Martin Belam 

Barry’s blunt England home truths give TV viewers a glimpse of dressing-room vibe

Assistant manager’s half-time interview on ITV offered an unexpectedly honest insight into the in-game mood in the camp
  
  

Thomas Tuchel and Anthony Barry on the touchline
Anthony Barry (left) and Thomas Tuchel look on during an angst-ridden first-half performance from England. Photograph: Eddie Keogh/The FA/Getty Images

England’s players have been effusive in their praise for Thomas Tuchel’s half-time talk, but the half-time talk that ITV viewers in the UK got was very different, in the form of a refreshingly frank interview with his assistant, Anthony Barry.

In-game interviews of staff are another novel broadcasting feature of this World Cup, like the innovative use of refcam, but, rather than fob off a reporter with some meaningless platitudes about the lads giving it 110%, Barry gave an honest assessment of the team’s failings up to that point.

What Barry served up was not the usual scripted optimism but a raw autopsy of England’s opening-half paralysis, pinpointing that the team were suffering from an excess of nervous energy in what he described as a “complicated and confusing” 45 minutes.

He criticised the mentality of the players for falling into “fearful patterns”, and making the wrong decisions – as he put it: “Playing longer when we should play short, playing short when we should play long, and not playing through the gaps, not allowing us to accelerate our game the way we wanted to.”

Barry was honest enough to admit that even the gift of an early penalty had not settled the team. Saying that nervous energy was “maybe expected in the opening game of a World Cup”, he nevertheless lamented that the early goal did not free the team up “to play more like ourselves”.

He didn’t offer a smile for the cameras. He finished with the blunt assessment: “We conceded the second goal late on, and now we have to speak about that at half-time,” leaving viewers with the distinct impression of a man heading down the tunnel with a clipboard full of problems to solve.

During his playing days as a midfielder, Barry knocked around the lower leagues with spells at Yeovil, Chester, Fleetwood Town and Forest Green, but if he isn’t a particularly familiar face to TV viewers – yet – he is very much a familiar face to Tuchel.

After launching his coaching career in 2015 and working with Wigan, Barry joined Chelsea in 2020, where he served under Tuchel before following the manager to Bayern Munich in 2023. Alongside these club roles, Barry built an impressive international résumé assisting the Republic of Ireland, Belgium and Portugal, before stepping in to the England assistant manager role.

His on-screen diagnosis of an England performance that delivered an inspiring result but which was far from flawless mirrored Tuchel’s assessment after the final whistle. The German said “sometimes you want it too much and you overthink it” before noting that there were far too many backward passes for his liking.

“I told them to calm down,” Tuchel said of his half-time talk. “To calm down, calm their nerves. And encourage them to do it our way.” Armchair viewers of England’s World Cup campaign look as if they could get to enjoy an unprecedented insight into what the management team are about to tell the players in the dressing-room.

 

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