Michael Pavitt
David Owen head and shoulders 1Phil Neville, the former Manchester United, Everton and England footballer turned BBC pundit, swam against the tide this week.

While many in the country that invented football were bemoaning the FIFA task force recommendation to stage the 2022 World Cup in November and December, Neville said it might be "the best thing that's ever happened" to England.

This was on the grounds that English players would be far fresher than during the World Cup's traditional time-slot in June and July.

"We normally go into a World Cup at the end of a long, hard, nine-month season when our players are absolutely dead on their feet," he observed sagely.

There is nothing like a statistic for ruining a good story and I was frankly sceptical of this "lambs in spring, lions in winter" theory.

However, on this occasion the record triumphantly vindicates Neville's words: never in the more than 142 years since England and Scotland drew 0-0 in the first football international in 1872 - on November 30, funnily enough - have England lost an international match in December.

There are some special circumstances that need to be taken into account; first and foremost, England do not often play in December, and have not done so at all for nearly 20 years.

Nevertheless, the team's record over the 19 December matches that they have played is, as a much-loved commentator might have said, "quite remarkable": Played 19 Won 15 Drawn 4 Lost 0 Goals for 68 - so three and a half per match. Goals against 20.

And while the biggest December win of all was a 9-0 drubbing of little Luxembourg in 1982, most of the victories were against far higher-class opposition, the likes of France, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Spain.

Former England footballer Phil Neville believes the Qatar 2022 World Cup being held in November and December could suit England ©Getty ImagesFormer England footballer Phil Neville believes the Qatar 2022 World Cup being held in November and December could suit England ©Getty Images






They include a 3-1 win over the then West Germany on 1 December 1954, less than five months after the Germans were crowned world champions.

The only thing is, every one of their December opponents over the years have been European.

By comparison, England's record over the far larger number of matches they have contested in the busy international month of June, including many World Cup games and some of the most vividly-remembered clashes in the history of England's national sport, reads as follows: Played 157 Won 71 Drawn 48 Lost 38.

Not bad, but far from the invincibility displayed decade after decade, since a 4-0 demolition of Belgium in 1924, in December.

So, one can say, it is statistically proven that, never mind how we got here, England would be well advised, if they ever want to win the World Cup again, to go along with FIFA's latest wheeze.

Indeed, you might argue, seven years out, that a second star above the crest on the national team shirt is almost in the bag.

There is just one hitch in the fiendish plan that, thanks to Phil Neville, is taking shape in my brain: the vital matches to decide whether or not England qualifies for history's first December World Cup might be in June.

England's football record in December

           Year                      Opponent                      Score                         Result

1.        1924                        Belgium                          4-0                            W

2.        1931                        Spain                              7-1                            W

3.        1932                        Austria                            4-3                            W

4.        1933                        France                            4-1                            W

5.        1935                        Germany                         3-0                            W

6.        1936                        Hungary                          6-2                            W

7.        1937                        Czechoslovakia                5-4                           W

8.        1948                        Switzerland                      6-0                           W

9.        1954                        West Germany                3-1                            W

10.      1956                        Denmark                         5-2                            W

11.      1964                        Netherlands                     1-1                            D

12.      1965                        Spain                              2-0                            W

13.      1967                        USSR                             2-2                             D

14.      1968                        Bulgaria                          1-1                             D

15.      1969                        Portugal                          1-0                             W

16.      1971                        Greece                           2-0                             W

17.      1982                        Luxembourg                    9-0                             W

18.      1989                        Yugoslavia                      2-1                             W

19.      1995                         Portugal                        1-1                              D   


David Owen worked for 20 years for the Financial Times in the United States, Canada, France and the UK. He ended his FT career as sports editor after the 2006 World Cup and is now freelancing, including covering the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the 2010 World Cup and London 2012. Owen's Twitter feed can be accessed here