The England team is blessed with right-back options and the Manchester united rightback defender remains behind his rivals in the national team manager’s plans
England manager Gareth Southgate says Aaron Wan-Bissaka is not in his squad as he remains a step behind his rivals for the right-back spot.
The Three Lions are blessed with options in the position and the latest squad includes Trent Alexander-Arnold, Kieran Trippier, Kyle Walker and Reece James, as well as Arsenal duo of Maitland-Niles and Bukayo Saka who can play as wing-backs.
Aron Wan-Bissaka has impressed defensively since joining Manchester United from Crystal Palace for a reported £50 million ($65m) last year.
In 2019-20 the right back won 80 tackles in the Premier League, 11 more than any other defender, and was only dribbled past by an opponent on 22 occasions.
By contrast, Alexander-Arnold was beaten 42 times by an opponent dribbling past him last season, but the Liverpool man’s record-breaking 13 assists – the most by any defender in a Premier League season – underline the attacking qualities that Southgate favours.
To that end, Chelsea’s James was included for this month’s matches with the Republic of Ireland, Belgium and Iceland despite having to serve a suspension in the UEFA Nations League.
“It’s an area of the pitch where we are blessed,” Southgate said. “Reece and Trent have both played as wing-backs as well as full-backs. They are in outstanding form and we are probably stronger there than in any other position.
“Aaron is a very good defender, one against one he’s probably as good as I have seen, but I have to look at the balance of the team and currently there are players ahead of him.”
Southgate also suggested he could speak to Jamie Vardy if the Leicester City striker continues his form until next year’s Euro 2020 finals.
Jarmie Vardy, 33, has scored seven goals this season to propel a strong Leicester start that included a 5-2 victory over Manchester City at the Etihad Stadium, where he got a hat-trick.
He retired from England duty after the World Cup in 2018 but said in March that he and Southgate “agreed the door would still be open for whatever reason” to a national team return.
“Jamie is playing as well as any forward in the country, there’s no two ways about that,” Southgate said. “We know exactly what he can bring, and he is probably benefiting from having a rest during international breaks rather than joining up with England. It would be another matter if we were going into a championship, but at the moment we are not.”