As at Tuesday morning we will know which players has been selected for the final twenty to South Africa. Based on their last match against Japan many would think how England will survive in the stage group. Neither players from England has made the contribution towards the winning and it's a shame as they were one of the most popular and reputable leagues in the world. Not to forget their high paid players which not as expensive as their plays.
This is the list of 30 players before the cut tomorrow and who you would think will be the final 20?
Give your thoughts and read the coaches note on the selection courtesy of Fifa.com.
GK Robert GREEN
GK Joe HART
GK David JAMES
Leighton BAINES
Gareth BARRY
Darren BENT
Jamie CARRAGHER
Michael CARRICK
Ashley COLE
Joe COLE
Peter CROUCH
Michael DAWSON
Jermain DEFOE
Rio FERDINAND
Steven GERRARD
Emile HESKEY
Tom HUDDLESTONE
Adam JOHNSON
Glen JOHNSON
Ledley KING
Frank LAMPARD
Aaron LENNON
James MILNER
Scott PARKER
Wayne ROONEY
John TERRY
Matt UPSON
Theo WALCOTT
Stephen WARNOCK
Shaun WRIGHT-PHILLIPS
On Tuesday morning, Fabio Capello will make seven fateful telephone calls that will end the dreams of those who answer. The Italian already knows in his own mind 20 of the men he will call upon in South Africa next month.
The remaining ten will face Japan in Graz tomorrow knowing they must scrap for their lives to claim one of that coveted trio of remaining tickets.
"I more or less know," he admitted. "Not 23 but maybe 20. It will be disappointing when I have to tell some of the players that they must go home because all the players here have trained really well. I am really happy with their focus and the job they have done. But I have to choose."
Likely candidates for the axe include Michael Dawson, Shaun Wright-Phillips and Scott Parker. Tom Huddlestone and Darren Bent both start tomorrow knowing a failure will probably end their hopes too.
A straight fight between Leighton Baines and Stephen Warnock to act as deputy to Ashley Cole at left-back will end in heartbreak for the loser, while Joe Cole and Adam Johnson would appear to be scrapping over the remaining berth.
It will be disappointing when I have to tell some of the players that they must go home.
Fabio Capello, England coach.
Capello will assess the performances of his players in tomorrow's final friendly, then receive any injury updates on Monday and, in Gareth Barry's case, Tuesday morning before reaching a conclusion that will be all his own work.
"No. I won't talk to the senior players," he said. "If I lose I want to know it has been because of my decisions."
So much would appear to hinge on Barry. Although there were some dire early predictions for the Manchester City midfielder's fate, his recovery appears to be progressing roughly in line with official estimates when he first suffered ankle ligament damage against Tottenham on 5 May.
Capello has provided an optimistic medical bulletin. However, even he cannot wait forever. And when he makes his call on Tuesday morning, he must discover Barry will be fit to play a full part in training the day after England tackle USA in their Group C opener in Rustenburg on 12 June.
"Barry has improved a lot. The last news was good," said Capello. "But we have to wait and see what the doctor says. After that, we will know if he will be fit in a short time and ready to train with us, or whether he won't be ready.
"He has to be able to train normally the day after the first game. He is doing a lot of physiotherapy to get the movement going and is following what the doctor says. But I don't know if he is running yet."
With Barry back home in Manchester, Huddlestone has been handed a start in midfield tomorrow, whilst Bent will partner Wayne Rooney in attack, as he did with limited success against Brazil in Qatar last November.
Aaron Lennon and David James have also been assured of their spots, the latter making his first appearance in an England starting XI since April last year.
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