Czechs make it seven in a row
OVERVIEW
The Czechs bounced back from a 5-0 thrashing in England in their opening qualifier to claim second place in Group A. The highlight of the campaign was a shock 2-1 win over the Three Lions in the return game in Prague.
- Few teams have had their Euro 2020 preparations as severely affected by coronavirus. At short notice, the Czechs were forced to field an entirely new XI against Scotland in the Nations League in September, and coach Jaroslav Silhavy missed the return game in Glasgow in October after testing positive.
- The Czechs reached the Euro ’96 final in England, and won the 1976 championship as part of Czechoslovakia. Since the Czech-Slovak split, the Czech Republic have qualified for all six Euros.
- In a squad short of household names, key players include keeper Tomas Vaclik, full-backs Vladimir Coufal and Jan Boril, midfield engine Tomas Soucek, winger Jakub Jankto and striker Patrik Schick.
TACTICS
Soucek sits deeper than the other two central midfielders in a midfield trio. Captain Borek Dockal’s return from injury could force coach Silhavy to drop Hertha Berlin’s Vladimir Darida, and centre-back Jakub Brabec could make way for Tomas Kalas.
STAR MAN
Tomas Soucek
Tall, energetic midfielder who has flourished in the Premier League since joining West Ham.
COACH
Jaroslav Silhavy
Level-headed and experienced former defender who coached Liberec and Slavia Prague to Czech League titles.
PLAYER PROFILE
Patrik Schick
Tall, handsome and talented, Schick is Czech football’s poster boy-in-waiting – tipped for greatness but yet to fulfil his early promise. 25 in January, the powerful yet elegant striker has already seen his share of ups and downs.
A teen sensation in the Czech League, Schick moved to Sampdoria, aged only 20, and almost signed for Juventus a year later. After failing medicals at Juve, he instead joined Roma as one of the most expensive Czech players of all time.
Schick’s career stalled in the Italian capital but a loan spell with RB Leipzig put him back on track. A permanent move to their Bundesliga rivals Bayer Leverkusen followed last summer.
First called up to the national team in 2016, the left-sided forward scored on his debut and has since become the Czechs’ main threat, with four goals in the Euro 2020 qualifiers.
A thigh injury sidelined Schick for much of the first half of this season but the delayed Euro finals should be the right tournament at the right time. The young pretender now has a chance to prove himself at the highest level.
Article by Sam Beckwith
This article first appeared in the January Edition of World Soccer. You can purchase old issues of the magazine by clicking here.