England manager Roy Hodgson looks set be attending Celtic’s
Champions League tie against Barcelona to run the rule over Gary Hooper.
This leads to the question that many fans have been asking
for a while now- is Gary Hooper really good enough for England?
In 2006 Hooper was playing semi-professional football for
Grays Athletic in the Conference National, where he was eventually released,
and six years on he is playing in the Champions League with Celtic.
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The Celtic fans are used to seeing Hooper celebrate |
Celtic’s number 88 has been no stranger to the score sheet
since joining the Hoops in 2010 and this has perhaps forced Hodgson to consider
him for the England squad.
In Hooper’s first season with Celtic he found the net 22
times in 36 appearances, with one European goal against S.C. Braga (Champions
League qualifier). He finished the second highest scorer in the SPL and picked
up three yellow cards.
During his first season with Celtic he had the best strike
rate of any player in Britain, scoring 20 goals in 26 games.
His second season saw him score 29 times in 49 appearances,
this time scoring two European goals against Stade Rennais and Udinese
respectively (Europa League). He
finished as top scorer in the SPL and picked up three yellow cards.
After not scoring in his first five games of the current
season, Hooper has regained his scoring form and netted 10 times in 18
appearances. He has scored two European goals thus far, one against
Helsingborgs (Champions League qualifier) and the opener in Celtic’s famous
away victory at Spartak Moscow (Champions League group stages).
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Hooper doing what he does best in the Champions League |
Hooper has scored 61 goals in 96 appearances for Celtic,
averaging around 0.63 goals per game.
Celtic goalkeeper Fraser Forster has already had a call up
to the England squad after some fine European performances, but it’s fair to
say that as long as Joe Hart is fit and able Forster will find his time on the pitch
for England very limited.
Hooper will also have to outshine the likes of Daniel
Sturridge, Danny Welbeck, Andy Carroll and maybe even Jermain Defoe if he is
ever going to make the grade for his national team.
In England’s last three games Sturridge, Welbeck, Carroll
and Defoe have all featured on the team sheet, and if Hooper was to force his
way into the England squad one of these players would probably have to make
way.
Daniel Sturridge has made eight appearances so far this
season for club and country. In his seven appearances for Chelsea he has found
the net once and he failed to score for England against Ukraine.
Manchester United forward Danny Welbeck has made 15 appearances
for United and England, scoring twice in England’s 5-0 victory over San Marino
and once in United’s 4-2 win against Stoke.
Andy Carroll began the season with Liverpool, playing in a
3-0 defeat at West Brom and a 2-2 draw with Manchester City, before being sent
on loan to West Ham. He has failed to score for Liverpool, West Ham or England
in 8 appearances so far this season.
Jermain Defoe has played 12 times for Tottenham and three for
England this season. He has scored once
for England, in their 5-0 win against Moldova and five times for Tottenham in
the Premier League.
Hooper’s scoring statistics come from a league which is a
world away in terms of quality compared to that of the Premier League, but he
has managed to score in European compeition this season- something which Welbeck, Sturridge and Defoe have not.
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It's unlikely Forster will take Joe Hart's place in the England set up any time soon. |
The Hoops' forward has fallen subject to some criticism this season for
looking lacklustre at times, but his scoring statistics for Celtic make for
impressive reading and he has seemingly turned his season around after a slow
start.
There is more to Hooper's game than just being a
goal-scoring poacher; he can fall deep, hold up the ball well and is more than
capable of picking out a pass.
However none of this ability was displayed against Barcelona
when Celtic played them at the Nou Camp, with Hooper stuck in uncharted territory
up the field in Barcelona’s half.
My initial feeling is that Hooper is not good enough to play
for England. Although, if he was surrounded by a squad of a far higher standard
than he already is, who knows what he is capable of.
Perhaps there is only one way to find out.
If Roy Hodgson does take
a trip to Celtic Park next Wednesday night, it will at least not be in vain should
Hooper fail to shine; Fraser Forster will have numerous chances to show the
England manager what he’s made of.