Austria everything England are not...and never have been
The Guardian|June 28, 2024
Why should there be surprise at Southgate’s confused team when there is no culture or coaching school to learn from
Barney Ronay
Austria everything England are not...and never have been

Here's a phrase you might not have heard since 1934. Hey, Austria look good. This is a new thing in many ways. What do we think of, traditionally, when it comes to Austria and international football? Indeterminate makeweights. The pre-war Wunderteam. The 1990s pomp-rock target-man stylings of Toni Polster.

And now? Modernity. Energy. Grooved patterns. Austria finished top of a group that includes the teams ranked second and seventh in the world. They have been coherent, joined-up, even vibrant in a mannered kind of way, the only team in the final round of group games to score three goals, en route to a first victory against the Netherlands in 34 years.

Knockout football is something else. Talk of an easy run to the semi-finals seems optimistic, as is the idea they may meet England there. Austria's tournament may well come to an end against Turkey in Leipzig on Tuesday, although Ralf Rangnick's team did beat their last-16 opponents 6-1 at the Ernst Happel in March.

Austria's vigour in Germany feels novel and also significant. Specifically, it's telling you things and we are always hungry for these things about England.

This is most obviously a tonal thing. Austria have been the most club football-adjacent team at these Euros. Other nations have seemed to be driven by patriotism, flag stuff, ancestral grudges. Austria have been playing with the fluency of a club team, their energy channelled into well-worn patterns and learned movements.

This is by design. In the game against the Netherlands, Austria fielded seven players who have spent time in the Red Bull franchise. Rangnick is the architect of that Red Bull style, installed early on as a kind of corporate tactics consultant. Those teams still play to his template.

This story is from the June 28, 2024 edition of The Guardian.

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This story is from the June 28, 2024 edition of The Guardian.

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