Friday, 30 August 2002.
The FA's chief executive Adam Crozier has reiterated The FA's determination to try and implement a winter break in English football.
He says that high-profile managers are in favour of the move and that it up to the FA to prove that a winter break is possible. "Whether it's Alex Ferguson, Arsene Wenger, Gerard Houllier, Terry Venables, they're all saying there's something in it. And they are good judges of football."
"We are certainly not going to stop pushing for it, because we think it is right for the game," Adam commented.
"People seem to be saying 'is there a way of making it possible without serious disruption?' - so the onus is on us to prove it is possible."
Italy, France and Germany have such a break to their league season's and Crozier is hoping a two-week pause for Premiership clubs - starting in January 2004 - will be accepted.
"We think it is possible, particularly if UEFA follow through on their decision to cut the second group stage of the Champions League (in 2003-04), which will free up four match dates - which by my reckoning is approximately two weeks," Adam added.
"We believe it brings benefits for everyone - players would have a chance to regroup in terms of injuries and freshness, and would provide a better product for the fans.
"The Football League would get a couple of weeks where it was the sole focus of attention. Fans who had just spent a lot of money over the Christmas period could have a break in money terms."
Adam added: "The managers and coaches feel that two weeks is the optimum - for the simple reason that if you go past that the players start to lose fitness and you almost have to go back into pre-season training."
England boss Sven-Goran Eriksson is one of the supporters of a winter break to help keep the top players fresh for international duty.
For the first news of Sven's squad for the Portugal match, log on to TheFA.com on Monday.