
Gary
Cahill admits his omission from the Chelsea first-team earlier in the season
had him worried over his immediate England future.
The 30-year-old will captain England in the absence of Wayne Rooney in their
friendly match against Germany at the Olympiastadion in Berlin on Saturday
night.
It has been a year to forget for all involved at Chelsea, with the Blues
failing to defend their Premier League crown and slipping to within an
uncomfortable distance of the relegation zone before sacking Jose Mourinho
in December.
Guus Hiddink's return to Stamford Bridge saw Cahill's first-team outings
decline for much of December and January, with Kurt Zouma and John Terry the
preferred central defensive partnership.
Cahill has since enjoyed a resurgence at Chelsea after Zouma was ruled out
for the remainder of the season with a serious knee injury suffered in
Chelsea's 1-1 draw against Manchester United in February.
And having started Chelsea's last nine games, Cahill says he is looking
cement his place in Roy Hodgson's England team ahead of the 2016 European
Championships in France.
"First and foremost it is good that I'm back in the team and back out
playing, it was concerning for me at that moment in time," he said when
asked about his lack of games around the turn of the year.
"I'm a player that wants to be out playing just like everyone else as much
as possible because you can't show what you can do when you're not in the
team.
"It is important for me to be back in the team, everyone is aware of the
season and the situation we have had at Chelsea and that has not been too
great.
"Form-wise I feel good, I feel fit - it is important that I'm out there, I'm
feeling sharp and getting game time."
Cahill has only once before captained England from the start of an
international - the 2016 European Championships qualification victory at
home to Estonia in October - and he is relishing the prospect of again
leading his country.
"To play for your country is enough but to be captain is a very special
moment and one I'm looking forward to," he said.
"We spoke a few months ago and said we were going in the right direction,
the qualification group went tremendously well.
"We have got two games coming up now (against Germany and Holland) that are
equally as good tests, not the be all and end all but nevertheless, the way
we want to play we are working on all the time and I think we are going in
the right direction without getting too carried away.
"When you pull on the England shirt you want to go out and do the very best
and get victories playing the right way, we know we are going to be judged,
especially against tough opposition like this.
"We want to go on playing the way we have been playing and hope that is
enough. It is another great test and one we are all looking forward to."