birminghammail.co.uk

Thomas Tuchel lays down law to Unai Emery over Marcus Rashford, Morgan Rogers and Ezri Konsa

Aston Villa face quarter-final ties in both the Champions League and FA Cup after the international break, with Unai Emery's side also battling for a top-four finish in the Premier League

Comments

Sport

England's manager Thomas Tuchel

England's manager Thomas Tuchel(Image: CameraSport via Getty Images)

Thomas Tuchel appreciates club managers' concerns about players at this crucial stage of the season but says his focus is on England's targets ahead of their second World Cup qualifier in four days.

Having managed Borussia Dortmund, Bayern Munich, Paris St Germain and Chelsea, the 51-year-old is tasting life on the international side of the fence for the first time.

Article continues below

Tuchel is preparing to host Latvia on Monday after starting his England reign with a 2-0 win against Albania and pondering how best to juggle the turnaround while maximising time with the group.

The German admits he would have preferred players not to play in back-to-back internationals when a club coach, but the shoe is now on the other foot.

"I know that this window, this camp, is where the clubs play a very crucial time of the season," Tuchel told BBC Radio 5 Live. "They play for championships, they play for quarter-finals in the Champions League.

"We are very well aware of it but we have also our own goals, we have our own targets. The players are keen to play and it has to be like this.

"I always accepted it as a club manager. I never got involved in line-ups, I never pushed any national coach because I was hoping that my players get picked, I was also hoping that they are proud to play.

"Of course, you're never happy if something happens. No-one can predict that there is no accident, but we have a World Cup qualifier and we'll take responsible decisions."

Aston Villa face quarter-final ties in both the Champions League and FA Cup after the international break, with Unai Emery's side also battling for a top-four finish in the Premier League - and they have Ezri Konsa, Morgan Rogers and on-loan Marcus Rashford in Tuchel's squad.

Tuchel says he has not heard from any managers this week about England's players and playfully pointed out how clubs look after their own needs.

"After a 7-1 first leg and Declan Rice played the next match with Arsenal, I didn't have the feeling that they think so much about us," the England boss said, pointing to the recent Champions League tie against PSV Eindhoven.

"I don't think we have to break our heads about this.

"I take care about the players. We take care about the schedule, but it would be the wrong signal to tell players now, 'Hey, you have tough matches coming up, so I rest you now'.

"We have a qualifier to play, we do what's good for us. We monitor them, we are in contact with the clubs, we are in high-level monitoring where the status is and we will not take any unprofessional risks.

Article continues below

"Because first of all I feel responsible for the players. I don't want the player to be injured, I want the player to play quarter-finals of the Champions League – all of them – because I want to watch it, I want to see it.

"So, this is where it is and in the end we take care about us and the clubs take care about themselves and the main focus is taking care of the players."

Read full news in source page