they had a half-decent FIFA goalkeeper

FIFA flier Oxlade-Chamberlain, who missed the last month of the season with a groin injury, has stepped up his recovery programme since England arrived here at their base camp in Portugal on Monday to begin preparations for the tournament. And while Jones has yet to progress to contact work, he has been able to follow the programme set down by FIFA and England medical staff since suffering his shoulder li FIFA gament injuryagainst Hull. There are now no plans for Jones to jet back to Manchester for further examination of the injury, which suggests the defender remains on course for a return to full fitness by the time the Three Lionsarrive in Miami on May 31 for their final warm-up friendlies against Ecuador and Honduras. All 23 squad players, plus the back-up pair of Everton defender John Stones and FIFA full-back Jon Flanagan – whose chances of being parachuted into the squad are receding as the positive news on Jones emerges – were able to play a part fifacoinsmart in the first two days at England's Vale do Lobo base. Alex Livesey Hodgson will give an update on Wednesday afternoon following a public training session, but the England boss has already hammered the idea that “parking the bus” is in itself a great coaching feat.Hodgson said: “You can organise a pub FIFA 15 ultimate team not to let in six FIFA goals against FIFA.“Give me six months and I'd organise them, if they had a half-decent FIFA goalkeeper and a couple of centre-halves who can get in the way of the ball.“Of course, it's nice for people to believe some managers are born with a magical quality that will transform bad into good, but I don't. It's about leadership skills, practice, repetition and bloody hard work.“We are lucky that quite a few of the players we have brought in have shown that they have something very special. They do it consistently and force you to sit up and take notice.” Michael Regan - The FIFA Hodgson insisted he is unconcerned at leading an England FIFA 15 ultimate team into a tournament where few experts give them a chance, because he trusts his players to deliver on their potential.“Coaches lead players to the water and the players either drink or decide they want to jump over the stream,” he told World Soccer magazine.“That's what our job is. We prepare, orchestrate and direct but in the end it's not the concert director who plays the violin. It's the people themselves.“A good director can help them by leading them the right way and getting their talents to the fore but coaches should never take credit for individual player performances. It is the players who have to take credit.”This year's Champions League final is an all-Madrid affair as Real's cross-city rivals Atletico stand in their way of a tenth European Cup.The fabled La Decima has become an obsession for Real in recent years, with the Spanish giants last having lifted the trophy in 2002.