England’s skipper Harry Kane has expressed displeasure at the trend of multiple withdrawals from the England national team duty for the November international break. The Three Lions will play the Republic of Ireland and Greece in the Nation’s League, with Lee Carsley calling up 23 players for his final games as the interim manager in charge.
Nine players withdrew from the squad due to several reasons, mainly injuries and some undisclosed. Eight players initially dropped out, including Trent Alexander-Arnold, Cole Palmer, Phil Foden, Jack Grealish, Bukayo Saka, Declan Rice, Aaron Ramsdale, and Levi Colwill.
Although Lee Carsley had called up five players to replace those who withdrew, until one of them, Everton’s Jarrad Branthwaite, pulled out again, and Harry Kane believes some of his teammates aren’t putting England national team duty on top of the priority list.
“I think England comes before anything. England comes before club. England is the most important thing you play as a professional footballer, and Gareth [Southgate] was hot on that, and he wasn’t afraid to make decisions if, you know, that started to drift from certain players. I don’t really like it, if I’m totally honest. I think England comes before anything, any club situation.” Kane said.
Many of those who withdrew had sustained injuries in the weekend games in the Premier League. Chelsea’s 1-1 draw with Arsenal saw Bukayo Saka and Declan Rice substituted due to injuries which have ruled them out of the Nations League. Chelsea’s Cole Palmer was a doubt for the game but still played all ninety minutes.
Southampton goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale also broke a finger while on duty against Wolves in a game the Saints lost.
Jack Grealish was not injured, but Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola was unhappy with his selection for the national team and was worried about his injury records in recent weeks that have seen him fail to play for City since October 20.