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Why World Cup agony should come as no surprise

July 1, 2010 15:08

By

Danny Caro,

Danny Caro

2 min read

We've had a sorry from the captain, a sorry from the manager and even a sorry from the FIFA President, but no number of apologies could put the smile back on the faces of the Caro boys after England's World Cup exit.

Disappointment more than surprise was my initial reaction, although my four-year-old son still cannot understand how Frank Lampard's 'ghost goal' was not awarded. In fact he's so adamant about the fact that he won't let me change the two to a one on his World Cup wall chart.

The signs were ominous because earlier at the weekend, when he was at the Excel football camp, he could not help England avoid a 5-4 defeat against Germany, although the fathers of the winning team were somewhat reserved in their applause for the victors.

The post-mortems are well and truly under way as to why the team performed so badly across four games. It's hard to fathom exactly how things went so wrong after we qualified in such style. The manager and the players deserve much of the blame but I feel that the problem is much more deep-rooted than that. Personally, I blame the system as we're simply not producing enough decent footballers who are able to compete at the highest level.

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