England Internationals Should Play for Free. By Rob Atkinson
After
England's successful World Cup qualifying campaign, the dust is now
starting to settle, and thoughts are beginning to intrude along the
lines of: Oh, Christ, spare us another World Cup finals performance like
the last one. It's a memory just too depressing for words as
highly-talented yet grossly over-paid young players sulked around the
pitch as if they'd forgotten exactly how lucky they were to be there at
all.
The fanatical travelling army which follows
England everywhere were shocked into spells of stunned silence at the
lassitude and sheer incompetence of some of their so-called heroes in an
England team made up, as is usual in these money-mad times, of
multi-millionaires, millionaires, and perhaps two or three of the merely
very
rich. The fans turned to each other and asked, what the bleedin' hell is going on? Well, situation normal, isn't it? What a load of
overpaid rubbish. We’ll stay at home and watch it on the box another time. It goes without saying though, that the fans
will always be there.
With the money in the game,
the long-established infrastructure, and the size of our nation
relative, say,
to a country like Holland which produces excellence as a matter of
course, we
should be doing better in these massive pan-global tournaments. But
however easily, or even gloriously we manage to get there, it always
seems to go wrong - at least it has so far this century. The relative
glory days of Mexico '86, Italia '90 or even England '96 are a long time
ago now. Something is
rotten in the state of England. What are
the missing ingredients?
Allow me to propose an
old-fashioned answer: pride and passion. Qualities the teams have shown
too little of over the years, qualities the fans possess in abundance.
Now, I’m not suggesting that
the players who represent England are lacking totally in either
commodity, but
I would venture the opinion that they is no longer the over-riding
motivation. Money – oodles of it - always looms far too large
within the game. To clear the players’
heads, to rid them of competing considerations and leave them focused on
the
job in hand, to nurture the mindset that they are representing their
country,
and carrying the hopes of millions, I would propose – quite seriously –
that we
abandon henceforth the practice of paying players to play for England.
This is not a new idea, not
by any means. Before World War Two,
players selected for England were invited to choose a match fee OR a souvenir
medal – not both. They invariably opted
for the medal - and this in an era when professional football wages were capped
at a level not far above those of a skilled worker. But pride and passion motivated them.
Nowadays of course,
footballers earn a vast amount, and some would say good luck to them – but do
they really need to be paid over and above their club contracts for what is
still a signal honour? How does this
affect the way we see them?
As things stand, the emotional
distance between the crowd and the players is magnified by a patently enormous
gulf in financial status, which breeds resentment among the fans when things
aren't going well on the field (look at him, fifty grand a week, and he
couldn’t trap a bag of cement). Would the frequently toxic nature of that
crowd/team relationship not be improved if the players were really playing for
the shirt and the cap, and nothing else?
Removal of monetary rewards
would not be universally popular among the players – but might this not help
sort out the committed from the opportunist, and thus – to risk an archaic
phrase - engender a more positive team spirit?
There would be no unpalatable
need for the FA to profit by the players’ noble sacrifice. The money that now goes on match fees and
bonuses should instead be diverted to a charity of the players’ choice – and would
this not only provide an additional incentive to win, but also enhance the
team’s good-guy credentials?
They might feel, deep inside,
that they’re a cut above the opposition - who are shamelessly, brazenly, doing
it for the money. It might even give
them that crucial edge. Success is, after all, about the steady accumulation of
marginal gains.
No match fees or any bonus,
not a red cent – just an international cap.
No taint of lucre in the motivations of the players, who would in any case
be set for life even if they never earned another penny. No charge of “mercenary footballers” from a
disgruntled crowd - rather it would be: well done lads, you’re doing it for England
and glory. If you didn’t win – well, we
know you were giving of your best, for love of the shirt and charitable causes.
Can there be a better incentive
than national pride and sheer altruism, uncluttered by the financial bottom
line? Wouldn’t there just possibly be a
whole new dynamic around the currently embattled England setup that might even
take us onwards and upwards? Am I being
hopelessly idealistic or even naïve?
Perhaps – but I would humbly suggest that it’s got to be a better way,
and is certainly worth a try.
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