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View Full Version : King of middle England? Ledley's in the frame for holding role


mawspurs
19-05-2010, 09:16 AM
Source: Daily Mail

Fabio Capello has identified Ledley King as a possible solution to his midfield problem and is now considering the Tottenham captain in the holding role for this summer’s World Cup.

It would represent a major gamble for the England manager, given how little football the 29-year-old centre half has played in midfield.

But with Capello increasingly concerned that Gareth Barry’s ankle ligament damage will rule him out of the tournament, King is seen as one solution to the problem.

King has not yet joined his international colleagues for training at England’s high-altitude base in Austria, Capello preferring to let him rest after a busy end to the season with Tottenham.

But the Italian is delighted with King’s fitness. He is confident the chronic knee condition which has so often forced him to miss matches will not prevent King from playing a major role in South Africa, be it in midfield or the back four.

Capello plans to look at King in midfield during training later this week while also assessing the claims of James Milner, Tom Huddlestone, Michael Carrick and Scott Parker before England meet Mexico in a friendly at Wembley on Monday.

Moving Steven Gerrard into a more defensive position is another option, although Capello would do that reluctantly as it would come at the expense of the Liverpool captain’s attacking threat.

The fact that the England manager is even thinking about King demonstrates just how much of a problem the injury to Barry has created. Not least because there is no obvious replacement.

Hugely talented, King does have the ability to step into midfield if Barry fails in his race against time.

Indeed, George Graham saw it as the player’s natural position when he was Tottenham manager. King scored a Premier League goal 10.2 seconds after kick-off against Bradford from that position back in 2000.

Sven Goran Eriksson selected him in midfield for two games in the autumn of 2005.

In a World Cup qualifier against Poland he was excellent, protecting the back four impressively while operating as the more defensive central midfield partner to Frank Lampard.

A month later, however, it was a rather different story, even if the friendly against Argentina in Geneva did bring a fine victory for England.

Asked to patrol the space so often occupied by Juan Roman Riquelme at the peak of his powers and the tenacious Carlos Tevez, King looked lost for the 58 minutes he was on the field.

Sol Campbell said it was a role only for those who play in the position every week and on that occasion the Arsenal defender appeared to be right.

In a difficult opening 45 minutes, Eriksson was alarmed by how easily his defence was breached — a lack of positional sense too often leaving King desperately chasing back in pursuit of Riquelme.

Preparation will be the key and while Capello is nothing if not meticulous, King’s inability to train regularly could yet prove a problem. It really does depend on Barry, who continues his rehabilitation at home with Manchester City while spending his nights sleeping in an oxygen tent that will not only accelerate the healing process but also prepare him for the high ground of South Africa.

Until Barry informed the England management at the last minute that his scheduled examination by a specialist had been brought forward by five days to May 24, Capello was set on taking a chance with Owen Hargreaves. This was even though the Manchester United midfielder had played little more than one minute of competitive football in a 19-month spell ruined by a knee condition similar to King’s.

But Barry, for so long first choice in the holding role during Capello’s tenure, was given the wild-card entry into the 30-man provisional squad and a new deadline has now been set.

If the specialist informs the England medical staff that Barry will be ready two weeks after June 1 — a deadline that would take him beyond the opening game against the USA on June 12 — the City midfielder will earn selection in Capello’s final 23.

If there is even the slightest doubt, however, he will be left behind. Last night the England camp remained less than optimistic.

They are not that optimistic about finding a decent playing surface when they arrive at Wembley on Monday, either, although there are no plans to ask the FA to move the game.

Capello is not happy with the state of the Wembley pitch but he accepts the difficulties and is prepared to make do.

It could make life interesting for England’s goalkeepers as they challenge for the starting role

mil1lion
19-05-2010, 09:20 AM
Please dont. If he struggles there, he'll be used as a scapegoat if we we crash out. He's the best centre back we have. Play him there.

dickyid
19-05-2010, 11:37 AM
Put the Hudd there with King & Daws behind him. Spurs to win the world cup!! COYS!!

pal90
19-05-2010, 11:47 AM
We debated this on here for Spurs a few weeks ago when we had our injury/ban crisis and basically came to the conclusion that LK probably wouldn't be able to cope with the additional physical demands this would place on him. Equally valid for England IMO.

Looks like a bit of a BS article to me anyway. Consider:

while spending his [Barry] nights sleeping in an oxygen tent that will not only accelerate the healing process but also prepare him for the high ground of South Africa.


This will do exactly the opposite of preparing Barry for altitude. The point of altitude training and playing is to prepare the body for a lower oxygen environment

chrissivad
19-05-2010, 11:54 AM
its their way of trying to keep Rio and Terry at the back.

King should be along side one of those two in defence.

Krafty
19-05-2010, 12:22 PM
In short, the papers havent got a clue what Capello is thinking.

Son_Of
19-05-2010, 12:28 PM
This will do exactly the opposite of preparing Barry for altitude. The point of altitude training and playing is to prepare the body for a lower oxygen environment

yeah that's just plain bull

vegassd
19-05-2010, 02:04 PM
This will do exactly the opposite of preparing Barry for altitude. The point of altitude training and playing is to prepare the body for a lower oxygen environment

I think an oxygen tent can be used both ways - basically just a way to control the level of oxygen the body receives.

With less oxygen available the body is forced to produce more red blood cells which helps with the healing.