‘England have to get out of group’

Greg Dyke

Greg Dyke: England have ‘got to get out’ of Euro 2016 group

Football Association chairman Greg Dyke says “we’ll all shoot ourselves” if England fail to progress from their group at Euro 2016.

Roy Hodgson’s side have been drawn alongside Wales, Russia and Slovakia for the tournament in France, which starts on 10 June.

“We’ve got to get out of that group,” said Dyke. “If we don’t, that really is bad news for English football.”

Dyke added he believes England can win the World Cup again “one day soon”.

The 68-year-old was speaking at the start of a year of events to mark the 50th anniversary of England’s 1966 World Cup win.

And he said the “building blocks are in place” to emulate that achievement.

“We owe it to a generation of teenage dreamers to show we can do it again,” he added.

“The FA is the richest FA in the world, the most income. The FA has to take some of the blame.

“We should have won a tournament in the last 50 years. We haven’t. But we will win in the next 50 years, hopefully long before.”

England are ninth in the Fifa world rankings and have not gone past the quarter-finals of a World Cup since 1990.

They went out of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil without a win, but Dyke stood by Hodgson.

England won all 10 of their Euro 2016 qualifiers and progress from the group in France “should not be the definition of success”, added Dyke.

He was joined at Tuesday’s launch by 1966 World Cup winners Sir Geoff Hurst, Gordon Banks, Martin Peters and George Cohen.

Dyke said: “It is important to remember and pay tribute to each and every player in the final and also in the squad.

“We hope the celebrations cement the ’66 winners their place in history and hope a new generation will hear their story and be inspired by it.”

Greg Dyke and Roy Hodgson

Greg Dyke backed Roy Hodgson after a disappointing 2014 World Cup

What next for Dyke?

Dyke said a decision on whether to extend his three-year contract – which expires in the summer – will be made in the coming days.

One of the aims of his tenure has been to increase the number of English players in the Premier League, with the objective of seeing England win the World Cup in 2022.

He added: “It is ridiculous. The figures in terms of the numbers of kids who don’t make it out of academies, who just disappear, is quite frightening.

“It’s not that they go and play in the lower league, they just don’t play at all. And they’re the cream of their generation.”

BBC Sport

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