Steven Gerrard and England’s ‘egotistical losers’ | The Guardian
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Gary Neville, Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard after England’s 2006 World Cup exit.
08/10/2025

Steven Gerrard and England’s ‘egotistical losers’

Barry Glendenning Barry Glendenning
 

THE GOLDEN DISCOURSE

Whether it was Archimedes’s eureka moment in the bath, Isaac Newton’s in the orchard or Doc Brown’s in the toilet while hanging a clock, many of the world’s most important discoveries have been made in the most unlikely locations. It is a list to which we can now presumably add the recording studio in which Rio Ferdinand presents his what-it-says-on-the-tin Rio Ferdinand Presents podcast. Of course, in discovering the principle of buoyancy, the law of universal gravitation or how best to transform a sports car with gull-wing doors into a time machine, the aforementioned scientists all chanced upon inspired moments of enlightenment that had never previously occurred to anybody else. When the lightbulb lit up over Steven Gerrard’s head while in conversation with Rio, he had clearly just figured out something rival fans have known for the best part of 30 years. Not so much a mic-drop as a penny-drop moment, it finally dawned on the former England international why the team with which he won 114 caps repeatedly failed to live up to expectation.

“We were all egotistical losers,” confessed the man who played in six major tournaments for England without ever reaching a semi-final. “I watch the telly now and I see Jamie Carragher sitting next to Paul Scholes and they look like they’ve been best mates for 20 years. And I see Carragher’s relationship with Gary Neville and they look like they’ve been mates for 20 years. I’m probably more close and friendly with you [Ferdinand] now than I ever was when I played with you for 15 years [for England]. So why didn’t we connect when we were 20, 21, 22, 23? Was it ego? Was it rivalry? It was down to the culture within England. We weren’t friendly or connected.”

The clique culture to which Gerrard alludes was well documented at the time, with players confined to an opulent but restrictively cloistered environment in which separate groups dictated by club allegiance largely kept to themselves while on international duty. The presence of these factions made it impossible for players to forge the kind of bond that might have led to the inflated egos of the Sven-Göran Eriksson era being replaced with the inflatable unicorns of more recent years. It was an open secret that players from Liverpool, Chelsea and Manchester United didn’t get along with each other. “I hated it,” said Gerrard of being away with England. “I didn’t enjoy it. Hated the [hotel] rooms. In my early days, I’d have days where I was down, like low down. Like I’m in this room for seven hours, what am I going to do? There was no social media, we didn’t have a DVD player or anything. Channel 1 to 5 or whatever it was on TV. I used to get low and down. I used to love the games. I used to love playing for England. I was really proud. I used to enjoy the training sessions but it was 90 minutes a day and then I was just on my own.”

While Gerrard’s sense of isolation at a time when he should have been living his very best life is nothing if not bleak, his recollections do raise an interesting question regarding what might have been in a less toxic England environment. “I’ve got a big frustration when I look back at England that we never did better,” Gerrard added. “I think it’s a combination of different things, but one of the big things for me was we weren’t a team. We were a group of individuals with talent and it never works like that.” Football Daily looks forward to the second part of the interview, in which Gerrard is expected to reveal that Pope Leo XIV wears a funny hat and bears occasionally defecate in the woods.

LIVE ON BIG WEBSITE

Join Taha Hashim from 5.45pm BST for minute-by-minute updates from Twente 1-3 Chelsea in Women’s Bigger Cup, while Sarah Rendell will be on deck for Manchester United 2-1 Vålerenga from 8pm.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“I would like to play like [Jürgen] Klopp, I like [Pep] Guardiola’s style, but you need to be realistic … We want to work really hard and with all the issues we have got we have to be together” – Nobby Solano has rocked up as the head coach of Pakistan so Tusdiq Din tracked him down for this entertaining chat.

Nolberto Solano in Lahore
camera Nobby Solano in Lahore, earlier. Photograph: Haider Ali/The Guardian

FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS

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I’ve been reading the acute tactical analysis in all media outlets of the trend for taking supremely well-thought out kick-offs where the ball is played to the corner touchline, enabling an early high press, etc etc. I recall that when John Beck was manager of Cambridge United and employed this exact tactic, his team was derided for hoofing the game back to the Stone Age. And if memory serves, Beck was even more tactically astute – he kept the grass in the corners of the Abbey long to keep the ball in play. When do we get Jonathan Wilson’s treatise on Nu Beckball and the enduring genius of Charles Hughes?” – Michael Hann.

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I only read Big Website of course (ahem) but while I was catching up on the latest edition of Architectural Digest, I came across ‘Soccer Player Ben Chilwell’s Home Brings California-Cool to Surrey, England’. The certainly-in-no-way-puff piece breathlessly states that ‘the English national team member’s house channels midcentury modern and LA contemporary in equal measure’. Rather wonderfully, it also quotes Chilwell as saying that ‘I love my sleep, so being two minutes away from where we train was a big draw’, which must be of great comfort to the player who signed for Strasbourg at the start of September” – Noble Francis.

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Re: strange football lavatory stories (yesterday’s Football Daily). On a wall in our loo is a framed 25-share certificate confirming investment in Berwick Rangers, the club based in England but playing in Scotland’s Lowland League. When I bought the shares they cost £1 each. I’ve failed in my inquiries into how much they’re worth now. My wife has her view” – Nigel Robson.

If you have any, please send letters to the.boss@theguardian.com. Today’s winner of our letter o’ the day prize is … Nigel Robson, who gets some Football Weekly merch. Terms and conditions for our competitions, when we have them, are here.

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SPINNING AROUND

It’s Javi Gracia’s turn again in the jury duty-esque world that is managing Watford FC. Yes, Paulo Pezzolano has lasted just 10 games before being told to find Vicarage Road’s constantly revolving door marked Do One. Gracia led the Hornets to the 2019 FA Cup final before locating said exit a few months later, pre-empting a run of 11 sackings since 2020. “We are sure there are many supporters who wished Javi had never departed in 2019,” cheered the Hornets’ chair and chief suit, Scott Duxbury. “His passion, leadership and clear strategy will help us build stability, unity and momentum.” Honk!

NEWS, BITS AND BOBS

OL Lyonnes are basking in a glorious London Borehamwood night after Melchie Dumornay’s decisive double sank holders Arsenal 2-1 in Women’s Bigger Cup. “Worried is not the right word but we’re not happy,” sighed Renée Slegers after the Gunners’ fourth game without a win. “It does something to a group. The important thing is we manage it really well. Last season shows that when it starts clicking we know how good we are.”

Match-winner Melchie Dumornay
camera Melchie Dumornay enjoying her surroundings. Photograph: Molly Darlington/Uefa/Getty Images

Senior WSL players will be guaranteed a minimum annual salary of £40,000 under financial rules brought in this season.

Everton’s James Tarkowski is the proud owner of a new two-year contract extension. “It’s been a crazy few years, with some big lows and some massive highs,” he cheered. “We’ve managed to get through those tough times and hopefully now we’re on to more positive and exciting times ahead.”

Jayson Molumby is relieved to have returned to the Republic of Ireland fold after being omitted from their earlier Geopolitics World Cup qualifiers. “It was tough for me, I was gutted not to be selected. It was hard to watch,” he sniffed. “You feel a lot of emotions. Angry, disappointed. Gutted. A lot of things go through your head. I’m just happy to be back.”

Also back in action after a knack-enforced 438-day break: Brazil’s Éder Militão. The Brazilian is in their squad for the friendlies against South Korea and Japan. “After the second injury, a lot of things went through my mind,” he said. “I thought about quitting football because it’s not easy, but with the help of my wife, my daughter and my teammates, I’m here today to play well.”

And NAC Breda have unveiled a new shirt co-designed by boyhood fan DJ Tiësto. “To be a part of the team in this way is something I could have never imagined,” he whoop-whoop … whoop-whoop … whoop-whooped.

DJ Tiësto at NAC Breda v Groningen
camera Tiësto in the threads at a game last weekend. Photograph: EYE4images/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

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