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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Sport
Andy Dunn

Chelsea's Callum Hudson-Odoi determined to force way into England's Euro 2020 attack

Callum Hudson-Odoi is determined to gatecrash Gareth Southgate’s attacking party.

Southgate has generally permed three from four when it comes to settling on his offensive options and his selection policy has paid dividends.

England are averaging 4.33 goals per game in qualifying for Euro 2020 - easily the highest rate amongst the 55 nations taking part. At 3.75 per game, only Belgium come close.

And Southgate normally relies on a combination of Raheem Sterling and Harry Kane along with either Jadon Sancho or Marcus Rashford.

Whatever trio he fields, Southgate believes he has one of the finest attacks in international football.

Callum Hudson-Odoi has impressed at Chelsea so far this season (Getty Images)

But with Sterling dropped and doubts emerging over Sancho’s form and fitness, Hudson-Odoi is sensing a chance to break up Southgate’s forward cabal.

He said: “That is a motivation for me, definitely. Jadon is still young but they have done exceptionally well for a number of years.

“So when people say they are the best front three, for me it's a motivation because I want to be one of them as well.

“I want to be around it and have people say… okay, there's five of them now. I always try and push myself.”

After his 2018/19 campaign was marked by a contract stand-off, persistent links with a move to Bayern Munich and an injury that ended his season prematurely, Hudson-Odoi is certainly in a happier place right now.

And for that, a lot of the credit goes to Frank Lampard, who convinced the 19-year-old his future was with Chelsea.

Hudson-Odoi in training for England (Getty Images)

So how many conversations with his new club manager did it take for Hudson-Odoi to be persuaded to sign a new contract?

“One! He believes in me, he wants me to play for him and he wants me to work hard,” explained Hudson-Odoi.

“They were the things you want to hear from a manager, that he believes in you and he has faith in you, that you can achieve a lot of stuff at the club.”

Not that Lampard indulges the prodigiously talented youngster. Far from it.

“He is hard on me,” said Hudson-Odoi. “But it is in a good way because he wants me to keep getting better. When the manager is telling me stuff, I always want to listen and improve my game because I'm not there yet.”

Hudson-Odoi celebrates a goal for England Under-21s (Getty Images)

And Hudson-Odoi is clearly relishing his time with both Lampard and Southgate, explaining: “I think they are quite similar. The way they both play, they wanted to do the same methods.

“As a winger or an attacking midfielder, they want you to be in certain positions to receive the ball, they want you to get at the defenders one-on-one and contribute as much to the team as possible.

“They have the same mentality.”

And clearly, both have a disciplinarian streak, judging by Southgate’s punishment of Sterling and Lampard’s bad behaviour tariff.

“It’s pretty strict,” said Hudson-Odoi, referring to Frank’s fines. “But even if there weren't fines, we would still be on point. We're very positive about everything we do.”

With that, Hudson-Odoi’s mobile phone rings.

That’s a grand, Callum. He laughs. in fact, right now, you can’t keep the grin off his face.

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