England could use Joe Cole's sleight of foot

June 20, 2010 02:49 pm | Updated 02:50 pm IST

England soccer player Joe Cole smiles during a press conference in Rustenburg. File Photo: AP

England soccer player Joe Cole smiles during a press conference in Rustenburg. File Photo: AP

Joe Cole launched himself at this England squad only to vanish into its inky depths. Fabio Capello has had no use for him in either of the games with which the World Cup programme has creaked open. This is all the more peculiar since the manager spoke initially as if he had located a rare commodity when referring to the freshness of a player often kept out of Chelsea's starting line-up by injury or Florent Malouda.

Some suppose Cole is being punished for alleged conceit when he talked merrily of what he might add to the team, but he was really presenting himself as a person desperate to meet Capello's every criterion, even if that entailed defending. It would be perverse of the manager to see arrogance when the 28-year-old was aiming for obedience.

Given the generally one-paced look of the oldest squad England have taken to a World Cup, the Italian may really have been eager to employ whatever direct runners there are, and in the goalless draw with Algeria Aaron Lennon started and then gave way to Shaun Wright-Phillips. Regardless of the acceleration, there was no quick thinking.

A one-paced Cole, on the other hand, is compelled to count on deftness and Wayne Rooney deems him the current England player with the best technique. There is an irony in the midfielder's decision to postpone an announcement about the club he will join as a free agent so that nothing detracts from the World Cup campaign. To date, he might as well have been exploring the fine detail of competing offers.

Cole is not always a luminous creator and Chelsea ruled out meeting the cost of the contract that might have kept him at Stamford Bridge. There is a suspicion that he is no more than decorative. Before Euro 2004, Sven-Goran Eriksson gave him 45 minutes in a warm-up friendly with Japan but did not let him on to the field in the finals.

Even so, the same manager relished the devastation Cole is capable of when he scored with a wonderful 30-yarder against Sweden at the 2006 World Cup and laid on Steven Gerrard's goal in the 2-2 draw. He got Capello's full attention in a first England appearance since September 2008 when he was a brisk substitute in the friendly with Japan. Suddenly Cole was more than just a man whose prospects had been clouded ever since a cruciate ligament injury.

The player's task now is to demonstrate that he is part of the remedy for England's sluggishness. The side must defeat Slovenia to ensure a spot in the last 16, but the resolve of Matjaz Kek's team is recognised and other aspects were on show as they followed a win over Algeria with a 2-2 draw against the United States.

England dare not be as passive as they have looked thus far. The form of specific key footballers is a worry to Capello. His commitment to Lennon has been all the more marked since he ditched Theo Walcott, but the Tottenham winger's crosses continue to be aimless. Other issues are in the balance and Steven Gerrard, having been so invigorated by his opener against the United States, made barely any impression on Algeria.

Rooney is the key figure, but he had a wretched evening in Cape Town. Defending against him was elementary when his touch and technique proved so inexplicably defective.

It was the type of outing that made people ponder the fact that the striker's last goal for his country at a major tournament was against Croatia at Euro 2004. That may be rectified soon, but it is also feasible that exasperation will undermine him against Slovenia and that the link with Emile Heskey, so valuable in the qualifiers, is not functioning for the time being.

England will be in jeopardy if they do not display subtlety soon. While Capello is not a man for second thoughts, his side are badly in need of variety and sleight of foot. At some stage, Cole's degree of impact may be critical to the team's hopes at this World Cup. © Guardian News and Media 2010

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