Capello still confident of success

Capello still confident of success

Published Jun. 23, 2010 10:43 a.m. ET

Fabio Capello is still adamant England can reach the World Cup final next month providing they get out of Group C with victory over Slovenia.

Capello's pre-tournament assertion that England were capable of competing for the trophy in South Africa has looked a little hollow over the past fortnight.

After starting with a mixed performance against the United States, England's campaign took a total wrong turning against Algeria in Cape Town last Friday.

A virtually unanimous assessment of that tepid goalless draw was that it was one of the worst England performances in living memory.

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The result sends the Three Lions into their final encounter with Slovenia knowing anything other than victory will almost certainly consign them to an early flight home and public ridicule.

Yet Capello, who was anxious to put a turbulent few days behind him and forget all about the John Terry-led rebellion, retains faith in his players.

While he accepts their performances in South Africa have been nowhere near the level that got them to the tournament in a highly impressive qualifying campaign, the Italian is keeping the faith.

"I am not crazy," he said.

"When I said my target is the final of the World Cup it was because we showed this is a really good squad.

"I think if... no, not if, when we win (against Slovenia) then all the teams have to fight against us."

Nevertheless, Capello, when pressed, admitted he had made mistakes.

The ill-advised Capello Index was not mentioned. But since the day that short-lived concept was unveiled, a previously faultless record has become pock-marked by errors.

Ignoring Joe Cole completely during two games where England have struggled badly to create chances is mystifying, although there is a suggestion he will be overlooked once more, with Jermain Defoe partnering Wayne Rooney and James Milner filling the right-sided midfield slot and Gareth Barry on the other side to halt the Slovenians flow of possession.

The intrigue over team selection is slightly misleading through.

In truth, Capello could select any line-up from his 23-man squad - Ledley King and Jamie Carragher miss out through injury and suspension respectively - and they should still have enough ability to beat the 25th-ranked nation in the world and the smallest country to make these finals.

The answer lies in England's highly-paid, usually, highly-praised players getting somewhere near the performance level that brought them nine wins from 10 in qualifying - including nine goals against Croatia - and beat Germany in Berlin, results which convinced Capello to make his bold statement in the first place.

"We did really well in qualification but now we are not in a good moment," he admitted.

"Sometimes we improve, but sometimes we aren't at the high level that I want.

"At this moment, we are down from the level that I know, that they know, that we all know.

"But we will be fit to fight. Definitely.

"My reputation is not important. We are a team, a group.

"This is a play-off, like a final of the Champions League. That is the spirit we have to find, from the first moment, because we have to win."

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