Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
FourFourTwo
FourFourTwo
Sport
Richard Laverty

Theo Walcott: I should have never gone to the 2006 World Cup

Theo Walcott speaks about his career to Gary Neville on Sky Bet's The Overlap

Theo Walcott has admitted he “should never have gone” to the World Cup in 2006 when he was selected as a 17-year-old by then England head coach Sven-Goran Eriksson.  

After bursting onto the scene with Southampton, Walcott had joined Arsenal that January but was untested at senior international level, playing for the Under 21s in May leading up to the tournament days before appearing in the first team.  

Walcott didn’t see any game time in Germany that summer, but Eriksson maintained the experience would stand Walcott in good stead for the future, but the newly retired forward admitted to Gary Neville on SkyBet’s The Overlap this week that it was a mistake to go.  

Theo Walcott went to the 2006 World Cup but didn't see minutes at the tournament (Image credit: David Ashdown/Getty Images)

“I’ve to be kind of nice [when talking about the media] if I want to go into it [media career]. Honestly, as a 17-year-old going to the World Cup for me, I should never have gone, I’ve said this.  

“Essentially, you try telling a 17-year-old to go and say they’re not going to the World Cup for England, I wasn’t going to do that. I didn’t play in the Premier League at all, so I hadn’t asked of it, but the manager saw something in me, and in the end I didn’t play.”  

VIDEO: Why David Raya Is Better For Arsenal Than Aaron Ramsdale (And Why He's Not)

Walcott went on to have a successful career but also one which was blighted by injury, while he would eventually go on to represent the Three Lions 47 times. 

Expanding further on that time of his career, he believes both England and Arsenal perhaps should have done more to protect him. 

England manager Sven Goran Eriksson picked Theo Walcott for his 23-man England squad – despite the teen having never played in the Premier League before (Image credit: Bruno Vincent/Getty Images)

“Probably both I’d say, [on whether England or Arsène Wenger should’ve stopped him going to the World Cup] because I’d already played up an age for England, so I was already in the books of ‘keep an eye on this kid’ I suppose. I probably could’ve been protected in that sense.  

“I knew Sven [Goran-Eriksson] was coming to training and I didn’t think anything of it. Obviously, you’ve got Ashley [Cole] and Sol [Campbell] and then I remember Arsène [Wenger] saying ‘he’s going to watch you’ and I’m like ok, alright, just thinking for the future type of thing. Then suddenly, that happened, and my whole life changed.” 

More Arsenal stories

Arsenal transfer news is coming thick and fast as we enter the final few weeks of the summer window.

The Gunners are reportedly willing to offer two players to Inter Milan in exchange for Nicolo Barella – and they could be about to complete the signing of David Raya from Brentford on quite an unusual basis. Arsenal are also said to have made an audacious approach for one of Barcelona’s most exciting young talents.

In FourFourTwo's Season Preview, we ask whether Arsenal are truly back, following last season's title challenge.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.