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England will lose again, so get over it

Simon Kuper believes they over-achieve and club managers are irrelevant. What’s more, statistics prove it, he tells Simon Round

August 13, 2009 10:19
England players reflect on another defeat, but statistical analysis shows they generally punch above their weight

BySimon Round, Simon Round

3 min read

Next year is the football World Cup and we all know what is going to happen should England qualify. They will struggle through the group phase before losing (almost certainly on penalties) in the quarter finals. The nation will, as usual, be disappointed — but, according to football writer Simon Kuper, we should not be.

In a new book, Why England Lose and Other Curious Phenomena Explained, Kuper and co-author Stefan Szymanski apply economics, statistics and psychology to football topics and come up some surprising conclusions.

In their view, England are not, as we all tend to believe, the international game’s perennial under-achievers — on the contrary, we actually do better than we should. Kuper explains: “Our main problem is that, compared to the European football powerhouses — Germany, Italy, France — we don’t have a very large population.

“In terms of wealth, we don’t have an advantage over the other major European powers and the edge in experience we used to have has now been cancelled out too. Having said that, England are consistently the 10th best football playing nation in the world, which is slightly better than where we should be.”