Football UK

Foden believes England U17 World Cup triumph can help him win with senior side

[ad_1]

Phil Foden already has a medal which most of his England team-mates still dream about.

It is from England’s under-17s World Cup triumph in 2017 when Foden scored twice in the final against Spain and was voted the player of the tournament.

No wonder the 20-year-old has been built up as the future of English football. The Manchester City midfielder, in the senior squad for the first time, is a prodigious talent who is beginning to live up to the hype.

Foden has already won the Premier League with City in 2019 and experiences even at a young age for club and country have left him wanting more.

“If you win youth tournaments it can give you the experience to go and win one with the first team,” said Foden about the 2017 success.

Foden in training ahead of England’s matches against Iceland and Denmark

“Winning the World Cup definitely helped me playing on a big stage and not to feel the pressure so much. I have played many big games for Man City now and I have learned to cope with the fans and the pressure.

“The medal is at my parents’ house in the cabinet. I go there quite a lot, so I see it all the time. Sometimes I will walk past and just take a look at all the trophies I have won and just go through it.”

The reason Foden has been built up is that he is something different.

He is a creative force, it is still difficult to work out exactly where his best position is but, in the latter stages of last season, he became a regular fixture for Pep Guardiola’s City side.

His passing, vision and confidence on the ball makes him the player who Gareth Southgate has been crying out for. Foden says he always idolised City team-mate David Silva but has also watched clips of Paul Gascoigne.

Will Phil Foden win the World Cup with England? Have your say below.

Foden celebrates England’s triumph in the 2017 Under-17 World Cup

He said: “I liked David Silva ever since he came to the club and I got to watch him live in training, so that is probably the player I looked up to most and tried to learn from. Hopefully he could be back one day as a coach.

“Sometimes I watch older players. Paul Gascoigne was one of the best, so I feel if they had the right coaches around them and played the right football at the time we could have won more trophies.”

Foden believes England’s youngsters are now getting the chances they deserve in senior football whereas perhaps they did not in the past. Starting with former City academy team-mate Jadon Sancho, who went to Germany to kick his career on.

Foden said: “I watched Jadon when he went to Dortmund and to do what he did at such a young age, there are not many players who could have played at such a high level and performed so well. I was very impressed.

Sign up for the brilliant new Mirror Football newsletter!

From the latest transfer news to the agenda-setting stories, get it all in your email inbox.

Put your email at the top of this article or follow the instructions on this link.

“There are a lot of young players playing at a very high level. It shows the academies have great coaches teaching them the right things to play in the first team.”

Foden is single minded in his ambition and while fear used to be the biggest threat to the England team, that will not be the case with the next generation.

“We are a young team and nothing fazes us,” he said. “We just go out and play our football. That is a good thing because we don’t think too much and we can start controlling games now.

“We have the players for that and I’m confident for the future.”



[ad_2]

Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *