Southgate: No baked bean ban

14 June 2015 22:32

Baked beans and ketchup will be on the menu for England's youngsters in the Czech Republic after Gareth Southgate revealed he intends to run a relaxed camp during the European Under-21 Championship.

Southgate and his 23-man squad landed in the Czech Republic on Sunday to begin final preparations for their tournament opener against Portugal on Thursday.

Southgate is sure his young players are responsible enough to cope with the fact that they are going to be away from home for more than two weeks and he will, therefore, not impose strict rules on them.

"Although it is a young team, you have to give them responsibility," the England Under-21 manager said.

"They have never betrayed that responsibility.

"I don't have a load of rules. They know they have got to be respectful, which is being on time for things and so on.

"When you have lists of rules and fines, number one, someone has to collect the bloody things. That is a problem in itself, and number two, I'm not sure that is discipline.

"That is just putting rules up. I'm not sure that means anything."

England will be based in Olomouc, the sixth largest city in the Czech Republic.

Southgate is happy for his players to roam into the city centre after training and mix with the locals.

There is no chance of Southgate adopting a Fabio Capello-style ban on ketchup either.

"Too bloody right (there will be ketchup)," he said.

"I'm not banning baked beans either.

"The players have got to be relaxed enough so that they play.

"I have said to them: 'look - we know internally what our objective is' - but we want this to be a good life experience for them as well.

"This is part of preparation for going into the seniors.

"We are staying in an area that is far enough out of town that we are not going to be swamped but it is close enough for them to walk in and have a cup of coffee, meet local people or go and see their families."

At senior and Under-21 level, England have performed poorly at their most recent tournaments.

Roy Hodgson's men failed to win a single game in Brazil last summer and crashed out of the tournament at the group stages.

And in the last European Under-21 Championship, Stuart Pearce's side lost all three group games and failed to score from open play.

Hodgson took Dr Steve Peters along to Brazil last summer to try to help the senior players with the stresses and strains of tournament football, but their junior counterparts will not have a psychiatrist to consult in the Czech Republic.

Southgate said: "It's not an area that we have got covered as well as we should but it is an area we are constantly reviewing.

"We are constantly trying to look at the characters and personalities of the players and how we help them. The coach has to be that person but there are areas that they can help."

After taking on Portugal, England face Sweden and Italy in their two remaining group matches.

With the likes of Harry Kane, Saido Berahino, Danny Ings, Nathan Redmond and John Stones in their squad, England are among the favourites to win the tournament.

Southgate is optimistic about his team's chances of success.

He said: "We have belief in them.

"When I look elsewhere, what I'm not seeing is countries where I go: 'We are miles behind them in youth development'."

Source: PA