The Roar
The Roar

Advertisement

FA to limit foreigners in English football

Roar Rookie
8th May, 2014
22

The English Football Association wants to limit the number of non-European Union players in Premier League teams in a bid to bolster home grown talent.

Football Association chairman Greg Dyke also announced an overhaul of the work permit system and the creation of a new division for Premier League ‘B teams’ in a bid to improve the health of the English game.

The work permit proposals include a blanket ban on non-European Union players for clubs outside the top flight, bringing England in line with other European countries.

There are currently 66 players eligible to represent England playing regularly in the 20 Premier League teams and Dyke has set a target of increasing that number to 90 by 2022.

A BBC study published in October found that English footballers accounted for just 32 per cent of the minutes played in the Premier League, compared to 59 per cent for home-grown players in Spain and 50 for home-grown players in Germany’s top league.

The report was produced by a commission set up by Dyke in October to investigate why the number of English players in the Premier League is falling.

“If this cannot be reversed, a future England manager will have fewer and fewer top-level English players from which to choose.”

Dyke wants to insert a new fifth tier into the English pyramid system — a ‘League Three’ — which would feature 10 B teams from the Premier League and 10 teams from the current fifth division, the National Conference.

Advertisement

Several European countries, including Spain and Germany, allow B teams from top-tier clubs to play in their lower leagues.

The 10-man FA commission, which included Dyke, England manager Roy Hodgson and Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand, produced an 82-page report after speaking to more than 650 people from across English and European football.

One aim of the study is to improve the England national team, who have qualified for the semi-finals of only two major tournaments since winning the World Cup on home soil in 1966.

However, the Football League, responsible for England’s second, third and fourth tiers, expressed reservations about the proposals.

Chief executive Shaun Harvey said: “We should continue to engage with the commission to establish whether there is a solution that meets its stated objective, but does not leave The Football League carrying a disproportionate or unreasonable burden.”

Meanwhile, Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger believes the only solution to England’s problems is to improve the quality of youth coaching.

“For me the competition has too much importance, and the training too little,” the Frenchman said.

Advertisement

“I have seen too many kids come to the age of 17 or 18 and they cannot head the ball, they have no left foot, because they have not practised enough.”

close