Gareth Southgate explains decision to stick by struggling Man Utd captain Harry Magurie
Posted by  badge Boss on Sep 23, 2022 - 11:47PM
Gareth Southgate is aiming to win the World Cup with England (Photo: Getty)

Gareth Southgate has vowed he will continue to pick Harry Maguire for England as there is currently no one better to take his place and insists he did not feel ‘sore’ after the 4-0 loss to Hungary in June.

Maguire has not started a Premier League game for since the back-to-back defeats against Brighton and Brentford to open the season.

There have been calls for the out-of-favour centre-back to be dropped for Friday’s penultimate Nations League Group A3 tie against Italy in Milan but Three Lions boss Southgate believes Maguire is still one of the top English defenders.

‘You always have to back your judgement and we feel he is an important player,’ said Southgate, who joked he was putting ‘whatever reputation I have’ on the line by picking Maguire.

‘If we thought there were experienced players ready to step in and play at a level above him there would be a different consideration and in some positions there would be a different level of competition in that way.

‘He is our most dominant aerial centre-back. Him and John [Stones] are incredible with the ball.’

England have not beaten Italy away since 1961 and come into the match after three months of waiting to put right that defeat to Hungary.

Harry Maguire has remained an England regular despite his struggles with Man Utd (Photo: Simon Marper/PA Wire)

Southgate, who was taunted with chants of ‘you’re getting sacked in the morning’ by England fans at Molineux, says he expected nothing less than to be strongly criticised.

‘No, I’m the manager of England and you’re judged purely on results and in the moment so after 30-plus years in football I know how it works with fans,’ he added.

‘The most important thing is the players are together, the staff, and I am supported by the people I work with.

Southgate was booed by home fans after England’s 4-0 loss to Hungary in June (Photo: Getty)

‘I am my own biggest critic, I am somebody who will always review everything intently, however well it has gone, and you don’t expect to lose 4-0 at home and not
be criticised.’

And Southgate claims he is not hurting after his treatment from home supporters that night, despite having the summer to live with the heavy defeat.

‘No, I am not sore, it’s pointless me worrying about how others might see you because you can’t affect that. You can’t do anything about that,’ he said.

And he felt lessons have already been learned 
from a poor Nations League campaign.

Southgate explained: ‘I compromised certain decisions and you don’t win if you compromise. It was good for me to sharpen that focus again. I’ve got to be completely ruthless.’

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