News

Arsene Wenger predicts England’s World Cup

Arsene Wenger predicts England’s World Cup


Arsene Wenger, FIFA Chief of Global Football Development, (C) is pictured at the FIFA World Cup national team workshop in the Qatari capital Doha, on July 4, 2022. (Photo by KARIM JAAFAR/AFP via Getty Images)
Arsene Wenger, FIFA Chief of Global Football Development, (C) is pictured at the FIFA World Cup national team workshop in the Qatari capital Doha, on July 4, 2022. (Photo by KARIM JAAFAR/AFP via Getty Images)

At the last World Cup in Russia, England reached the semi-finals, only to lose to Croatia, who themselves went on to lose against France in the Moscow final.

The Three Lions then followed that up with a run to the final of the postponed 2020 Euros in 2021, only to lose on penalties to Italy.

That might lead some to think that England will win the World Cup this year as they’ve edged themselves ever closer over the last decade.

Former Arsenal manager, Arsene Wenger, who now works as FIFA’s Head of Global Development, is not one of them.

“If you look at the last few years, England should be in the semi-finals at least,” Wenger told The S*n.

“They got to the semi-finals in Russia and then the Final in the Euros.

“But the doubt comes from what has happened over the past year.

TRING, ENGLAND - JUNE 10: World XI FC Manager, Arsene Wenger during a Soccer Aid for Unicef 2022 Training Session at Champneys Tring on June 10, 2022 in Tring, England. (Photo by Alex Davidson/Getty Images)
TRING, ENGLAND – JUNE 10: World XI FC Manager, Arsene Wenger during a Soccer Aid for Unicef 2022 Training Session at Champneys Tring on June 10, 2022 in Tring, England. (Photo by Alex Davidson/Getty Images)

“If they can get over that doubt in their own minds, they have the team that is good enough to reach the semi-finals.

“In Russia four years ago it was all about a deep defensive line and counter-attacking.

“This time it will be about the high press, the teams that can play out and have that courage, or the ones who go long.

“I expect to see the teams who want the ball being the most successful.

“But this is also a last chance tournament for the players who have dominated football for the last 15 years.

“You think about Ronaldo and Messi but there is also Neymar, Modric and Lewandowski, and some others.

“There will not be another World Cup for them. It’s now or never.

“This is that last opportunity to show the world they deserve to win it and so these big players will have pressure on their shoulders and we will see how they cope with that.”

The first World Cup took place in 1930 but England only entered the tournament for the first time in 1950 (although there was no World Cup in 1942 and 1946 due to World War II).

Since 1950, however, England have only missed out on reaching the finals of the competition three times (West Germany 1974, Argentina 1978, and USA 1994).

Of the 15 World Cups they have appeared at, England have failed to get out of their group three times (Brazil 1950, Sweden 1958, and Brazil 2014).

England have won the World Cup once (England, 1966), finished fourth twice (Italy 1990 and Russia 2018), and reached the quarter-finals nine times.

They face Iran, USA and Wales in Group B.

England at the World Cup

England FIFA World Cup finals record
YearRoundPosPldWDLGFGA
Uruguay 1930Not a FIFA memberxxxxxxx
Italy 1934Not a FIFA memberxxxxxxx
France 1938Not a FIFA memberxxxxxxx
Brazil 1950Group stage8th310222
Switzerland 1954Quarter-finals7th311188
Sweden 1958Group stage11th403145
Chile 1962Quarter-finals8th411256
England 1966Champions1st6510113
Mexico 1970Quarter-finals8th420244
West Germany 1974Did not qualifyxxxxxxx
Argentina 1978Did not qualifyxxxxxxx
Spain 1982Second group stage6th532061
Mexico 1986Quarter-finals8th521273
Italy 1990Fourth place4th733186
United States 1994Did not qualifyxxxxxxx
France 1998Round of 169th421174
South Korea Japan 2002Quarter-finals6th522163
Germany 2006Quarter-finals7th532062
South Africa 2010Round of 1613th412135
Brazil 2014Group stage26th301224
Russia 2018Fourth place4th7313128
Qatar 2022Qualified???????

 

Arsenal at the World Cup

As the World Cup takes place in a country where being LGBTQ+ is illegal, please also remember that “Qatari authorities have failed to investigate the deaths of thousands of migrant workers over the past decade, despite evidence of links between premature deaths and unsafe working conditions,” according to Amnesty International.



Source link

Related Posts