Font Size
15px

Chapter 457: Special Guest Comntator

Translator: Nyoi-Bo Studio Editor: Nyoi-Bo Studio

Half a week after Tang En and Dunn arrived in Germany the German World Cup, watched by tens of thousands of people, finally kicked off.

Other than staying in rooms in the sa hotel, the two mostly did things on their own. Whether it was having als or moving on the outside, they took separate paths. Tang En followed the personnel from BBC television station around, while Dunn proceeded alone. The focus of their work was different.

Due to contractual obligations, Tang En had to tag alongside the personnel from BBC5 to battle in nurous cities. He was mainly required to be a guest comntator for the matches played by England’s National Team. Other than his old acquaintance, comntator John Motson, there was also the forr captain of the English team, fad for being the best forward in the English Premier League in the last decade, Alan Shearer.

Of course, Tang En was well-aware of this legendary character in the English football scene. But all he saw then was his cutting figure on the field. Having him sit with Tang En in the broadcast room to comntate together on a match still gave Tang En a special feeling.

Dunn moved independently. He did not follow along with the TV broadcasting plans. He mainly went to the matches that were not receiving much attention in England, especially those of the weaker teams. From there, he hoped to be able to unearth so pearls and raw minerals Tang En might need. He still did not know what Forest’s transfer fee budget would be for the new season, so he could only begin searching from the candidates with the best value.

Tang En had complete trust in Dunn’s eye for ability. After all, based on his own standards, he himself had truly only nurtured George Wood. anwhile, those players who had stood above their peers back then, like Michael Dawson and Andy Reid, were all personally nurtured by Dunn.

Tang En believed that the platform that allowed him to show off his own true potential was not being a scout, assistant manager, or Youth Team manager; it was not to discover and nurture new players. Rather, it was to lead a team to battle for the Champions League throne. He and Dunn could complent each other greatly. Dunn’s stringency in nit-picking details would make him a fantastic assistant. When the ti ca, he would be in charge of the operational specifics during the daily training of the team, while Tang En would only oversee their overall direction and path. The two of them cooperating would allow them to perform at the optimal levels in the areas they are most familiar with.

The reason behind BBC5 station’s inviting of Tang En to be a special comntator in this World Cup period might have been his current level of fa. Due to having been the target of news stirred up by the dia, football manager Tony Twain could be said to have shot to stardom this season. His superstar status reached its peak after the Champions League finals. The public criticisms he made of the main referee on match duty as foolish and brainless, as well as his actions during the award ceremony that embarrassed UEFA, put the leading powers of the European football scene on the spot.

Ever since BBC5 announced their invitation of Tang En to be a special guest comntator, they imdiately attracted the attention of other major dia groups. Tang En had not begun his work yet but had already helped his temporary master grab a fair bit of attention.

Everyone was in anticipation of the kind of sparks that would erge in the process of Tang En’s first attempt at TV comntaries, between England’s local characteristic manager and John Motson, who was fad for his passionate comntary.

“I didn’t expect us to work together this way.” At the scene of the Germany World Cup, Motson took the initiative to put out his hand after seeing Tang En.

Tang En knew the comntator before him. He also knew that Motson was his supporter. Although there were tis when Motson was equally harsh when it ca to the comntary on Tang En, Tang En himself was a harsh person as well, so the two felt as if they had common interests.

“I think Eriksson is going to be down on his luck.” Tang En laughed as he returned the gesture.

Motson laughed as well. “I was thinking you would be nervous, and I wanted to give you so guidance. That you should comntate just like you usually deal with the reporters. But it seems like I don’t have to.”

Tang En began chuckling in delight along with him.

anwhile, Alan Shearer stuck out sowhat like a sore thumb standing beside them, being the straight-laced person he was.

This was a small interlude in the backstage before the live broadcast of the match. Tang En looked forward to his first ti working as a television comntator. He also had seriously done his howork. He especially went to further understand the current situation of Paraguay, England’s opponents for the match; he did his analysis as if he was the main manager of the English Team.

This was a classic and reasonable arrangent from Station BBC5. John Motson was an old hand among England’s sports comntators. His sharp words and passionate comntary style made those who liked him extrely fond of him, and those who hated him imnsely hateful of him. He was to be the connecting factor and overseer of the match comntary, sothing comparable to a host of a variety show. Alan Shearer was an active mber of Newcastle, as well as a forr core forward and captain on the English team; he would be comntating from the players’ perspectives in the match. Tony Twain, a manager himself, was naturally analyzing the match from the view of strategic adjustnts of both managers.

In this way, the audience would be able to understand the match from various angles.

England’s group stage match with Paraguay was the third match of the current World Cup.

Tang En was no longer willing to think about the results of the match progressing concurrently in another dinsion; it had no aning for the match here and now. Would knowing the score for this match in a different dinsion be of any help to England’s performance in this one? Could it assure that England would not repeat their sa old problems?

Tang En did not at all look favorably upon Team England’s prospects in the World Cup. This had nothing to do with what he knew about England’s performance in the current World Cup. The problem with England’s football was chronic; it had been passed down generation after generation. Even before he had transmigrated, he had never thought well of England’s prospects in the international competition.

This was a team which, after being overly publicized by the advanced dia in the nation, ended up fooling others as well as themselves.

Beyond attaining a World Cup trophy on their own doorsteps in 1966 and becoming the earliest ancestors of modern football, what other praiseworthy achievents had England’s National Team accomplished? Nothing.

The prosperity of the English Premier League made people feel as if the abilities of England’s National Team should also be very strong. While Tang En agreed that the league was the foundation of a nation’s football levels, he disagreed with directly equating them. That was a moronic way of doing things. Additionally, a large part of English Premier’s prosperity was rely blown up by the dia.

Why were football stars from England usually more expensive than ones at the sa level from Continental Europe or other countries? Why were there nurous young geniuses in England, but so few that ended up managing to succeed?

It was all thanks to their advanced dia.

With extensive hype and a matured series of publicity systems, it was even easier for England’s footballers to be sculpted as great “football stars” in the hearts of their audience. This has sothing to do with England’s culture and originated from their previously glorious history as the empire on which the sun never set.

Their own was always the best.

Those were the true thoughts in Tang En’s heart. He believed the dip in England’s football standards—sothing thought as temporary in the hearts of the English—had nothing to do with the level of the manager, the true abilities of the players, the food cooked by the chefs, or their alcoholic natures. This was purely a cultural issue, sothing unsolvable. Perhaps they could perform exceedingly well at so point in a big competition. With so luck, they could even beco champions. But this would raise their overall standards of play by exactly zero.

Of course, this sounded sowhat like China’s football. However, no matter the low period of the English, it was still better than the true “zero” of China’s football.

But Tang En would not reveal his thoughts during the match comntary. The English would not allow anyone to readily make negative remarks of themselves, especially when it pointed towards a sensitive topic such as sothing culture-related. Tang En did not wish to beco a public enemy in the nation.

Motson hoped for him to comntate on the match from a manager’s perspective, so Tang En aid his criticisms at Eriksson during the match broadcast.

His criticisms against Eriksson were mainly focused on his use of the “Lampard-Gerrard Duo.”

Lampard and Gerrard were respectively the midfield cores of their own teams, and their club performances were excellent. In theory, using both as core players in the National Team at the sa ti should be a good idea. However, there were problems appearing. Lampard and Gerrard both perford spectacularly in Chelsea and Liverpool. But when it ca to Team England, appearing together on the field would have either of them, or both, performing in a lackluster manner.

Even a fool could tell that the position and style of the two individuals on the field overlapped with each other. Being fielded at the sa ti was not a simple matter of wastage; rather, it was sothing along the lines of magnets repelling each other. The two disrupted each other, causing neither to perform well in the end.

Why did Eriksson still insist on letting the two players be starters? Could he not see the problem? Of course, Tang En would not criticize Eriksson as foolish. What he criticized was the Swede’s overindulgence of hot-shot football stars under his command.

This was a direct clash of two managent ideals. Tang En belonged to the type in which the whole was greater than anything else. On his football team, there was only one authority and superstar: him, the main manager. All players had to listen to him. He would not sacrifice his own tactical strategy to accommodate certain football stars.

Eriksson, on the other hand, belonged to the type that was more indulgent of football stars, depending on hot-shot players to decide the match; it was sowhat biased to celebrities. This way, he was able to maintain good relations with the players. In their hearts, he was not lowly placed. In the repeated occurrences of the FA’s vote of no confidence in him, the players always stood on his side. From a certain understanding, this could also be considered a type of loving protection. But the price of having a fantastic relationship with his players was the sacrifice of England’s competitiveness in the World Cup.

Sa with the match against Paraguay, under the hot sun of Frankfurt’s afternoon, Eriksson’s team played drowsily without a single bright spot.

“… I see no hope for England to win this match. In fact, I don’t even know if Eriksson wants to win. Of course, he wants to. But if he doesn’t prove it, I’ll think he doesn’t want to. Owen has just returned from recovery; he’s not in the best condition, but why make him play as a starter with Rooney? In this kind of match, Crouch is the most suitable candidate. I’ve coached the man himself, so I understand his abilities. Look, aren’t I right? Eriksson is changing players. Crouch in, and Owen out. Simple and brutish, without any technique to speak of… I’m sorry, I think I’ll sleep for a bit. Wake up when there’s a goal…”

The match went on drowsily; neither Paraguay nor England launched any threatening attacks. Both parties seed reluctant to take a more active thod to score a goal. Under the hot sun, they carried on like that. The audience also watched sleepily with a lack of interest.

So, when Beckham utilized his trademark free-kick to send the ball flying into the goalpost via a transiting header from Paraguay’s captain, Gamarra, Tang En finally awoke amid Motson’s shouting.

“Oh, it’s a goal? And it’s an own goal! Fabulous! Eriksson can breathe a sigh of relief now.”

Through their opponent’s own goal, Team England managed to gain a victory in this match after much difficulty.

After the match, Tang En used up much of his word limit in the after-match comntary articles for Nottingham Evening Post and China’s Titan Sports to describe an interesting matter he had discovered midway through the match. On an occasion when England’s goalkeeper, Paul Robinson, was clearing the ball, he had kicked it towards the gigantic television screen hanging at the top, in the middle of the stadium; the ball was almost unable to co back down…

This matter made Tang En laugh for a long while during his comntary. During the halfti break, he even repeatedly related it to his two partners. When he was comntating, Tang En joked that it was a pity the football dropped back down in the end. He had hoped to see the football stay stuck up there. Perhaps that way, the match would not be as boring.

George Wood, who was participating in the World Cup and was selected to represent Team England for the first ti, continually moved back and forth between the substitutes’ bench and the warm-up area in the match. He did not get even a minute of ti on the field. This was quite the norm. After all, England’s midfield was currently saturated with too many football stars. Both Gerrard and Lampard had to be on the field at the sa ti, and added to that were Captain Beckham, Joe Cole, Hargreaves… There was no space left for a new recruit like Wood to enter.

The problem with the match did not lie in midfield defense, but in organizing the attacks. Changing Wood in would not be helpful to the team. Tang En did not attack Eriksson for this decision of his. This showed that he was not a person who would slander soone else without care.

After the end of the live broadcast of the match, BBC5 received many feedback calls from the audience. Most of them were calling in to criticize Tang En’s comntary style. They felt that Tang En was utterly unsuitable to be a guest comntator, as his words were filled with too much aggression and that he evidently harbored personal feelings. There were even those who suspected Tang En was making use of this job opportunity to vent his personal grudges.

Tang En’s response to those was a simple shrug of his shoulders. He did not wish to explain too much. He was a guest comntator, not an interpreter who had to maintain an objective middle ground. Wasn’t he invited here precisely to express his personal viewpoints? So people may be afraid of offending others, but Tony Twain was not.

Of course, there was also so truth in him using the opportunity to discharge a personal vendetta. He had never quite liked Eriksson. He felt that Eriksson was too weak. This was a clash in personalities; sothing that could not be easily changed.

BBC stood behind him as well. They knew that however many people hated Tang En’s comntary, their viewership ratings would surely be raised in the next match; those people still wanted to see what kind of fresh comnts Tang En would be tossing out this ti, for their ease of continuing to call in to nit-pick and complain.

Those who liked him would continue supporting him, staying in front of the television to watch his varied expressions. Those who hated him would also pay attention to him, collecting the proof of his sins in preparation to usurp him.

Regardless, whether it was fondness or hatred, this was a person who could not be ignored.

BBC5 had signed an extrely worthwhile contract.

You are reading Godfather Of Champions Chapter 457 - Special Guest Commentator on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.