It was two years ago yesterday that Argentina won the World Cup. England had gone out to France in the quarterfinals and, beyond the usual kneejerk attacks on Gareth Southgate, there was a sense of general optimism. They had lost in a 50-50 game, beaten in the marginal details, and the squad looked young and fresh. When had we last seen an England attack so bristling with talent, as a front three of Bukayo Saka, Harry Kane and Phil Foden demonstrated, with Raheem Sterling, Jack Grealish and Marcus Rashford on the bench to replace them?
How quickly the world of football changes. Grealish is an intermittent presence at a glitching Manchester City. Sterling, chewed up by the Great Disruption at Chelsea, has vanished on his loan at Arsenal. But nobody perhaps has suffered a more striking decline than Rashford. He'd scored off the bench against Iran and got two against Wales on his only World Cup start in Qatar. He returned from the tournament in the form of his life. He scored eight goals in his next seven appearances. In total that season, he scored 30 goals for Manchester United. He'd campaigned successfully to secure free meals for disadvantaged children during school holidays, which appeared to speak not only of a social conscience but unusual maturity.
He seemed to have added a yard of pace and a greater directness to his game, and had a pleasing knack of putting the ball in the net. By the end of that season, he was 25 and seemingly entering his peak.
This story is from the December 19, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 19, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Everton to stage three test games at new stadium
Everton are to stage the first game at Bramley-Moore dock stadium next month in preparation for their move to the Liverpool waterfront.
Rooney horror show
Plymouth scrap documentary after manager's departure
Hagi sparks Rangers to easy derby win and leaves Celtic baffled
Celtic's job is to prove this Old Firm outcome is nowhere near as significant as Rangers would like it to be.
Fan shame Rodgers riled after Engels struck by coin at Ibrox
Celtic’s manager, Brendan Rodgers, believes Arne Engels was close to sustaining a serious eye injury after a coin thrown from the Ibrox stands towards the end of Rangers’ 3-0 Old Firm victory struck the Belgian midfielder on the head.
The sad story of Aleksey Bugaev ends with his death in war
Talented defender, who starred at Euro 2004, opted to fight in Ukraine rather than serve a long prison sentence
Arteta has nowhere to hide as sickness and injuries begin to bite
Arsenal must negotiate eight more matches this month with a 'thin squad' but started well by winning at Brentford
Swiatek has too much for battling Boulter and puts Great Britain out
Over the course of the past 18 months, by far the most rewarding period in her blossoming career, Katie Boulter has gradually established herself as one of the best players in the world.
Djokovic keeps his Monfils run going with record 20th win
Novak Djokovic extended the most dominant head-to-head record in tennis by defeating Gaël Monfils 6-3, 6-3 to reach the quarter-finals of the Brisbane International.
Van Gerwen races into final with total demolition of Dobey
It was early in 2019 that Michael van Gerwen leaned forward in his chair and told us he was going to dominate darts for a decade.
'It is reaching a stage when sport is too big and too rich for mere humans'
Back in 2000 the media's finest were hit and miss with their predictions on the unfolding of sport's future