Delivering vital views Online,Information,Entertainment,Breaking News,Sports ,Exposing You and Also Celebrating You, And Yes.... Business And More

Boxed Width - True/False

test

Breaking

Post Top Ad

Your Ad Spot

Tuesday, 10 July 2018

This is How Jordan Pickford became England's number one

But Pickford had proved willing to go out and learn his trade in the toughest surroundings before playing in the Premier League - an experience that moulded the confident, strong character we have witnessed in Russia.

He had the rough edges knocked off him in non-league football with Darlington and Alfreton, where no allowances were made for youth, and he recalls: "I learned quite a lot from getting battered by fully grown blokes. You got really battered going for crosses.

"You'd go to away grounds and hear everything shouted at you. I remember being at Southport going for a drink of water and one old bloke shouts 'hey you lad - your grandad is under that grass.' I just turned around, gave him the thumbs-up and said 'nae problem.'"

Pickford, who also had loan spells in the English Football League with Burton, Carlisle, Bradford and Preston, has had his size questioned - he is relatively short for a modern goalkeeper at 6ft 1in - but no-one can question his courage.

And the agility and elasticity that have served England so well in Russia have made a nonsense of worries about his height.
Pickford's show of strength
Jordan Pickford makes a save during the Premier League match between Tottenham Hotspur and Sunderland at White Hart Lane on 18 September 2016
Pickford in Premier League action against future England team-mate Dele Alli while he was at Sunderland in 2016

When Pickford returned from his nomadic existence to his beloved Sunderland, he walked into a club in freefall from Premier League to League One - and even since his big-money move to Everton, he has not had it easy.

He was Sunderland's stand-out performer when they were relegated from the top tier in 2016-17, making 135 saves from 185 shots on target with a save ratio of 72.97%.
Season     Team    Saves    Shots on target faced    Goals conceded    Save percentage
2017-18    Everton    121    178    58    67.42
2016-17    Sunderland    135    185    50    72.97
2015-16    Sunderland    11    17    6    64.71

The move to Everton under then manager Ronald Koeman was meant to be the start of a vastly more pressurised life - but with perhaps fewer saves to make - at elite level for Pickford.

Everton, however, went into almost instant meltdown under the Dutchman before he was replaced by Sam Allardyce - but in a season of almost unrelenting misery, Pickford was head and shoulders above every other player.

It was these performances that persuaded Southgate, a regular visitor to Everton games last season, to give him his debut in the friendly against Germany at Wembley in November 2017 before selecting him as his World Cup goalkeeper in Russia.

Everton's end-of-season awards were a Pickford procession as he picked up Player Of The Season, Young Player Of The Season and Players' Player Of The Season.

His signing was a rare success for Everton's sacked director of football Steve Walsh.

Everton needed a goalkeeper and Pickford was Walsh's first and only pick - he pressed hard to sign him, he said, as he feared a club of the stature of Real Madrid might even be interested, and willing to pay twice what the Toffees did. The £30m fee is starting to look a bargain already.
Season    Team    Games    Minutes
2017-18    Everton    38    3420
2016-17    Sunderland    29    2610
2015-16    Preston North End    24    2101
2015-16    Sunderland    2    180
2014-15    Bradford City    33    2890
2013-14    Carlisle United    18    1620
2013-14    Burton Albion    12    1080
Growth on World Cup stage
World Cup 2018: Sweden 0-2 England highlights

Pickford, under England goalkeeping coach Martyn Margetson - who was also with him at Everton, before leaving this summer - is now the leader of what he calls "the goalkeepers' union" at their Zelenogorsk training base.

He cuts an animated, hyped-up figure watched at close quarters in training, a blizzard of body movements and facial expressions, especially when he makes a rare mistake. By goalkeeping standards, he is a bundle of perpetual motion.

One of Pickford's greatest strengths, according to those who know him, is an ability to put mistakes behind him - not that he takes them lightly.

A moment of uncertainty in an otherwise magnificent display against Sweden led to Pickford inadvertently punching his knee rather than the floor, hence the bandage on his left hand as he showed off the man of the match award.

He is a steely character, too, unaffected by criticism of his performance in England's loss to Belgium, when he was perhaps ring rusty after little action against Tunisia and Panama.

He has been superb since, making a flying save from Colombia's Mateus Uribe in normal time then saving from Carlos Bacca as England won a penalty shootout - before the brilliance of his performance against Sweden in Samara.

There is no question he had to prove his credentials as England's number one, not simply with his saves but by fulfilling a vital role in Southgate's plans via his work with the ball at his feet.

Pickford's deeds in the past week have made him a prime contender for Fifa's World Cup team of the tournament and proved England have a goalkeeper who could serve them for the next decade.
My England starting XI v Croatia

Choose who you would pick in the England starting XI to face Croatia in the World Cup semi-final - and then share it with your friends using our team selector.






This is How Jordan Pickford became England's number one

No comments:

Post a Comment

Post Top Ad

Your Ad Spot