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England v Italy: Gareth Southgate’s squad dilemmas in statistics

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It is fair to say that there were a number of talking points when Gareth Southgate named his England squad last week.

It was said that the manager had shown too much loyalty to players who are out of form, but the England boss has his reasons for selecting those who have never let him down.

The Nations League matches against Italy and Germany, while big games in their own right, carry an extra importance.

They are the last games that England play before Southgate names his World Cup squad and the threat of relegation to League B hangs over the team if they lose to Italy on Friday night.

BBC Sport has taken a look at the data that backs up Southgate’s decisions.

1. England’s centre-back debate – why no White?

The inclusion of Harry Maguire has been one of the biggest talking points since Southgate made the list of 28 players public. He has been dropped to the bench by Erik ten Hag at Manchester United with the Dutchman favouring a partnership of Lisandro Martinez and Raphael Varane.

Against other English centre-backs in club football, Maguire has the worst minutes to goal conceded ratio of one every 40.1 minutes when he has been on the pitch for United this season.

Conor Coady, on loan at Everton from Wolves, tops the list with Ben White second, but there is no place for the Arsenal defender in the squad. White also has a high duel success rate of 62.5%.

It looks as though the fact the 24-year-old is playing at right-back for his club since the return of William Saliba and his lack of experience at international level are the reasons why he is an outsider for the World Cup squad, which will be announced in October.

Player Minutes Goals conceded Minutes/goals conceded Duels Duel success Interceptions per 90 minutes
Conor Coady 531 4 132.8 23 47.8 0.8
Ben White 559 6 93.2 48 62.5 1.0
Eric Dier 810 9 90.0 47 48.9 1.6
Fikayo Tomori 744 9 82.7 49 61.2 0.8
John Stones 551 7 78.7 24 79.2 0.3
Marc Guehi 630 9 70.0 43 55.8 1.0
Kyle Walker 612 9 68.0 32 65.6 0.9
Tyrone Mings 540 8 67.5 27 74.1 1.0
Harry Maguire 281 7 40.1 24 50.0 1.9

Although Maguire’s stats aren’t impressive when looking at his club form it is a different story for his country, which shows why Southgate calls him “one of our best centre-backs”.

He has 46 caps, experience in World Cup and European Championship campaigns, is behind only Manchester City defender Kyle Walker in terms of the most minutes played for England and has kept the most clean sheets out of any centre-back under Southgate.

When the 29-year-old was booed in the home match against Ivory Coast in March, Southgate said: “We aren’t going to win a World Cup with a load of players with three or four caps. That’s never happened in the history of the game”.

It looks as though the manager is sticking to this philosophy.

Player Appearances Minutes Goals conceded Minutes/goals conceded Clean sheets* Duels Duel success (%)
Tyrone Mings 17 1190 3 396.7 8 79 64.6
Conor Coady 10 889 3 296.3 7 42 59.5
Ben White 4 244 1 244.0 1 17 70.6
Harry Maguire 46 4075 29 140.5 23 355 63.4
John Stones 47 3919 29 135.1 19 306 61.4
Kyle Walker 48 4147 32 129.6 19 307 63.8
Eric Dier 33 2425 22 110.2 12 247 56.3
Marc Guehi 3 182 5 36.4 0 10 60.0
Fikayo Tomori 3 124 0 N/A 0 9 66.7
*Players must be on the pitch for the full 90 minutes to earn a clean sheet

2. England’s full-back dilemma

The England squad is blessed with an abundance of talented right-backs, which comes with its own issues, but there is not much depth at left-back.

For the last international break in June, Southgate did not choose a recognised left-sided defender, with Newcastle United’s Kieran Trippier playing the majority of the minutes there and James Justin of Leicester City called up for his first international cap.

The Justin experiment didn’t work and Southgate has again opted for a player who was so key in the run to the Euro 2020 final, Luke Shaw. Shaw, however, is another Manchester United player having a difficult time at club level.

Southgate has also picked Chelsea’s Ben Chilwell for this squad but, like Shaw, he has not played many minutes leading up to these fixtures as he regains fitness following injury.

Chilwell has the best minutes to goals conceded this season but with the caveat that he has had limited playing time. Shaw is the only full-back to have played fewer club minutes than Chilwell but he is bottom of the table.

Player Minutes Goals conceded Minutes/goals conceded Duels Duel success
Ben Chilwell 193 1 193.0 23 52.2
Kieran Trippier 681 7 97.3 44 50.0
Reece James 630 9 70.0 63 63.5
Tyrick Mitchell 414 6 69.0 34 38.2
Trent Alexander-Arnold 737 12 61.4 39 48.7
Kyle Walker-Peters 629 11 57.2 89 51.7
Rico Henry 630 9 52.5 53 49.1
Luke Shaw 154 6 25.7 14 50.0

However, the stats are somewhat flipped when looking at chance creation. Shaw is behind only Trent Alexander-Arnold of Liverpool and Trippier in chance creation – which is impressive given he has only played 154 minutes this season.

Chilwell is bottom of the chance creation stats but he has registered one goal and one assist in just 193 minutes of play.

Player Minutes Chances created Assists Goals
Trent Alexander-Arnold 737 2.7 0 2
Kieran Trippier 681 2.5 1 1
Luke Shaw 154 1.8 0 0
Reece James 630 1.1 1 1
Tyrick Mitchell 414 0.7 1 0
Rico Henry 630 0.7 1 0
Kyle Walker-Peters 629 0.6 0 1
Ben Chilwell 193 0.5 1 1

3. Will Kane peak in December?

The one player who is pretty much guaranteed to start every single game for England is Harry Kane. Southgate regularly speaks about the side’s over-reliance on the captain’s goals and how others need to step up.

The 29-year-old Tottenham striker scores a lot of his goals in November and December for Tottenham, which could be good news for England the World Cup is being played in those months, but he does play more games at that time of year because of the festive fixtures.

In other positive news for England, Kane has scored six Premier League goals so far which is his joint best start after seven games.

And that is not the only stat that is going in England’s favour. Kane’s chance conversion rate is 25%, making this his best start to a Premier League season for six years.

Kane scores more goals in December - but does play more games. His best month for goals per minute ratio is March
Kane scores more goals in December – but does play more games. His best month for goals per minute ratio is March

It looks as though Southgate’s biggest worry will be Kane keeping free from injury until the tournament starts.

Season Mins played Goals Assists Shot conversion %
2014-15 185 1 1 12.5%
2015-16 604 1 0 4%
2016-17 585 5 1 27.8%
2017-18 621 6 0 13.6%
2018-19 628 5 1 25%
2019-20 625 5 1 21.7%
2020-21 624 6 8 19.4%
2021-22 558 1 1 5.9%
2022-23 618 6 1 25%
Kane’s creative stats after 7 Premier League appearances in each season

4. A lack of goal-scoring creativity?

You can see why Southgate is concerned about goals in this England team. After Kane (50) and Raheem Sterling (19) the next highest scorer in the squad is Maguire (7).

This is not a new issue. Back in June Southgate said: “We have to start sharing that load. There are players who are scoring regularly with their club and have to transfer that to international football.”

That’s why Brentford’s Ivan Toney has been included as England look for a solid back-up option to Kane. Toney has scored five goals in seven Premier League appearances this season.

Marcus Rashford is one of those players who will be in Southgate’s mind but time is running out for the Manchester United forward to make it into the plans for Qatar.

It’s pretty incredible to think of Rashford as an outside pick for the England squad. Prior to the Euros last year he would have been a certain in England’s first XI.

However, a mixture of injuries and poor form have led to the 25-year-old not being called up for the Three Lions since November last year. He has, however, shown signs of improvement under Ten Hag, scoring vital goals in wins over Liverpool and Arsenal.

Southgate did mention Rashford will be under consideration if he manages to maintain his good run of form, but he is definitely not a certainty.

Jack Grealish has spoken about his desire to be a main player for England but will have to increase his goal output, with just one in 23 games for Manchester City. Jadon Sancho is another who has a chance – he has nine goal involvements in 23 games for Manchester United but seems further down the pecking order.

Whatever happens during these two games, it’s clear that any player who finds the net has a big chance of being in that final 26-man squad in November.

Player Games played Minutes played Goals Assists Goals & assists Mins per goal involvement
Harry Kane 56 4552 45 11 56 81
Jadon Sancho 23 1078 3 6 9 120
Phil Foden 16 976 2 6 8 122
Raheem Sterling 50 3887 17 12 29 134
Luke Shaw 15 1159 2 6 8 145
Marcus Rashford 43 2088 11 3 14 149
Jack Grealish 23 1190 1 6 7 170
Jesse Lingard 32 1830 6 4 10 183
Bukayo Saka 18 1191 4 3 5 238
Ben Chilwell 17 1351 1 4 5 270
Mason Mount 31 1930 4 3 7 276
Dele Alli 24 1668 2 3 5 334
Jordan Henderson 41 2685 2 6 8 336
Kieran Tripper 37 2820 1 5 6 470
Harry Maguire 46 4075 7 1 8 509

*Bold = players in current squad

  • Think you’ve got the answers? Choose your England XI to face Italy in the Nations League here
The Football News Show: Is Gareth Southgate under pressure?

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