Thursday 14 December 2017

863 European Championship 1988


First  viewed : 10  June  1988

The  European  Championships  came  round  again  and  England  qualified  this  time  although  probably  wished  they  hadn't  as  they  lost  all  three  of  their  group  games. Ireland  beat  them  1-0  in  the  first  game  then  they  were  thrashed  3-1  in  the  other  two  games  against  Holland  and  the  Soviet  Union. It  seems  astonishing  today  that  Bobby  Robson  kept  his  job  after  that. The  main  fall  guy  was  the  young  Tony  Adams  who  was  absolutely  destroyed  by  Marco  Van  Basten  as  he  plundered  a  hat-trick  but  Adams  proved  able  to  shoulder  it  and  become  a  stalwart  in  the  nineties. On  the  other  hand  it  was  the  end   of  the  line  for  press  darling  Glenn  Hoddle  who  marked  his  final  England  appearance  with  a  dreadful  error  that  let  in  the  Soviets  to  score  after  only  3  minutes.  Jack  Charlton's  Ireland  by  contrast  had  a  good  tournament, drawing  with  the  Soviets  and   only  narrowly  being  squeezed  out  by  the  Dutch.

In  the  other  group  Denmark  matched  England's  dismal  showing  with  their  supposed  superstar  Michael  Laudrup  looking  uninterested. Italy  and  Germany  went  through.

The  Dutch, fielding  two  former  First  Division  players  you'd  forgotten  about  in  Hans  Van  Breukelen  and  37-year  old  Arnold  Muhren, went  on  to  win  their  first  international   tournament   beating  the  Soviets  2-0 in  the  Final. Prior  to the  tournament,  all  eyes  were  on  their  captain  Ruud  Gullitt  , now  challenging  Maradona  for  the  World's  best player  accolade,  but  even  he  was  outshone  by  Van  Basten  who  crowned  a  superb  tournament  with  a  contender  for  best  ever  international  goal  in  the  Final. Sadly, an  ankle  injury  forced  him  out  of  the  game  just  five  years  later.


2 comments:

  1. That Dutch team were the darlings of the playground at my school - everyone wanted to be one of van Basten and Gullitt, though I maintained my loyalty to Bryan Robson, perhaps one of the few England players to keep some kind of dignity from the fiasco.

    Did Hoddle and Lineker both hit the post vs the Dutch at 1-1, or is memory tricking me? Kenny Sansom was another whose England career was curtailed from this - with Peter Reid, Dave "not that one" Watson and Viv Anderson also never featuring again. Bobby Robson was given the opportunity to shape a new backline around Terry Butcher (missing in Euro '88): Stuart Pearce and Des Walker would become constants in the team towards Bobby's World Cup redemption.

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  2. I don't recall the post incidents to be honest.
    You have reminded me about Sansom though. Before the game against Ireland, we were treated to his embarrassing impersonations of Frank Spencer and Ronald Reagan and then four minutes he sets up Houghton's goal with a miskick. I remember saying "He doesn't do international left back very well does he ?"
    With Bracewell crocked and Cottee struggling to justify his price tag, the Everton component of the England squad was drastically reduced after this tournament.

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