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MIAMI — Thomas Tuchel always felt himself a little bit English. Well, he is one of us now, anglicised by the match trying to fathom how the players he sees at our clubs become mysteriously something other in an England shirt.

Tuchel, the great German technician brought to the post to make us less English in the later stages of major tournaments, ends up just as grateful as his predecessors for the indomitable spirit that binds us.

Tuchel will be loved forever for the honesty and candour of his post-match rant bemoaning the lack of quality and method that left his team so close to disaster against Norway.

But that will not save him should his own mistakes continue to work against the good in his team. The problem he faces in Atlanta is not so much working out how to blunt Lionel Messi and Argentina but how to unlock his own side and maintain his alliance with Jude Bellingham.

Like us, Tuchel is thankful for the talismanic, super human, a player who simply refuses to shrink before the responsibility of leading this team. But there is clearly a tension from less happier days when Tuchel questioned his attitude and singular approach.

“Sometimes it’s not technical or tactical,” Bellingham said, “It’s psychological, how you manage setbacks, how you manage adversity. You’re not going to win every game popping the ball and making a thousand passes. Sometimes you have to win dirty.”

MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA - JULY 11: Reece James #24 of England controls the ball away from Patrick Berg #6 of Norway during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Quarter Final match between Norway and England at Miami Stadium on July 11, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Photo by Michael Pimentel/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images)
Putting James in midfield was an insult to Mainoo (Photo: Getty)

This was essentially Bellingham’s retort to Tuchel’s frustration and anger. We were lucky, argued Tuchel. He was right. Tuchel also said he loved his team, but that context was lost in the immediacy of post-match processing.

“Maybe he doesn’t know what it’s like to play in those conditions against Erling Haaland, [Martin] Odegard, [Antonio] Nusa and [Alexander] Sorloth. That’s not an easy team to play against,” Bellingham said.

Maybe Norway was the contest that laid tensions bare, that stripped camp England of all pretension. The blade of truth is out, cutting through the rhetoric. The requirement now is an honest appraisal of how we progressed to a fifth World Cup semi-final without remotely hitting a peak.

And part of that is to address his own contribution to the diminution of rhythm and pattern on the pitch. He might start with midfield. The part of the pitch served with distinction by Bellingham malfunctions around him partly because of Tuchel’s bizarre reluctance to play Kobbie Mainoo and the unavailability of Jordan Henderson, whose selection always looked a punt too far.

With England falling into disarray sans Declan Rice, it was almost an insult to Mainoo to deploy Reece James at the base of the scrum instead of him. And to have Henderson bouncing around in full kit with a pot on his arm was cultish nonsense.

Reheating Tuchel’s selection foibles will not bring Cole Palmer, Phil Foden or Jarrod Bowen back for Wednesday. If there is a lack of quality in his squad it is of Tuchel’s own making. Having chosen Mainoo his continued exclusion feels unreasonable.

Tuchel’s frustration is our frustration. How to get 11 players to be the sum of their parts, to impact matches like they do for their clubs. Norway stood off in the first half but England didn’t pick up on the deference shown them and were too risk-averse. Tuchel demands dynamism and gets diffidence.

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Argentina are essentially peopled by players from the Premier League’s top six plus Messi. There ought to be no surprises and, to quote Franklin D. Roosevelt, little to fear accept fear itself.

The post-match mantra is always the same. We have to improve, we can get better. And before the next the optimism is back. He wants front foot aggression, to attack with skill and confidence. Be the best England we can be.

The tournament is in his hands as much as the players’. To live the dream in Atlanta and beyond England need a better game from their manager too.



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Even the wording is eerily similar. Like back in 1983, Gabriel Clarke probably expected Thomas Tuchel to eulogise about what his England players had just achieved in reaching the World Cup semi-final from the outset.

Just as an irate Sir Alex Ferguson did, after guiding Aberdeen to cup success over Rangers 43 years ago, Tuchel instead laid down the gauntlet to his jubilant charges – he wants and expects more.

Ferguson labelled that Aberdeen showing a disgrace. While Tuchel did not go quite as far, the thinking behind engaging in such psychological warfare is the same. It is what elite managers do.

Ilkay Gundogan explained how Pep Guardiola was always harsher on his players when they won. One particular example he cited upon the Catalan’s Manchester City farewell was when, in 2022, City had just become the first team in Champions League history to lead an away knockout tie by at least four goals at half-time against Sporting Lisbon, Guardiola came into the dressing room fuming.

Certain passes weren’t right as he berated his players – if they played like that in the next round, they were out.

Tuchel has created an environment with England where such tough love works.

Earlier in the tournament, the German’s trusty lieutenant Anthony Barry became the star of the show for his forthright views on England’s first-half performance against Croatia.

And not just among the expectant masses back home – the players were totally on board.

“You need it,” Nico O’Reilly said. “I mean, if you’re not doing something right, or you’re not doing so well, someone there to tell you, I think it’s the right thing to do.”

Jude Bellingham’s immediate response was to bite back. But that would have been welcomed by Tuchel and his staff too. Tuchel has picked a squad in his mould, to much criticism. How could he leave players of the talent of Phil Foden, Cole Palmer and Trent Alexander-Arnold at home and take Jordan Henderson and Djed Spence instead?

Nothing is without reason with the meticulous England obsessive. The squad was picked to cope with this kind of challenge. It may seem trivial to some, but vibes within the group really are just as important as the ability of any player.

Gareth Southgate did a lot of good in the England setup. St George’s Park looks like it does and offers the path to stardom it can as a result of measures he and Dan Ashworth put in place.

Southgate’s managerial persona was more akin to a diplomat than a Tuchel-type disruptor. While his record of two major finals trumps anything since Sir Alf Ramsey, in the heat of the moment, 2018 against Croatia and the Euro 2020 final immediately spring to mind, when England lacked that killer instinct to reach the promised land again.

Tuchel has learned the hard way, after dealing with Paris Saint-Germain’s “bling-bling” era, that being an elite manager, you need to do things your way, no matter what the naysayers say.

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Take his in-game substitutions. Every decision is preordained, right back to his squad selection and picking players for particular moments, not for their overall ability. Dan Burn has had a greater effect on results than many starters, for example. How many others would have even brought the Newcastle United defender along?

Knockout football is a results business, not an aesthetically pleasing performance one. And this is when Tuchel comes alive. His record in knockout football speaks for itself, but it is no fluke.

This is what elite managers do. There is no resting on laurels. Every decision has a consequence. And it is why England perhaps have their greatest chance of ending 60 years hurt more than ever before.



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Jude Bellingham is now second for non-penalty major tournament goals in the history of the England national team. No England player has ever scored more goals than him at a single World Cup or European Championship. Bellingham is also the second-youngest appearance maker for England at this World Cup. Read that last one again. This does not make sense.

Every major tournament goal is momentous, but even so: Bellingham scored England’s first goal in Qatar and their first in Germany. He has scored 90th-minute equalisers, opening goals and game changers. He has scored twice in two minutes. He has carried an entire team on his back during this tournament. Harry Kane has the same number of goals, but for impact there is no fair fight.

Herein lies the great irony. They accused Bellingham of being arrogant. They said that his demand to be the protagonist, his main character energy, was in danger of dragging England down. Now that is exactly what they must celebrate him for being and doing. Bellingham has been named Man of the Match in four of England’s six games. He is the literal main character.

He gets frustrated because he wants to win? Fine by me – I want that too. He throws up his arms in frustration when things aren’t going his way? I’d rather my footballers looked like they care than the opposite. He demands perfection from teammates? Great, if he demands it from himself too (and he does). We have a World Cup to win. This isn’t a school sports day.

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Mistakes may have been made. It would be weirder if not. If you put up a list of the personal lapses of judgement in my late teens and early 20s on a big screen in even a small town centre, I’d move permanently to live in a large hole in the middle of nowhere. Growing up is a non-linear pursuit and doing so as a superstar is a thousand times harder than in some quiet corner of any country you can think of.

The accusation of arrogance is harder to parse without getting angry. For arrogance is an inflation of one’s own importance and I don’t think it possible to overstate Jude’s. Self-assurance – now that’s different: an understanding of your ability and a psychological process to maintain belief in challenging or high-pressure situations. There is no footballer on the planet more capable of doing that at the same age than Bellingham. You can’t overstate the importance so arrogance becomes impossible.

Not only do we tend to conflate arrogance and self-assurance, we (and I mean the English here) fall into the trap of seeing demonstrative shows of confidence differently in outsiders. Eric Cantona can walk in with a collar turned up as if he owned the place, to quote Roy Keane, and become iconic. As a sporting culture we are wedded to the eternal fear of pride before a fall and as a result are rotten at allowing confidence to run free. No shows of self-belief please, we’re English.

For Bellingham, an extra challenge: few people truly know him. He is unique, a magnificent, generational English talent who has never made a single Premier League appearance. He doesn’t like speaking to the media (which is entirely his fair choice) and doesn’t like the intrusion. That lack of knowledge has bred rumour, conjecture and information that is hard to prove or disprove.

But what was never in doubt is that this talent always had to be front and centre because his talent and attitude deserves it. There is the second irony: the questions were over personality but find me a player in this World Cup who has worked harder for their country. Even without the goals, the dribbles, the ball protection, the passes and the tackles, Bellingham runs for two. Do as I say and as I do; I’m fine with that.

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Kevin Garside: Jude Bellingham saves ‘sloppy’ England to book World Cup semi-final spot

Quiz: How many can England questions can you get right?

There is a link to England’s manager here too. In his interview after full-time in Miami, Thomas Tuchel was angry with the performance. England had just made a World Cup semi-final; surely happiness is the only appropriate emotion? How arrogant of Tuchel, thinking England should be even better. Or perhaps: this is how the elite think. Good is never good enough. Pats on the back only come at the end of the road, never halfway.

Bellingham did not engage with the criticism. He knew what he could do and he knew how self-assurance would assist it. A kid from Stourbridge walked into the Bernabeu and believed he could own it. He landed at this tournament and believed that being 23 was no barrier to leading your national team to its greatest day.

So forget arrogance and its negative connotations for good and just watch, appreciate, admire. Even if Jude Bellingham did believe that he was the centre of England’s world, it’s a joy to live in it. You wouldn’t want him to be anywhere but here.



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Just three games are between England and winning the World Cup for the first time in 60 years.

Tonight, Thomas Tuchel’s side are in Miami as they take on Norway for a spot in the semi-finals.

The Three Lions will be buoyed by Monday’s impressive victory against Mexico when they held on with 10 men to beat the co-hosts 3-2 at the Azteca, but tonight also presents a tough test as they come up against a Norway side spearheaded by Erling Haaland.

England are without defender Jarrel Quansah, who is seeing out a two-match ban after being sent off in Mexico. Defender Marc Guehi has been suffering with a hamstring issue, while midfielder Declan Rice has had a sickness bug and Reece James has only just returned to training.

With Quansah ruled out and James not deemed fit enough to start, Thomas Tuchel has opted to shift Ezri Konsa to right-back with John Stones slotting in alongside Guehi for an all-Manchester City centre-back pairing to combat clubmate Haaland.

Noni Madueke replaces his Arsenal teammate Bukayo Saka on the right-wing, with England otherwise unchanged from the side who beat Mexico.

Should England overcome Norway then victory sets up a semi-final tie against Argentina, as long as they beat Switzerland in their quarter-final in the early hours of Sunday morning. Either France or Spain would then await in the final should England make it that far.

Follow The i Paper’s live blog for the latest updates below.

This England team has something I’ve never seen before

England have two game-changers in Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham (Photo: Getty)
England have two game-changers in Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham (Photo: Getty)

The dartboard is still there, players taking it in turns to take down Peter Crouch with bonhomie or even a well-placed arrow.

The content boom that became such a crowd-pleaser during Gareth Southgate’s great English makeover is an easy icebreaker for media sessions, lightening the mood and loosening tongues.

The return to Kansas City post-Mexico was supposed to be about decompressing before rising again in Miami, where Norway await in Saturday’s quarter-final.

While there has been some of that, Morgan Rogers explaining the benefits of England’s home from home in the American Midwest to a Norwegian journalist tasked with a dispatch from inside the enemy camp, there is also a low thrum of electricity crackling about the squad, a sense that some cosmic force is driving England towards the ultimate finale.

As an observer of the Southgate years, you never quite got the feeling the team believed the message. Southgate’s instinct for inclusion built genuine bonds but never quite the commensurate belief that all champions exude.

If Thomas Tuchel has achieved one step with this team it is in shedding the imposter syndrome that ultimately stalled Southgate’s vehicle, the feeling that against the very best there was something deficient in the English character that condemned them to fail.

Read more here

BBC or ITV? There’s only one winner at this World Cup

'There is no substitute for being out there and seeing things first hand' (Photo: ITV)
‘There is no substitute for being out there and seeing things first hand,’ says Dan Walker (Photo: ITV)

“You know we’re in Salford, right?” joked Micah Richards as Joe Hart was eulogising about the “unbelievable energy” of the Azteca Stadium before England’s epic win over co-hosts Mexico.

Richards got a round of laughter in the studio, but the loveable pundit touched on one of the lively debates around this World Cup. Should the BBC be broadcasting from a futuristic studio thousands of miles away from the action? Does it affect the coverage? Do the viewers care? Or is it just one of those weird media obsessions?

Comparison is the thief of joy, as the famous saying goes, but here comparison is stealing the admiration that the BBC might have received for their state-of-the-art studio. The technology is impressive and it will be used by BBC Sport for years to come. The problem is, ITV’s backdrop has blown them out of the water.

Read more from former BBC presenter Dan Walker here

Concourses filling with Vikings

An hour before kick-off stadium concourses filling with Vikings. Bit warm for fur you would think. Cameras searching out the early settlers in the stands. Flags from Plymouth, Nottingham, Rushden, etc., the usual suspects.

Pickford becomes England’s most-capped World Cup player

Reporting from Hard Rock Stadium

A word for Jordan Pickford, before we inevitably curse him. In starting this evening, Pickford surpasses Peter Shilton to become the player with the most World Cup appearances for England.

Often doubted, never doubting. Pickford has repeatedly stepped up when England have needed him. He and Kane are the two seams that run throughout the last eight years.

Streets of Oslo packed

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Quarter Final - Norway v England - Fans gather in Oslo - Oslo, Norway - July 11, 2026 Norway fans gather before the match REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger
Norway fans have gathered in their capital (Photo: Reuters)

Reporting from Hard Rock Stadium

Have heard from a Norwegian mate who says that the streets of Oslo are packed full already. The 9pm news was a single-issue edition focusing only on the World Cup. The top seven songs in the Norwegian singles charts are all football-related.

Let’s break some hearts tonight.

Team news – Stones and Madueke start

The England line-up is in and it confirms the earlier leaked team, with John Stones and Noni Madueke starting.

That means Ezri Konsa shifts to right back to fill in for the suspended Jarrell Quansah.

England: Pickford, Konsa, Guehi, Stones, O’Reilly, Anderson, Rice, Madueke, Gordon, Bellingham, Kane.

Martin Odegaard and Erling Haaland both start for Norway.

Norway: Nyland, Ajer, Moller Wolfe, Heggem, Berg, Berge, Odegaard, Schjelderup, Sorloth, Ryerson, Haaland.

Jarell Quansah is a sacrificial lamb to Fifa’s twisted incompetence

File photo dated 06-07-2026 of Jarell Quansah who has been given a two-match ban following his red card in England's last-16 win over Mexico. Issue date: Thursday July 9, 2026. PA Photo. Photo credit should read Nick Potts/PA Wire.
Jarell Quansah will miss the next two games after his red card against Mexico (Photo: PA)

It was half a smart play by Fifa. Revisit the case, adjust the tariff, double down. You might say Jarell Quansah paid the price for Fifa’s egregious (mis)management of the Folarin Balogun case.

Balogun, you may remember, was sent off for serious foul play, handed a two-match ban and was going fishing before Donald Trump picked up the phone to his valet, Fifa president Gianni Infantino, to protest injustice.

The exact process that led from the Trump call to Balogun’s reprieve is buried in mystery, protected by a regulation that allows Fifa’s disciplinary committee to revisit cases without explanation or account.

However, by upgrading Quansah’s red card offence to serious foul play and doubling his ban from one to two matches Fifa’s shadowy order could plausibly claim equivalence of process, namely that they went back over the evidence in the same way to ensure the “correct” outcome was reached and appropriate sanction applied.

Read more here from Kevin Garside, on Fifa’s decision and how England might cope

Why I fear for England against Norway

EAST RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY - JULY 5: Norway's Erling Haaland celebrates scoring his side's first goal during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round Of 16 match between Brazil and Norway at New York New Jersey Stadium on July 5, 2026 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. (Photo by Rob Newell - CameraSport via Getty Images)
Erling Haaland has scored 20 goals in 2025-26 for his country alone (Photo: Getty)

If there was some doubt as to whether England were favourites in Mexico City, they cannot ignore or avoid that tag in Miami. The draw has opened up for England in a way that would make even Gareth Southgate blush: DR Congo, Mexico and Norway for a place in a World Cup semi-final. None of those are currently ranked in the top 18 in the world.

Yet if Mexico was a test of England’s steel and ability to cope in adversity and atmospheric pressure, Norway is a step up in quality. Like England, there is a sense of incremental improvement as they move through the knockout rounds.

From Erling Haaland’s prowess to Martin Odegaard in the middle, we analyse six reasons for Norway to be confident of causing a second upset on the spin.

Stones and Madueke set to start

England's John Stones during a training session at Inter Miami Training Complex, Miami. England face Norway in their FIFA World Cup 2026 quarter-final match on Saturday. Picture date: Friday July 10, 2026. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Bradley Collyer/PA Wire. RESTRICTIONS: Use subject to restrictions. Editorial use only, no commercial use without prior consent from rights holder.
Manchester City defender SJohn Stones comes into the back line (Photo: PA)

Reporting from Hard Rock Stadium

The England team has been leaked, much to the chagrin of many supporters. There will be two changes and a positional shift.

The biggest news is that Bukayo Saka is not considered fit enough to play 90 minutes and so will start on the bench with Noni Madueke given the nod – Saka will play the role of finisher again.

Meanwhile, Reece James may have trained but he’s still not available; bit of a farce that one. This time it’s Ezri Konsa, who becomes England’s fourth different starting right-back in the tournament.

That means Thomas Tuchel needed another central defender. He has gone for Manchester City pairing over the aerial ability of Dan Burn, so it’s John Stones and Marc Guehi.

Is that right side a worry?

Four England players need to be careful tonight

There are four Three Lions players who must be on their best behaviour to avoid being suspended if England progress.

Jude Bellingham, Marc Guehi, Nico O’Reilly and Declan Rice could all join Jarrell Quansah in being ruled out for disciplinary reasons.

Bellingham was booked in the last-32 victory over DR Congo, while the rest were booked against Mexico.

If players receive two yellow cards across the last 32, last 16 and quarter-final matches, they will be suspended.

Norway have never beaten a European nation at the World Cup

Reporting from the United States

A strange quirk of Norway’s World Cup record is that they have never beaten a European nation at the finals. That’s continued in 2026 with them beating Iraq, Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire – and of course Brazil – but being brushed aside 4-1 by France. England are their most familiar opponents yet – nine of this Norway squad play in either the Premier League or Championship.

Asides from the obvious in Erling Haaland (Man City) and Martin Odegaard (Arsenal), there is Jorgen Strand Larsen (Crystal Palace), Kristoffer Ajer (Brentford), David Moller Wolfe (Wolves), Sander Berge and Oscar Bobb (Fulham), Egil Selvik (Watford), and Sondre Langas (Derby).

Good evening

Have you recovered from the drama of England’s win against Mexico yet?

It’s time for the quarter-finals as the Three Lions face Norway for a spot in the final four.

The Scandinavian side boast Manchester City’s Erling Haaland amongst their ranks, who has already netted seven times at this World Cup.

Thomas Tuchel’s men’s defensive worries continue as Jarrel Quansah is suspended, but there is hope that the injured Marc Guehi may be available after taking part in training before the match. Declan Rice was also in training despite worries about illness.

We will bring you live updates on tonight’s match and insight from our reporters at the ground as the evening unfolds. Kick-off is at 10pm UK time.



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AUGUSTA – Other than the superstar attackers turning up and the Fifa president doing everything to preserve his existing reputation amongst sensible football supporters, the theme of this World Cup has been missed penalties.

In total, 60 penalties have been taken so far – including during shootouts. The conversion rate is just 65 per cent, lower than at any World Cup since 1938. You wouldn’t think that it has got any more difficult for an elite footballer to kick the ball hard into a corner. So what has happened?

Goalkeeper research

It is abundantly clear that the amount of video data available to footballers and coaching staff has risen exponentially. Goalkeepers at international level will have a full breakdown of where every likely taker shoots as their first preference and may look for physiological tics in the run-up and approach to the ball.

But that data has been around a while, right? Well yes, and the data bears that out. Although 2026 has the lowest conversion percentage since 1938, the conversion percentage has actually been dropping ever since the 2014 World Cup. That correlates with the research theory; they’re getting harder to score.

Stutter run-ups

Stuttering your run up – or adding in the Jorginho leap – is an attempt by penalty takers to seize back some of the control that goalkeepers were gaining. Effectively you momentarily stop, either provoking the goalkeeper to give away which way they intend to dive or lose their rhythm and be unable to produce a full-length dive.

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - JULY 03: Lucas Herrington #25 of Australia misses the penalty during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round Of 32 match between Australia and Egypt at Dallas Stadium on July 03, 2026 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Masashi Hara/Getty Images)
Lucas Herrington, 18 years old, should not be taking penalties (Photo: Getty)

The problem at this World Cup? The stutter has stopped working. No longer a surprise tactic, goalkeepers are standing their ground and it’s the takers who seem to be losing their composure. Eight of 16 stutter penalties in regular play have been missed in this tournament. Lionel Messi, Harry Kane and Kylian Mbappe have all made that same mistake.

I think we may well look back on this World Cup as the last of the stuttered run-up age. Does it make you a Proper Football Man to think that a striker running at a reasonable, steady pace and just hammering a football towards a corner (either deliberately low or towards the top corner) must be the best chance of success?

Poor selection

There is a more route one explanation: have you seen some of the picks in the shootouts? We could already expect the conversion rate to be lower at a World Cup, where there is immense pressure and the onus is always on the taker to score rather than the goalkeeper to save.

But picking the best penalty takers might help. So far, five central defenders (Davinson Sanchez, Lucas Herrington, Harry Souttar, Jonathan Tah and Manuel Akanji) have missed the target with penalties in shootouts and their nations were eliminated. Don’t leave it to centre-backs to do what the attackers should be able to.

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The moving ball

All tournament, we have heard punditry from former goalkeepers who believe that the World Cup ball – the adidas Trionda – is swerving and veering in the air. Anecdotal evidence is undeniable: the ball seems to dip quickly but also move from side to side.

Could this play into the minds of players? If you’re used to aiming for the corner with power, it won’t take much movement for you to hit the woodwork (which has happened several times in this tournament already). Any extra doubt in the taker’s mind is likely to cause overthink that can easily mess with your technique.

The extreme heat

It’s just the added psychological pressure of a World Cup scenario. During regular club seasons, you’re less likely to be taking penalties when under extreme heat pressure. Putting the body and mind under heat stress causes technique fatigue and impairs decision-making through diminished cognitive function.

It makes complete sense, particularly in shootouts. If you ask an experienced taker to step up after 120 minutes of football in summer heat, muscle memory may well still win. Ask a less experienced taker and you are making their task harder.

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My Sporting Life is The i Paper’s look behind the curtain at what drives sports stars to greatness. This week, we speak to Jermain Defoe, one of English football’s most prolific strikers, about feeling invincible at Tottenham Hotspur, how Simply Red connects him to his departed loved ones, and the move to Juventus that never was.

It’s so hard to say when I was happiest

I made my debut at West Ham when I was 17, and I finished at 39. I played nearly 800 games.

24 Oct 2001: Jermain Defoe of West Ham United holds the ball up against Graeme Le Saux of Chelsea during the FA Barclaycard Premiership match played at Upton Park, in London. West Ham United won the match 2-1. \ Mandatory Credit: Ben Radford /Allsport
Defoe, who is now retired, pictured in action for West Ham in 2001 (Photo: Getty)

There were so many periods I thought I was playing my best football and years later you think “hmm, I enjoyed this other period a lot more”.

My favourite season

The 2009-10 season at Tottenham. We qualified for the Champions League that year, and I went to the World Cup. I was playing some of the best football of my career, in terms of goals and how I felt physically. I scored five goals against Wigan Athletic.

As players and athletes, you know when you’re in the zone, when you feel invincible, like it doesn’t matter who you play against, you always fancy yourself and back yourself. I was in that mode.

Making my debut a year out of school, at 17, was a massive achievement

I was only a kid. The League Cup with Tottenham was also a big achievement. We should have won a lot more. At Rangers, winning the league title, arguably the biggest league title in such a big club’s history. But I think playing for England was the biggest of all. Because when the World Cup is on, the world is at a standstill.

Ian Wright was my sporting idol

LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 02: Ian Wright and Jermain Defoe hug on stage at the Legends of Football 2023 event at Grosvenor House on October 02, 2023 in London, England. (Photo by JMEnternational/Getty Images)
Defoe calls Ian Wright his ‘sporting idol. I felt like I could relate to [him]’ (Photo: Getty)

The goals that he scored, him being a centre-forward, his movement – just everything about him, really, the celebrations – I felt like I could relate to Wrighty, even though he’s south London, I’m east London.

That West Indian background, how tough it was to come from humble beginnings and become something with hard work.

I cry when I listen to Simply Red

When I listen to certain music, it reminds me of my nan or my dad. My mum had me at 18 when she was still at home with her parents, my nan and granddad, so it was like it was like I had two mums, and I was really close to my dad.

So sometimes if I listen to certain music, I feel myself getting emotional just thinking about all the good memories that I have with my nanny. Simply Red – “Holding back the Years.” That tune. It’s such a good tune. Growing up, West Indian culture, music was such a big part of my life. Proper music. That song – I’ve always loved it.

It’s nice when you have those moments. With my nan, when I have moments like that, it’s comforting, because I feel like I still can feel her presence. I’ve got my nan tattooed on my arm. I love those moments where she can just come into my head, when songs come into my head, it’s nice.

Grief has helped shape me in a positive way

It’s well documented, the stuff that I’ve been through, with my nan, my brother, my dad, my cousin, obviously Bradley Lowery, of course.

Sometimes in life I just believe that things happen for a reason, it does make you stronger, it actually makes you appreciate life more. It makes you appreciate people around you.

The people around you that you love, it’s important to actually show them that you love them with your actions and the things you say, and how you carry yourself, not just family members.

I could have signed for Juventus

I got a call from an agent in, I think it was 2008, when I went back to Tottenham about Juventus. But because I already told Harry Redknapp and Daniel Levy I was going back to Tottenham, I was just waiting for the deal to get done.

I think it was just principle, really. If you shake hands with someone, say, “Okay, then I’m coming back to Tottenham”, then you should.

I know players do it, but to change my mind at the last minute and say “OK, I’m going to Juventus,” I just don’t think I could have done it at the time.

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I don’t regret anything about my career

My life could have been a lot different. Of course, there’s moments I’d change, like for example that first half against Germany at the World Cup, where Frank Lampard scored, and if there was VAR – but really, I wouldn’t change anything.

Growing up in the East End, when I was at school, if someone would have said to me I would go on and do what I have done, I’ve been like, “wow, really?”

What football has done for me and my family, I think you just have to be grateful.

This summer E.ON Next is encouraging people to get their washing done when they’re up watching football at night, to take advantage of cheaper off-peak electricity prices. The “Watch and Wash” campaign launches as it’s revealed the nation could save £93m collectively if they washed and watched this summer with the Next Smart Saver tariff.



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England have previous when it comes to stopping the best players on planet football. It generally ends badly.

When Diego Maradona was single-handedly (no pun intended) dragging Argentina through the knockout stages of the 1986 World Cup, England were powerless to stop him.

Preventing Ronaldinho proved beyond them in 2002. In 2006 they were undone by a winking Cristiano Ronaldo.

And last time out in Qatar, Gareth Southgate’s side were so fixated on dealing with Kylian Mbappe that Antoine Griezmann ran riot and put the ball on a plate for Olivier Giroud to score the winner.

Now, another great, one born in Leeds and polished in Manchester, stands between Thomas Tuchel’s side and just a third World Cup semi-final in 36 years.

No wonder the questioning occupying the minds of so many this week is how you prevent Erling Haaland from doing what he does better than almost anyone in the history of the game.

As Brazil found on Sunday afternoon in New Jersey, it’s tough. Really, really tough.

‘He’s not even looking – then bang!’

“And I’ll tell you why,” says Erling Moe, Haaland’s former coach at Molde. “It’s because this is a player that only really comes to life in the penalty area. And he sometimes does it very few times in a match.

“You saw that against Brazil. He’s walking, he’s walking. A few seconds before he makes his run [for the first goal, when he outjumped Gabriel from an Andreas Schjelderup cross], he’s not even looking at the ball. Then bang!

“He’s a defender’s worst nightmare. You have to be switched on 100 per cent of the time. You have to be as mentally sharp as you are physically sharp.

HAUGESUND, NORWAY - MARCH 18: Erling Braut Haaland of Molde FK in action against FK Haugesund during a Norwegian Eliteserien league match at Haugesund Stadium on March 18, 2018 in Haugesund, Norway. (Photo by Andrew Halseid-Budd/Getty Images)
Haaland in action for Molde, where coach Erling Moe saw first-hand how effective he could be (Photo: Getty)

“You always have to know where he is, which runs he might make. But most of the time, you don’t actually have to worry about him at all. All the great players have unique qualities, that is what makes them great.

“They don’t do what everyone else does. If they did? Well, they would just be like everyone else.”

Haaland spent two seasons at Molde, scoring 14 goals in 39 matches, before making the switch to Red Bull Salzburg in Austria in January 2019. The rest is history.

And after rewriting the record books for Norway on the East Coast of the U.S. last weekend, his former national team age-group coach – ex-Oldham, Leeds and Bradford defender Gunnar Halle – believes Haaland’s experience as a young player has directly contributed to what makes him such a challenge to defend against today.

“The thing people forget now is that back then, when he was in his mid-teens, he was actually a small guy,” says Halle.

“He went through a massive growth spurt between the ages of 15 and 17.

BURTON-UPON-TRENT, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 16: Tashan Oakley Booth of England U16 is tackled by Erling Braut Haland of Norway U16 during the U16s International Friendly match between England U16 and Norway U16 at St Georges Park on February 16, 2016 in Burton-upon-Trent, England. (Photo by Tony Marshall/Getty Images)
Haland tackles Tashan Oakley Booth of England during an Under-16 friendly in 2016 (Photo: Getty)

“I vividly remember watching him play at a U17 tournament over in Croatia, where our squad also played against England.

“Jorgen Strand Larsen was leading the line with him and they were up against Marc Guehi in the England defence. By that point, Erling had shot up, but his body hadn’t quite figured it all out yet.

“He was just arms and legs all over the place! He looked like a completely different player physically, just trying to coordinate this sudden, huge frame.

“So it wasn’t like you saw this guy and thought he was going to be a superstar. The lessons he learned when he was smaller, he has taken with him.

“Even when he was gangly and adjusting to his height, he always possessed that distinctive goal-scoring mentality. You can’t really teach that.

“He had an innate hunger to get into the right areas and put the ball in the net, no matter how clumsy the growth spurt made him look on the ball at times.

“You have to have a plan for neutralising him because you can’t defend against him the way you defend against anyone else.”

My message to England? Good luck

If anyone knows how to stop a player who has now scored 62 goals in just 54 matches for his country, then surely Guehi and John Stones should have more chance than most, having played and trained with him day in, day out at the Etihad.

Suggest that to Moe, though, and you’re greeted with a wide smile and a distinctive Norwegian laugh. A bit like a supervillain when you suggest that he might want to go easy because James Bond is about to turn up in his Aston Martin.

“Good luck, that’s all I’ll say,” says the Norwegian. “If you look at the players who have handled him, then I’d have to say William Saliba is the best.

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“He’s a very physical defender, and whenever he plays Erling he never gives him a moment’s peace.

“I think that’s how you can best keep him quiet. But stop him for 90 minutes? I’m not sure if anyone can do that.

“He might only touch the ball twice in a half, but at least one of those could end up as a goal.

“And if you’re spending 100 per cent of your time worrying about Haaland, well that will suit this Norway’s team as well.”



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