Gary Neville plays down Champions League blank for Premier League sides

England coach not convinced much should be read into absence of English teams from the quarter-finals

Simon Stone
Thursday 14 March 2013 07:13 EDT
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The Arsenal players thank their away support after just coming up short
The Arsenal players thank their away support after just coming up short (AP)

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Gary Neville is not convinced England's Champions League decline will be a long-term phenomenon.

Arsenal's heroic failure to overturn a first-leg deficit in their clash with Bayern Munich at the Allianz Arena leaves the Premier League without a representative at the quarter-final stage of Europe's most prestigious tournament for the first time since 1996.

Many would argue it underlines a general decline in English football, with Arsene Wenger expressing dire warnings immediately after last night's game.

But, speaking on his return to old club Bury Juniors FC as part of the FA Community Awards 2013 presented by McDonald's, nominations for which can now be made at http://www.mcdonalds.co.uk/kickstart, Neville said he does not think the situation is that bad.

"We are not in a strong moment. There is no point denying it," said Neville.

"From 2005 to 2012 we had eight or nine finalists, which is a ridiculous success rate when you include semi-finals as well.

"But Barcelona and Real Madrid are stronger, the German teams are stronger, Juventus look like they are getting back to it.

"It works in cycles. You cannot always be at the top. Maybe we are having a period where we are in a little bit of a dip.

"But it may change around completely next year or the year after."

Neville will be getting his head back to England matters next week, with manager Roy Hodgson due to name his squad for the forthcoming World Cup qualifiers against San Marino and Montenegro tomorrow.

The major focus will be on whether Rio Ferdinand gets a recall given Phil Jagielka has been ruled out with an ankle injury, Joleon Lescott has started just one game of the last four for Manchester City, Chris Smalling was reduced to Under-21 duty at Manchester United on Monday and Gary Cahill has been struggling for form at Chelsea.

It would represent a major climbdown for Hodgson to select Ferdinand, having continually given the impression he wanted to "move on" from the 34-year-old.

Nevertheless, the obvious alternatives, Tottenham duo Michael Dawson and Steven Caulker, lack Ferdinand's experience, which could be vital in Podgorica against a dangerous Montenegro outfit that represent the greatest danger to England's hopes of automatic qualification.

Arsenal's Jack Wilshere is out with an ankle injury but Ben Foster is expected to receive his first call-up since confirming he was willing to end his exile from the international fold.

PA

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