleon Lescott to the ball and scores Poland's equaliser on Wednesday

Heads up: Kamil Glik beats Joleon Lescott to the ball and scores Poland's equaliser on Wednesday

When asked if himself and Jagielka can become the new centre-half pair, Lescott said: 'We'd like to believe so. Obviously Gary Cahill has played a number of games and is out here (in Poland).

'Ryan Bertrand is also a quality player. But, if the manager believes myself and Jags can make the positions ours, then great and hopefully we can do that.

'We grew up together. We played from England Under-18s, then at Everton, and it is a level of trust.'

Jagielka said: 'I've known Joleon for a long time and we've played together on a few occasions for Everton and England.

'If our partnership is the reason that I get in with England alongside him, then I'll be ecstatic.'

Lescott was partially at fault with Poland's equaliser in the 1-1 draw in Warsaw on Wednesday, although keeper Joe Hart also shouldered some of the blame.

But Lescott said: 'If you are calling that an error, then he is going to be some keeper. He is always going to say that because he is a leader in a way but we've all got to take responsibility. It was not solely his error.

'It was a combination of errors and nine times out of 10, if you do that it will lead to a goal. Joe is a strong character. I've no doubt about Joe's ability or character.'

Disappointment: Joleon Lescott and Phil Jagielka are among the players to show their feelings here after England's draw

Disappointment: Joleon Lescott and Phil Jagielka are among the players to show their feelings here after England's draw

Lescott insists England were always anticipating a battle to qualify for Brazil but believes that may work in their favour. He said: 'We never expected it to be easy and, in a way, hopefully it isn't that easy.

'In previous qualifiers, we've strolled through to tournaments and not looked as effective when we've got there.

'Maybe if we struggle to get there, but we do get to Brazil, hopefully it will stand us in good stead and it will be easier once there.

'But having said that, I don't think any result away from home is a negative one. We didn't play as well as we would have liked but it is important to get results in qualifying rounds.

'We dug in and got a point against a good Polish side and now move onto the next game.'

Jagielka echoed Lescott's sentiments and said: 'As long as we qualify for the World Cup, it doesn't matter where we get the points from.

'It's about getting as many as we can at this stage. It's going to be a long campaign to qualify.'

Wayne Rooney: England must improve on Poland draw to reach 2014 World Cup

England must improve on Poland stalemate to reach Rio, claims below-par Rooney

|

UPDATED:

05:57 GMT, 18 October 2012

Wayne Rooney insists England need to improve on their performance during Wednesday night's 1-1 draw with Poland in Warsaw to qualify for the 2014 World Cup.

England lead Group H by one point from Montenegro, who have a game in hand, after Rooney's 32nd goal for his country was cancelled out by Kamil Glik midway through the second period.

Rooney believes a share of the spoils is not a disaster after the game eventually went ahead a day late due to a waterlogged pitch on Tuesday.

Net gains: Rooney scored the opener in Warsaw before England were pegged back

Net gains: Rooney scored the opener in Warsaw before England were pegged back

However, the Manchester United striker knows England have to produce better performances.

He said: 'Do England have to improve to qualify Yes, of course. We know we can play a lot better than that.

'But at least we got the point. It was a hard-fought point. It was a difficult game, a difficult pitch. We weren't at our best but we dug in and got a draw.

Pole position: England lead the group but will be leapfrogged by Montenegro if they win their game in hand

Pole position: England lead the group but will be leapfrogged by Montenegro if they win their game in hand

'We know we can play better but this is a difficult place to come. It is a decent point.

'We knew it was a tough group, but we're confident. We believe in ourselves and we believe we are the best team in the group, so we are confident of qualifying.'

Boss Roy Hodgson admitted Rooney was well below his best. Rooney failed to take a golden chance to wrap up victory in the second half, with Glik profiting from a Joe Hart mistake immediately afterwards to earn Poland a point, which even Hodgson admitted was the least they deserved.

Rooney was eventually replaced by Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, having failed to find the form he produced as skipper against San Marino last Friday.

Withdrawn: Rooney was replaced by Oxlade-Chamberlain in the second half

Withdrawn: Rooney was replaced by Oxlade-Chamberlain in the second half

'A bit of both,' was Hodgson's response when asked whether the reasoning behind the substitution was physical or tactical.

'There was an element of physicality because it looked as though he was tiring. 'He couldn't reproduce his excellent performance against San Marino and we wanted to get a little bit more life and energy into the central area, which (Tom) Cleverley was capable of giving us alongside (Steven) Gerrard and (Michael) Carrick, so Wayne moved wider.

'Then, when we thought he was tiring we felt it was the right moment to bring on Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, who gave us some fresh legs.'

Skipper Steve Gerrard is never afraid to admit the truth and acknowledged England were 'not totally at the races.'

Off colour: Gerrard conceded that England were never 'at the races' in their Warsaw draw

Off colour: Gerrard conceded that England were never 'at the races' in their Warsaw draw

He said: 'It was difficult conditions and a difficult pitch but we can't use that as an excuse.

'I thought Poland dealt with the conditions and played to the conditions slightly better than us. That's the reason we didn't get three points.

'The pitch was slippy, wet, cutting up. I think it was only laid a week and a half ago so it wasn't ideal. Both teams tried to make the most of it and they did it better than us.

'We did okay until we scored but never built on the one-goal lead. We never passed the ball well enough, for whatever reason.'

Gerrard refused to use the 20-hour delay before the game went ahead for England's poor showing.

The Liverpool midfielder said: 'When you're fired up, pumped up, you've had your massages and you're ready to go, that's not ideal (when the game is called off).

'But we're professionals. We're playing at the top level and we had to get ourselves up for this but I didn't think we were totally at the races.'

England players took sleeping pills before Poland match

Caught napping: England keeper Hart suffers nightmare in draw with Poland… but were sleeping pills to blame

|

UPDATED:

07:15 GMT, 18 October 2012

England nodded off in Poland on Wednesday and dropped two vital World Cup points after some players needed sleeping pills to cope with the game’s 20-hour delay.

Wayne Rooney headed his team into a first-half lead but Kamil Glik equalised 20 minutes from time and manager Roy Hodgson was relieved to hold on to stay top of Group H.

Some England players, who routinely take caffeine stimulant tablets before matches, had struggled to unwind after Tuesday’s game was rained off and those suffering most were given sleeping tablets.

Blunder: Poland's Kamil Glik beats Joe Hart to the ball to score the equaliser in Warsaw

Blunder: Poland's Kamil Glik beats Joe Hart to the ball to score the equaliser in Warsaw

Goalkeeper Joe Hart shouldered responsibility for Poland’s goal after coming out to punch a corner, only to be beaten to the ball by centre half Glik.

‘I came out and didn’t get there,’ said Hart. ‘It’s my fault and that’s cost us the three points.'

But questions will be asked about the impact taking sleeping pills can have on a player’s performance.

Poland mastered the sodden pitch better than the English players, who looked to have suffered more from the disruption of the game being put back because of a waterlogged pitch.

Hodgson said: ‘I had the impression earlier in the week that the players were looking sharp and lively. I didn’t have that impression today. I don’t know if that’s due to the extra night, the sodden pitch or that we didn’t play well on the day.

Main man: Glik celebrates after heading home the equaliser for Poland against England

Main man: Glik celebrates after heading home the equaliser for Poland against England

‘There are days when you don’t hit the heights. You just have to make certain you don’t go away ruing that fact. A point in Warsaw is not to be looked down upon.’

Midfielder James Milner said: ‘You have all your meetings, you go into the dressing room and have your massages, put strappings on, boots on, tie-ups on, are ready to go out and then you’re told to wait and the game is called off. It’s not ideal but you have to be professional and prepare again.’

Hodgson took his team for a walk and a stretch on Wednesday morning and no-one tried to use the delay as an excuse. Captain Steven Gerrard said: ‘When you’re fired up, pumped up and you’ve had your massages and you’re ready to go and then don’t play, that’s not ideal. But we’re professionals. We’re playing at the top level and we had to get ourselves up for this but I didn’t think we were totally at the races.

‘The pitch was slippy, wet and cutting
up. I think it was laid a week-and-a-half ago. So it wasn’t ideal. Both
teams tried to make the most of it and they did it better.

Opening salvo: Wayne Rooney got his shoulder to the ball to put England in front in Warsaw

Opening salvo: Wayne Rooney got his shoulder to the ball to put England in front in Warsaw

‘The surprise was why they didn’t shut the roof the night before when it was raining. But that’s life. We get on with it. I won’t use the delay and conditions as an excuse. The reason we didn’t win was because we didn’t pass it when we went in front.’

The draw means England will be overtaken as group leaders if Montenegro beat San Marino next month and manager Hodgson is looking for a big improvement when his side travel to San Marino and Montenegro in March.

He said: ‘We didn’t play well. We’ve got to be satisfied we came away with a point. We were fortunate to be 1-0 up at half-time because we hadn’t played well.

‘The extra day and stay over, the sogginess of the pitch didn’t work in our favour. But we leave here with a point, on an unbeaten run, and hopefully we’ll continue to progress and get the points we need.’

England fans show Bulldog spirit in Poland

Fans show Bulldog spirit but feel the pain after Poland clash is rescheduled

|

UPDATED:

21:44 GMT, 17 October 2012

Plac Zamkowy, Warsaw’s historic hub, was bathed in watery autumn sunlight and busy with tourists as midday chimed.

A group of schoolchildren gathered around Sigismund’s Column to pose for a photograph before visiting the Royal Castle.

Others burrowed down the cobbled streets towards the old-town Market Square, past the mime artists, human statues and those hawking business for restaurants and bars.

All smiles: England fans take in the sights in Warsaw ahead of the match

All smiles: England fans take in the sights in Warsaw ahead of the match

Weather beaten: An England fan with his ticket which was destroyed in the rain

Weather beaten: An England fan with his ticket which was destroyed in the rain

Across the River Vistula, the National Stadium glistened, blissfully unaware it had become the focus of what Polish papers called a ‘National Scandal’.
Inside, the grass was being mown and the tarpaulin roof had been re-opened to help the pitch air. Later it was closed, as if the roof controller was making up for lost time.

In the city centre, with five hours to kick-off, there was little evidence that this was a big match day. England flags hung outside the Bulldog pub but the anticipation was not building.

Some England supporters were trying to work out if it was better to watch the first half and miss the second as they travelled to the airport, or go early to the airport and see the whole game on TV. Others were long gone.

Many were seeking help to re-arrange flights or trying to claim back their 40 ticket, as the FA had promised they could do.

In fact, England’s players have joined with the FA to part-fund the fans’ money-back scheme as a sign of their appreciation for their away support.

Heading home: Some England fans left Warsaw after the rain on Tuesday

Heading home: Some England fans left Warsaw after the rain on Tuesday

Scott Thompson was one of a group of Stockport County fans who had always planned to stay until Thursday but still something rankled about the fact a World Cup tie in a new 400million stadium with a retractable roof had been postponed for rain.

‘We went to watch Stockport at Southport and it was raining but they borrowed a blotter from Lancashire cricket club and got the game on,’ said Thompson. ‘We were in Belarus when it was -14C on a rubbish pitch and they played.

‘The English are used to things going wrong with the weather. We were at Bristol Rovers one night when a game was called off at 7.40pm, five minutes before kick-off.

‘The worst thing with this was the lack of information. They had a state-of-the-art screen, so why not use it to get information across I found out on Twitter. They got it all so wrong.’

Resolute: Around 800 fans stayed in Warsaw to watch England play Poland

Resolute: Around 800 fans stayed in Warsaw to watch England play Poland

Inside the stadium, as the game kicked off under a big top, keeping the sunshine at bay, there were more than 50 St George flags on display and 800 people rattling around inside the section for visiting supporters.

There were many empty seats in the Polish end, too, left by those fans who had travelled from different parts of the country or could not get time off work at short notice.

Kevin Miles of the Football Supporters’ Federation, called for a FIFA inquiry to make sure it does not happen again.

‘We want the process to be examined and questioned,’ said Miles. ‘Never again should we have hundreds and thousands sent home from an expensive trip without seeing a ball kicked.’

England fans were praised by Polish police.

There were eight arrests after the game, for bottle-throwing and damaging police vehicles, but the night seemed to pass without major incident.

Roy Hodgson faces moment of reckoning – Martin Samuel

Cagey Roy faces his moment of reckoning after England stutter to Poland draw

|

UPDATED:

21:45 GMT, 17 October 2012

Top of the group, unbeaten in 11 games under Roy Hodgson, a point away from home, Wayne Rooney on the scoresheet again, so why did this not feel like the best of times for England

Perhaps because we can see what is coming. There is a moment of reckoning.

It may occur later in the season against Montenegro, or in the tournament itself in two summers’ time, but England cannot continue playing like this and hope to thrive.

Plenty to ponder: England manager Roy Hodgson saw his side struggle to a draw with Poland

Plenty to ponder: England manager Roy Hodgson saw his side struggle to a draw with Poland

Only one team should feel disappointed by a single point out of this game and it is the hosts.

Poland were more creative, more entertaining to watch and had the better chances. Both goals came from set-pieces but whereas this was just about all England offered, Poland were busy but wasteful with their final ball.

Hodgson’s England are famed for being hard to beat, but a better team would surely have won comfortably against them here. Poland are technically impressive, but lack a definitive finisher. Thank heavens.

When Hodgson took over, the fear was he would be a cautious coach and so it is proving. /10/17/article-2219292-158D08E7000005DC-235_634x343.jpg” width=”634″ height=”343″ alt=”Tough times: England players look dejected after Poland level the score in Warsaw” class=”blkBorder” />

Tough times: England players look dejected after Poland level the score in Warsaw

Carrick did not secure the centre defensively and his passing was inferior. Jack Wilshere cannot return soon enough; nor can Frank Lampard.

It was hardly a match worth waiting for. Those who travelled through rain to watch the game that wasn’t on Tuesday will be compensated and they would appear to have got the best of the deal.

Around 800 England fans returned to the National Stadium in Warsaw for this and they were, for the most part, a mute presence.

Loyal to the end, they know the reality. England lead Group H but that position is misleading.

Montenegro have a game in hand and it will take place at home to San Marino on November 14.
Barring a stunning upset, plague-like illness or the biggest coup at the bookmakers since the Hole In One Gang, Montenegro will top the table by Christmas.

They are the dark horses here. Montenegro have already defeated Ukraine away; the opponents England failed to beat at Wembley, and drew home and away with England in the qualifying campaign for the 2012 European Championship.

Not up to it: Michael Carrick struggled in the England midfield

Not up to it: Michael Carrick struggled in the England midfield

It is far too early to panic, but the fact remains that after four World Cup qualifying matches, the only nations Hodgson’s England have vanquished are Moldova and San Marino, ranked 47th and 53rd out of 53 teams in Europe.

The manager might not lose, but he is hardly enjoying a winning streak, either. Carry on like this and there will be matches in which only victory will do. Being hard to beat in those will ultimately be as valuable as the ability to juggle skittles.

The one development that has gone against Hodgson is the international retirement of John Terry. Put the circumstances to one side for a moment and consider his absence, instead, purely in football terms.

There were those who claimed he would not be missed. Madness. The words of goalkeeper Joe Hart before last week’s match with San Marino were ominous.

‘Football-wise the guy is an inspiration,’ said Hart. ‘He’s a great centre half, a great servant to his country and it’s a shame we’ve lost him. It’s a big blow. He’s still got so much ability.’

San Marino were never going to expose the hole where Terry once stood, but Poland most certainly did.

At fault: Joe Hart had one of his worst games for England and was partly to blame for Poland's goal

At fault: Joe Hart had one of his worst games for England and was partly to blame for Poland's goal

Specifically, his absence sucked the
confidence out of Hart, who had his least convincing game in an England
shirt for some time and was partly at fault for Poland’s equaliser.

Goalkeepers like to feel safe with the men around them. The central defenders like a goalkeeper they can lean on: the relationship between Hart and Terry was crucial to England.

Alan Hansen and Mark Lawrenson, Liverpool stalwarts, would never have a word said against the maverick Bruce Grobbelaar in goal.

Hansen’s point was that they always knew where they stood with Grobbelaar.

‘He came for everything,’ he recalled. ‘A defender wants to know precisely where he stands and we did with Bruce.

‘If a cross came into the penalty area, get out of the way because he’s going for it. Knowing that, we could concentrate on protecting the goal, just in case. He missed the odd one, but it was worth it for the certainty.’

Stronger together: John Terry and Hart

Stronger together: John Terry and Hart

Hart and Terry might not have had the familiarity of clubmates, but they had faith. Terry did not appear as confident with David James or Robert Green, for instance, as he did with Hart.

And it is worth remembering that Hart has lost not one, but two great central defenders: Rio Ferdinand being the other.

He knows Joleon Lescott from Manchester City — although he does not always make Roberto Mancini’s team — and Phil Jagielka has again been impressive for Everton this season but this triumvirate needs time.

Jagielka played as if under duress from his Polish relatives and, defensively, England were an accident waiting to happen: a trait inconsistent with the mantle of being hard to beat.

Ferdinand and Terry were also the best passers among England’s central defenders and that showed too on Wednesday night.

The Poles were more than happy for Jagielka and Lescott to have the ball, sensing that no good would come of it.

Ferdinand is known for his football brain, but Terry’s excellent passing is often overlooked. The toxic fall-out from his abuse of Anton Ferdinand makes him a hard player to miss, but judged purely for football reasons the void was noticeable in Warsaw.

It is hard to imagine it being very different in Podgorica, Kiev and, most worryingly, Wembley.

Enlarge

England v Poland

Warsaw water torture – Graham Chadwick image of the week

Graham Chadwick: My image of the week – Warsaw water torture

|

UPDATED:

14:56 GMT, 17 October 2012

This week's picture was taken from Tuesday night's World Cup 2014 qualifier between England V Poland. Or rather, the game that never was!

After a day of torrential rain in Warsaw, the fans were in place and the teams were due to warm up at the national Stadium.

But barely a few minutes watching the goalkeepers going through their pre-match routine, it became pretty clear that the pitch was unplayable.

You can see from this picture just how much sitting water was around the goal mouth. Why didn't they close the roof sooner

This picture was taken with:

D3
lens 400mm
ISO 1600
f/ 2.8
1000s

Warsaw water torture - Graham Chadwick image of the week

Polish FA to refund tickets for England fans unable to attend rescheduled match

Polish FA to refund tickets for England fans unable to attend rescheduled match

|

UPDATED:

10:42 GMT, 17 October 2012

The Polish FA have announced that they will refund any unused match tickets from the rearranged World Cup qualifier against England in Warsaw.

The match was called off on Tuesday night due to a waterlogged pitch, and though it was rescheduled for 4pm the following day, many England fans had already travelled home.

The FA's website revealed that fans can send their unused tickets to the FA at Wembley, where they will then be sent on to the Polish FA who will issues refunds accordingly.

Refund: England fans will be reimbursed following the farce

Refund: England fans will be reimbursed following the farce

England fans’ spokesman Mark Perryman expects up to two thirds of the 2,500 supporters who travelled to Poland to attend the rescheduled game.

Perryman also insists fans will not be overly hit in the pocket by the 20-hour delay in the fixture because of the cheap nature of the Polish economy.

Perryman, from the London England Fans’ group, said: 'I expect there will be between half and two thirds of the England fans who travelled out for the game to be there this afternoon.

'A lot of fans I’ve spoken to have booked to come out on Monday and go back on Thursday anyway while a lot have Polish relatives over here.

'But in any case it will not cost the fans a lot of money for the extra day because Poland is a cheap place to get to, to stay at and to eat in – maybe an extra 150.'

Saturated: England manager Roy Hodgson tests out the pitch on Tuesday night

Saturated: England manager Roy Hodgson tests out the pitch on Tuesday night

The game was eventually called off an hour after the scheduled 8pm (BST) kick off time with sections of the pitch flooded.

Perryman said: 'The feeling was not of anger but of bemusement and no-one knew what was going on but I include the Poland fans in that as well. It wasn’t anything against the England fans.

'The only good thing is that Cliff Richard didn’t start conducting the singing in the rain like he did at Wimbledon!

'But can we have a sense of perspective after people have gone on about the roof not being closed

'If there had been rain like that in England, there is not a single football stadium which has a roof to close.'