How Howard Wilkinson set English Football on Course for its Golden Summer

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How Howard Wilkinson set English Football on Course for its Golden Summer

It was a drastic decision that, if one had listened to the cynics at the time, was doomed to failure. Yet a little more than 20 years after the Football Association’s then technical director Howard Wilkinson proposed that responsibility for the national under-15 and under-16 teams be taken away from the English Schools FA as part of his ambitious Charter for Quality, Saturday’s events at the Salt Lake Stadium in Kolkata should have provided the final confirmation that the last English manager to win the league was on to something.

The thrilling 5-2 victory against Spain in the Under-17 World Cup final provided the perfect ending to an unprecedented year of success for the FA’s age-group teams. Since Steve Cooper’s side were beaten by the same opponents on penalties in the final of the European Championship in May, England have also been crowned world champions at under-20 level and won the European under-19 title in ruthless fashion, not to mention the triumph at the prestigious Toulon tournament for the second year in a row.

“It’s fantastic evidence that we have the best youth developers in the world in this country and they are developing the best players in the world,” says Wilkinson. “But it’s not a transformation – this has been a long progression that started with the introduction of academies and the building of St George’s Park. Once that was in place, it’s all been about the benefit of having a plan and sticking to it.”

In 2007 England qualified for the Under-17 World Cup for the first time, reaching the quarter-finals in South Korea, before losing at the same stage four years later. But the appointment of Dan Ashworth as technical director in 2012 when the FA moved into its £100m headquarters proved to be another watershed moment. Much maligned for his role in the Eni Aluko/Mark Sampson controversy, the former defender who spent most of his career playing for non-league clubs in Norfolk deserves credit for introducing the joined-up approach by which all England’s coaches now work out of the same office at St George’s Park. “All the national coaches are very close, from Kevin Betsy with the under-15s to Gareth Southgate with the senior team,” Cooper told BBC 5 Live on Sunday. “The teams are expected to play in a certain way and, if it is a good one, the more you practise it the better you become at it.”

Wilkinson believes that has been made possible thanks to the support of the academy system he helped to introduce in 1997. The FA invites coaches from all over the country to attend regular sessions at St George’s Park which explain its long-term vision to develop future internationals. “You’re asking them to entrust their players into your hands,” Wilkinson says. “If you’re going to do that, then you’ve got to be able to show that the process is worthwhile for their players and will improve them rather than detract from their development. I think over the years academies have come to appreciate that this isn’t a conflict; this is a joint effort.”

The Crystal Palace academy director, Gary Issott, has seen the youth-team products Nathaniel Clyne and Wilfried Zaha progress through the age groups to win senior caps for England, even if Zaha eventually opted to play for Ivory Coast. He remembers the then England Under-21 manager, Stuart Pearce, coming to the training ground to implore them to make their best young players available for international duty in an effort to give them the experience they need.

“In Spain and Germany all the best young players would have accumulated something like 80 caps through the different age groups by the time they are ready to step up to senior level,” Issott says. “So we were being educated as clubs as far back as eight years ago. The FA has definitely engaged more with the clubs in recent years. There is an improved scouting network that means most of our games are being watched. It’s just about trying to build a relationship with the clubs and trying to understand what they are trying to do.

“It’s also about trying to keep the players grounded because there’s a spin-off every time you get called up,” he adds. “It’s almost like alerting every agent and every predator club in the country. That’s almost the biggest challenge. I remember one period when we had several players in the England Under-19 side and you could see their mind-set: ‘Well I’m the best in my position in England and I’m almost guaranteed to make it.’ We’d pull them over and say: ‘Yes, you’re the best for your age in this country but the Premier League is the best out of 70 countries in an age band of 17 to 35.’ The next level is really tough for them to crack.”

For England’s under-20 coach, Paul Simpson, and Cooper, however, following Brazil’s class of 2003 into the record books by winning two world titles in the same year is just the start of the process they hope will lead to silverware when it matters most. “The results have been fantastic but we are very much still in the infancy,” Cooper says. “We want to be as successful as we can but we also want to work in a way that’s beneficial for the future. It was fantastic to win on Saturday but, even if we hadn’t, it would have been a successful tournament. We played in a World Cup, with five internal flights, a penalty shootout and playing against the best teams and beating them. We have to keep one eye on the future. What we really want is to be successful at senior level.”

Whether that becomes reality will be fascinating to watch unfold, although the manner in which England’s young players have conducted themselves this year – culminating in the stirring comeback from two goals down after 30 minutes on Saturday – has been a credit to their coaches.

“You can’t develop a player without developing the person,” says Wilkinson. “Under pressure people with the right mentality and the right temperament then produce the best performances. England were always the best team from kick-off to finish but in the opening stages they were naive. They left themselves bare and paid the price. But fortunately talent always rebounds and that’s what they did.”

The Guardian Sport



Morocco Expects as Hosts Face Senegal in Cup of Nations Final

Soccer Football - CAF Africa Cup of Nations - Morocco 2025 - Semi Final - Nigeria v Morocco - Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium, Rabat, Morocco - January 14, 2026 Morocco coach Walid Regragui before the match REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
Soccer Football - CAF Africa Cup of Nations - Morocco 2025 - Semi Final - Nigeria v Morocco - Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium, Rabat, Morocco - January 14, 2026 Morocco coach Walid Regragui before the match REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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Morocco Expects as Hosts Face Senegal in Cup of Nations Final

Soccer Football - CAF Africa Cup of Nations - Morocco 2025 - Semi Final - Nigeria v Morocco - Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium, Rabat, Morocco - January 14, 2026 Morocco coach Walid Regragui before the match REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
Soccer Football - CAF Africa Cup of Nations - Morocco 2025 - Semi Final - Nigeria v Morocco - Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium, Rabat, Morocco - January 14, 2026 Morocco coach Walid Regragui before the match REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

Morocco are hoping the backing of a fervent home support can help them overcome Sadio Mane's Senegal in Sunday's Africa Cup of Nations final as the hosts and favorites close in on the continental title for the first time in 50 years.

The Moroccans came into the competition on home soil having emerged as Africa's leading national team since becoming the first side from the continent to reach the World Cup semi-finals in Qatar in 2022.

Ranked 11th in the world, above Italy, the Atlas Lions have not lost since going out of the 2024 Cup of Nations to South Africa in the last 16 and are captained by the current African footballer of the year, Paris Saint-Germain full-back Achraf Hakimi.

However, all of that means there has been enormous pressure on Morocco to deliver since the beginning of this tournament, the first AFCON to start in one year and end in another.

Morocco have played all of their matches at the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in the capital Rabat.

After the commanding win over Cameroon in the quarter-finals and a nerve-jangling triumph on penalties against Nigeria in Wednesday's semi-final, close to 70,000 Moroccan fans will fill the stadium hoping to see their team take the trophy.

"I think we deserve to be in the final. We have played top teams like Mali, Cameroon and Nigeria, and now we will be facing another of the best teams," said coach Walid Regragui, who has faced regular criticism from an expectant public.

"Eventually people are going to accept that Morocco are actually a major football nation. But to go to the next step we have to win titles, so Sunday's match is really important in terms of our history."

Regragui is mindful of the country's underwhelming record in the tournament.

The French-born coach played in the last Morocco side to come this far, when they lost to hosts Tunisia in 2004, and this time wants to go one better.

If he does not, then the chances are he will no longer be in charge by the time the World Cup starts in June.

"Even if we had been knocked out in the first round, that would not have prevented me believing in myself and telling myself I am a good coach," Regragui said when asked about the criticism.

"What I have done in the past cannot be taken away from me. I am not expecting people to give me anything. I am not claiming to be the best. The most important thing is that Morocco are in the final."

However, the hosts could not have asked for a tougher opponent than Senegal, who are Africa's second-best side in the rankings and are into their third final in four editions of AFCON.

After losing to Algeria in Cairo in 2019, the Lions of Teranga won the title for the first time in Yaounde in 2022 when they defeated Egypt on penalties.

Knocked out by Ivory Coast in the last 16 in 2024, they bounced back to qualify for the World Cup and have now reached the final here -- a Mane strike saw them defeat Egypt in the last four.

It is a vastly experienced Senegal side, but therefore an aging one -- Mane, goalkeeper Edouard Mendy, skipper Kalidou Koulibaly and midfielder Idrissa Gana Gueye are all aged between 33 and 36.

Former Liverpool star Mane even said after the Egypt game that the final would be his last Cup of Nations match.

"I am a soldier of the nation, and I try to give my all every day, whether in training or in matches," Mane said.

"But that's not the most important thing for me. The most important thing is to bring this cup to Dakar."

Center-back Koulibaly will miss the game through suspension, which is a big blow for Senegal in a final between two outstanding defenses -- they have let in three goals between them at the tournament.

It may not be an open, high-scoring final, but it will be tense, and how Morocco handle the pressure will be key.


Crystal Palace, Fiorentina Will Head East after Conference League Knockout Playoffs Draw

William Gallas, former French international player shows a ticket of Crystal Palace FC during the UEFA Conference League 2025/26 Knockout play-offs round draw, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, 16 January 2026. EPA/MARTIAL TREZZINI
William Gallas, former French international player shows a ticket of Crystal Palace FC during the UEFA Conference League 2025/26 Knockout play-offs round draw, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, 16 January 2026. EPA/MARTIAL TREZZINI
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Crystal Palace, Fiorentina Will Head East after Conference League Knockout Playoffs Draw

William Gallas, former French international player shows a ticket of Crystal Palace FC during the UEFA Conference League 2025/26 Knockout play-offs round draw, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, 16 January 2026. EPA/MARTIAL TREZZINI
William Gallas, former French international player shows a ticket of Crystal Palace FC during the UEFA Conference League 2025/26 Knockout play-offs round draw, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, 16 January 2026. EPA/MARTIAL TREZZINI

Crystal Palace and Fiorentina face trips to eastern Europe in the Conference League after both preseason favorites found the opening phase tough and landed in the knockout playoffs round draw Friday.

Palace is away in the first leg against Bosnian champion Zrinjski Mostar while Fiorentina — a two-time beaten finalist — will go to Poland to face Jagiellonia Bialystok.

Teams in the knockout playoffs placed ninth to 24th in the 36-team league standings that finished in December. The top eight, led by Strasbourg, advanced direct to the round of 16 which is drawn Feb. 28.

Palace and Fiorentina might have expected trips east with nine teams from former Iron Curtain countries in Friday's draw, and 10 in total in the 24-team knockout phase, The Associated Press reported.

That’s the most yet in the fifth season of UEFA’s third-tier competition that was created to give lower-ranked clubs more chances to play — and win prize money — into the second half of the season. The total Conference League prize fund is about 285 million euros ($331 million).

Kosovo is represented in a knockout phase for the first time in its nine seasons playing in UEFA club competitions: Drita is at home first against Celje of Slovenia.

North Macedonia’s Shkendija was paired with Samsunspor of Türkiye, and Armenian champion Noah will first host AZ Alkmaar of the Netherlands.

First-leg games are played Feb. 19 and the returns are one week later.

Teams already in the round of 16 also include Shakhtar Donetsk, Rayo Vallecano and Mainz.

The Conference League final is in Leipzig, Germany on May 27.


Arteta: Arsenal Building Momentum in Every Competition

14 January 2026, United Kingdom, London: Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta Applauds the fans after the English Carabao Cup semi-final first leg soccer match between Chelsea and Arsenal at Stamford Bridge. Photo: Nick Potts/PA Wire/dpa
14 January 2026, United Kingdom, London: Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta Applauds the fans after the English Carabao Cup semi-final first leg soccer match between Chelsea and Arsenal at Stamford Bridge. Photo: Nick Potts/PA Wire/dpa
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Arteta: Arsenal Building Momentum in Every Competition

14 January 2026, United Kingdom, London: Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta Applauds the fans after the English Carabao Cup semi-final first leg soccer match between Chelsea and Arsenal at Stamford Bridge. Photo: Nick Potts/PA Wire/dpa
14 January 2026, United Kingdom, London: Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta Applauds the fans after the English Carabao Cup semi-final first leg soccer match between Chelsea and Arsenal at Stamford Bridge. Photo: Nick Potts/PA Wire/dpa

Arsenal's consistent performance should convince the players that they can achieve something historic this season, manager Mikel Arteta said on Friday, with the club in contention for four trophies.

Arteta's men, who finished second in the English top-flight in the past three seasons, have a six-point lead at the top of the standings and have not lost any of their last 10 matches in all competitions.

They are also top of the table in the Champions League with six wins from six matches, have reached ⁠the FA Cup fourth round and clinched a 3-2 win at Chelsea in the first leg of the League Cup semi-finals on Wednesday.

"We are building very good momentum and belief comes from performances and the level of consistency we have shown throughout 32 games this season," Arteta told ⁠reporters before Saturday's Premier League trip to Nottingham Forest.

"What we did the other day at Stamford Bridge should help us to be very convinced that we have the ability to do that.

"But the reality is you have to show it in every game. There is still so much to happen. But we are glad that we are still alive in the four competitions."

Arsenal drew with champions Liverpool in their previous league game, and Arteta ⁠was wary of Forest, who are 17th in the standings but have recovered from a terrible start to the season since they appointed manager Sean Dyche in October.

"A top coach. Really good at what he does. You can see straight away his fingerprints, the way they play, some of the results they got against big teams as well, how difficult they make it," Reuters quoted Arteta as saying.

"With Sean, they are different. Very efficient in what they do with a clear identity. That is what makes them dangerous."