Football
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Ross Barkley says England squad experience made him grow up

Ross Barkley thinks he grew from a boy into a man this summer as a result of his chastening World Cup experience with England.

Barkley looked every inch a star in the making in June when he impressed on his first England start in the humid heat in Miami.

The Everton midfielder nutmegged one Ecuador player and drifted past another before setting Rickie Lambert up for England's second goal in the 2-2 draw.

As a result of his performance, debate sparked as to whether Barkley, 20, should start for England in Brazil, possibly even at the expense of Wayne Rooney.

So it came as something of a surprise that Roy Hodgson criticised the midfielder at his post-match news conference in Florida.

"I'm not prepared to address your obsession with Ross Barkley," the England manager snapped, uncharacteristically. "He lost the ball an awful lot of times. If he's going to be the player we want him to be, he has to make better decisions of when he turns with the ball."

Barkley had every right to feel aggrieved. There were shades of Rooney's show-stopping displays in Euro 2004 about his performance. Ecuador could not handle his pace, power and trickery.

But he was not offended.

"I learned from that experience," Barkley said of being criticised. "I'm the type of player who takes risks so now and then I'm going to give the ball away, but I just have to learn not to give the ball away in silly areas of the pitch.

"And I learned from being around the likes of [Leighton] Baines, Stevie [Gerrard] and [Frank] Lampard this summer. I learned that it's not a kids' game anymore."

The fact that Barkley even managed to get to the World Cup is remarkable.

"A year or two ago, I was playing reserve football," said Barkley, who had only one full year of first-team football at Everton before being called up to the World Cup squad.

Barkley had to rough it in the Championship with loan spells at Sheffield Wednesday and Leeds before he was deemed good enough for a place in the Everton first team.

"I went out on loan from being a kid to going into a man's game," Barkley said. "When I came back from Leeds, things started to change as I was getting on the pitch more. It's more serious, more professional, playing with better players, playing against better players.

"When I was younger I was getting the ball and able to take all the players on as I was bigger and stronger but in the Premier League you cannot do that."

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