England’s golden generation were ‘egotistical losers’, ex-midfielder Gerrard says
Former Liverpool captain says big things never happened because team could not connect and he hated being in England camp

England’s golden generation failed to live up to their potential because they were “egotistical losers” who fostered an unfriendly environment and were unable to work together, former Liverpool midfielder Steven Gerrard said.
In the 2000s, big things were expected from an England squad that included the likes of Gerrard, David Beckham, Paul Scholes, Rio Ferdinand and Frank Lampard, but the team never progressed past the quarter-finals at a major tournament.
Gerrard and Ferdinand will face off against each other in Hong Kong in 10 days’ time in the Red on Red legends game at Kai Tak Stadium, with Gerrard captaining a Liverpool side including the likes of John Arne Riise and Vladimir Smicer, and Ferdinand a Manchester United team involving Nicky Butt and Dimitar Berbatov.
“I think we were all egotistical losers. I watch the telly now and I see [Jamie] Carragher sitting next to [Paul] Scholes on this fan debate and they look like they’ve been best mates for 20 years,” ex-England captain Gerrard said on a podcast with Ferdinand.
“Why are we all mature enough now and at stages in our life where we’re closer and more connected? Why couldn’t we connect as England teammates back then?
“I think it was down to the culture within England that we were all never connected. All in our rooms too much. We weren’t friendly or connected. We weren’t a team. We never at any stage became a real, good, strong team.”