A tale of fraternal friction

CHANTILLY. — This week’s exchange of views between Wales soccer star Gareth Bale and England manager Roy Hodgson represented the latest potshots in an uneven football rivalry that stretches back 137 years.

Speaking ahead of his side’s 2-1 win over Slovakia in their Euro 2016 opener, Bale claimed that England, who Wales face in Lens tomorrow, “big themselves up before they’ve done anything”.

It prompted Hodgson to shoot back that the Real Madrid forward had been “disrespectful”, with England midfielder Jack Wilshere upping the ante by declaring that the dislike between the countries was mutual.

England’s 1-1 draw with Russia in their first Group B game means that Wales will go into the match with the upper hand, which is not a position to which they are accustomed.

A goal by Thomas Heathcote Sorby earned England a 2-1 victory over Wales when the teams first met at London’s Kennington Oval in January 1879 and it set the tone for much of what was to follow.

In 101 meetings between the teams, England have lost on only 14 occasions and between 1946 and 1976 they tasted defeat just once in 33 encounters.

Wales’ few wins have been celebrated exuberantly, most notably in the 1980 edition of the now-defunct British Home Championship, when an England team that had beaten world champions Argentina four days earlier was thrashed 4-1 at Wrexham’s Racecourse Ground.

In the main, however, England have had things their way. This century, the teams have only met four times and England have won all four games without conceding a goal.

Historically, the relationship between the two nations was one of English incursions and Welsh resentment.

English king Edward I invaded Wales in the 13th century, building huge castles that still stand today, before Wales was annexed to England by Tudor monarch Henry VIII in the early part of the 16th century.

More recently, English Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher became a hate figure in south Wales, accused of accelerating the decline of heavy industry in the region and thereby robbing the area of its livelihood.

Today, Wales is governed from the British Parliament in London, although it was given a degree of political autonomy by the creation of the Welsh Assembly government in 1999.

“Wales is administratively part of England and so Welsh national identity is a rather contested area,” Huw Richards, a Welsh journalist and academic, said.— AFP.

 

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