Sampson expects England nerves

05 June 2015 10:17

England head coach Mark Sampson expects an attack of nerves to strike his players before Tuesday's World Cup opener against France but he would not have it any other way.

The match promises to be England's toughest Group F test, with Mexico and Colombia to follow, as Sampson pits his wits against Philippe Bergeroo's richly talented team.

France defeated England on penalties at the quarter-final juncture of the 2011 World Cup, and 3-0 in the Euro 2013 group stages, and start among the most strongly fancied teams to lift the trophy in Canada.

England have similar enthusiasm for the tournament that begins on Saturday, with the hosts playing China in the opening game.

Sampson says he would have refused the job when offered it by the Football Association in December 2013 if he did not believe the Lionesses could be successful under his leadership.

However it promises to be a twitchy time when it comes to the final minutes in the dressing room before tackling France in Moncton, as all the hard work of the last 18 months goes on the line.

"I'll be in game mode and I'm sure the players will be as well, but of course they'll have nerves," Sampson told Press Association Sport.

"If I looked around the changing room and saw a group of players who were relaxed and treating it like just another day in the office, I'd probably be concerned.

"These players are competitive animals and they want the pressure. They don't want to be sitting at home watching this game. They want to be the ones with the responsibility of the journey, and to know they can affect the result.

"I think the players will be excited by that pressure.

"I'll be sitting down with a few nerves but real excitement and that real sense of opportunity that we've got a chance to get a result and be the ones who take responsibility for getting that result.

"We're looking forward to it without a shadow of a doubt and we'll be ready for it, I'm really confident in that."

Sampson was one of several candidates the Football Association considered before settling on their choice as the permanent successor to Hope Powell.

John Herdman, Canada's County Durham-born coach, was also strongly linked with England but the prospect of leading the hosts into the World Cup made that a non-starter.

Sampson had been a success with Bristol Academy in the Women's Super League, and the 32-year-old Welshman knew taking on the England job was a major step up in his career. He had previously coached with Swansea's academy, and managed Welsh minnows Taff's Well.

"The opportunity to work with the national team was a great one and one I was excited by, and the big decision I had to make after the decision I was willing to leave Bristol was whether I felt i could be successful, and that was the big one," Sampson said.

"I certainly wouldn't have taken it if I didn't think I could be successful."

Of the 24 teams at Canada 2015, only Costa Rica and Ecuador, whose coaches are both in their twenties, have younger bosses than Sampson.

His target for the World Cup is to lead England beyond the quarter-finals for the first time.

But Sampson is wary of expectations being heaped on England, and the presumption that because the players are all full-time professionals for the first time at a major tournament they should automatically perform better than previous teams.

He said: "The funding now is far more professional towards the women's team, but the issue for us is there are far more associations being far more professional towards their women's teams, and there'll be far, far more professional women's players at this tournament than there were at the last World Cup.

"To describe us as a professional team is right in the sense that players haven't got jobs outside their football, but have they been professional for a long time? No, they certainly haven't."

Source: PA