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The Arsenal Blog

Opinion

2016 has been the year of the sporting underdog

July 15, 2016 13:28
joshua hoffman 0
2 min read

Euro 2016 confirmed this year to be the year of the underdog. Leicester City conquered the Premier League, and Iceland and Wales, with a combined population 5% that of England, progressed to the quarter and semi-finals respectively. So what makes 2016 so good for the smaller teams? What has given the underdogs a chance to win the race?

This year we have seen the years-long elite party coming to an end. The big boys club enjoyed their time at the top, but, like any bored party member with money to waste, they drank too much and partied too hard. This season of football has been the hangover finally catching up with them.

England's astonishing failure at the European Championships is a case in point. They have repeatedly taken their ability for granted; scraping through to the latter rounds major competitions only by relying on raw talent. But with the increasing pool of footballing talent, they have been left behind. They were lulled into a false sense of security by the so called ‘golden generation’ of David Beckham and co, and by the time Roy Hodgson, a diplomatic and ineffectual choice for England manager, had arrived, the foundations were already crumbling. The talent had run out, and suddenly organisation and tactics were desperately needed. But we'd spent so much time drinking cocktails that we'd forgotten to eat.

England's failure shouldn't come as a shock. We were lazy, unprepared and disorganised. But this isn't just from the Hodgson era. This has been a problem from long before the not-so-wise owl's appointment. The FA failed to install a system which laid down a clear footballing philosophy, and the chaotic, disorganised, pathetic football played at Euro 2016 was its final product.