England
Under 21 coach Stuart Pearce has been singled out for blame after
Chelsea’s dual-nationality forward Victor Moses chose to play for
Nigeria rather than England.
Former
Crystal Palace owner Simon Jordan, who oversaw Moses’s development at
Selhurst Park, says the often taciturn Pearce should have done more to
make the 21-year-old welcome during his time with his England side.
And
managers Neil Warnock and Roberto Martinez, who had Moses in their
respective teams at Palace and Wigan, have also criticised the FA for
not persuading the player to pick England.
Jordan’s
faith in Moses’s potential extended to the multi-millionaire football
chairman having a £50,000 bet with former Arsenal forward Paul Merson
that Moses would win more England caps than Merson’s tally of 21 —
although that wager has been voided by the Nigeria decision.
The
FA strongly defend Pearce’s interactions with Moses, saying that a lot
of effort was made to keep the player in the national set-up. And they
point to plenty of other young internationals opting for England when
given a choice.
Roy
Hodgson’s assistant Gary Neville was asked about Moses snubbing England
while he was doing the Sky co-commentary of the Chelsea-Manchester City
game last Sunday.
Neville
shifted the blame on to the system that allows England to develop
youngsters through junior sides only to lose them at senior level.
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