We, oui! Wenger hails England youth policy after U-17 win

Victory added to England's growing list of youth honours — it has won the Under-20 World Cup and European Under-19 championship this year — and was revenge for losing the Under-17 European Championship final to Spain in May.

Published : Oct 29, 2017 01:59 IST

Veteran French manager Wenger, in charge of the Gunners since 1996, was delighted by England's recent youth results and even talked of "we" following Saturday's latest success.

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger insisted England's Under-17 World Cup final triumph was further proof of the increasing success of his adopted country's once much-derided youth system.

England came from behind to beat Spain 5-2 in Saturday's final in Kolkata, with Manchester City starlet Phil Foden scoring two goals.

Victory added to England's growing list of youth honours — it has won the Under-20 World Cup and European Under-19 championship this year — and was revenge for losing the Under-17 European Championship final to Spain in May.

READ: England clinches FIFA U-17 World Cup

By contrast, the senior England men's side has not lifted a major international trophy since it won the World Cup in 1966.

For decades the technical development of young players in England has been compared unfavourably with that of their counterparts in rival European nations such as Spain, France, Germany and the Netherlands.

But veteran French manager Wenger, in charge of the Gunners since 1996, was delighted by England's recent youth results and even talked of "we" following Saturday's latest success.

PHOTO STORY: FIFA U-17 World Cup - Top goal scorers

"I'm so happy because I've been here for 20 years and for 20 years we didn't do so well with the youth," Wenger said after Arsenal won his 800th game as a Premier League manager with a 2-1 victory at home to Swansea on Saturday.

"Now we have won the Under-17 (World Cup) and the Under-20 for the first time since I'm here (in England).

"It shows that since they restructured the (youth) academies and dedicated a lot of work to that, you have the results."

Saturday's success came at the end of a bruising week for the Football Association, with chairman Greg Clarke admitting English football's governing body had "lost the trust of the public" for its botched handling of racism allegations involving the former manager of the women's national team.

Victory in India was a welcome piece of good news for the under-pressure Clarke and his beleaguered colleagues.

"For once we can all have the opportunity to congratulate the FA," Wenger said. "It doesn't happen often!," he jokingly added.