
'Dull England show Tuchel's search for thrills will be no quick fix'
Thomas Tuchel wants England's brave new era to bring thrills and excitement, but he has swiftly discovered that if you have seen one England qualifier you have almost seen them all.Tuchel has been firing off positive messages since delivering a damning verdict on England's Euro 2024 campaign under predecessor Gareth Southgate, which he claimed lacked intensity, identity and hunger.During the routine 3-0 win over a Latvia side ranked 140th in the world, it was clear Tuchel's intended transformation will not be a quick fix - because this was more of the same labouring old England seen so often under Southgate.The Three Lions, as they have done so many times before, finally overcame gallant but limited opposition after struggling for long periods to make the most of their superiority, too often pedestrian and too often failing to transform good positions into goals.There was the traditional Wembley backdrop of paper aeroplanes - with the first hitting the turf after 14 minutes as opposed to 33 against Albania - the Mexican wave and the thousands of empty seats well before the final whistle.And there were even the old frustrations that have surfaced before in this type of attritional fixture, with Jude Bellingham - who was already on a yellow card - fortunate referee Orel Grinfeld took a lenient view of his reckless second-half challenge on Raivis Jurkovskis.England got there in the end, as they always do in these qualifiers, with Reece James illuminating his first international start since September 2022 with a superb free-kick seven minutes from half-time to break the deadlock.Latvia, unsurprisingly, barely left their half after the break, and England put the result beyond doubt with two goals in eight minutes.Captain Harry Kane scored his 71st goal in 105 international appearances with a simple tap-in after 68 minutes and substitute Eberechi Eze added the hosts' third with a deflected shot.All very routine. All very England when it comes to qualifiers - as it should be against a country ranked between Burundi and the Dominican Republic on Fifa's list.
This is not, it must be stressed, a criticism of Tuchel, whose tenure in its infancy.It is simply a confirmation that providing the sort of thrill ride the German coach wants to serve up for England fans is easier said than done in these types of games with this team, and there is no quick fix to change that.If Tuchel thought he could quickly blow away the cobwebs he believed had gathered on Southgate's England, then his first two games in charge will have been a sobering dose of reality.There has been little, so far, to distinguish Tuchel's team from the one that went before it.For long periods this was a deadly dull England performance. Tuchel, in some respects, has made a rod for his own back with his deeply unflattering review of the Three Lions' efforts in Germany last summer and his talk of change.England did do some of the things their new boss demanded. He wants more touches in the opposition box - and that figure more than doubled from his first game against Albania, increasing from 34 on Friday to 69 against Latvia.They put in 36 crosses on a night when they enjoyed 73.5% possession, but the end product was poor. Marcus Rashford improved slightly on his performance against Albania, but Jarrod Bowen could not make the desired impact as a replacement for struggling Phil Foden.England sent in 21 of those crosses in the first half, the most in a game since they played Poland in October 2013 and delivered 25 - but their only goal game from James' free-kick.In a sign of England's complete domination, they had 569 successful passes in Latvia's half compared to the visitors' 26, and must be disappointed such overwhelming statistics resulted in relatively meagre results.Tuchel wants to give England a fresh identity as they try to cross the psychological barrier from a nearly team to winners, but - as so often in the past - the acid test will only truly come when (it is hardly if) they qualify for the 2026 World Cup.Qualifying should be a formality from a group that also contains Andorra and Serbia, so the first high-quality opponents England are likely to meet will be when they get to the World Cup. It is a situation they have been in before - and then been found wanting when it matters.
This a problem for Tuchel to solve and one he will be well aware of.But the 51-year-old will have enjoyed the spectacular strike from James, a player he greatly admires and who was a vital part of his Chelsea team that won the Champions League in 2021.Kane's second was also right up the head coach's street, with pace injected into play as a move reached the Latvia box by Declan Rice, whose drilled cross only needed a simple finish from his captain.What will cheer Tuchel is that he has plenty of raw materials to work with.Bellingham, for all the impetuosity that could - and should - have seen him sent off on Monday, is a generational talent, while Arsenal's Myles Lewis-Skelly once again demonstrated he is a natural at this level.There was more good news from The Hawthorns where another Gunner, Ethan Nwaneri, excelled in a goalscoring performance for England Under-21s - and the return of a third Arsenal player, Bukayo Saka, will offer an added attacking dimension.Tuchel's task is to find the "X Factor", the missing ingredient, to get England's men over the line they have failed to cross since the 1966 World Cup.Two wins from two games is a satisfactory - and totally expected - opening to the Tuchel era, but now he must discover the missing link to enable him to deliver the exciting England side he has promised.And on the somewhat tedious evidence of his first two games, Tuchel will have plenty to exercise his mind between now and the next international camp in June.

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BBC News
33 minutes ago
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European U21 champions again - but who could make World Cup?
The triumphant England Under-21s were hidden by the tickertape as they lifted the Euro 2025 trophy. Now they must ensure they do not disappear again. As the blue and white confetti rained down from the Slovakian sky the Young Lions were wrapped up in their deserved to be. Jonathan Rowe's extra-time goal sealed successive European titles after Germany had fought back from 2-0 down in many it was their last chance with the Under-21s, but, with a World Cup next summer, they have the opportunity to force their way into Thomas Tuchel's we assess who might progress to the full squad in time for next year's World Cup, and what the progress of those who went before them might tell us. Who are the standouts to make the World Cup? So, with a World Cup in the US, Canada and Mexico less than 12 months away, who can make the step up?Of the Euro 2023 winners, James Trafford, Levi Colwill, Cole Palmer, Morgan Gibbs-White, Noni Madueke and Curtis Jones were named in Tuchel's squad for the games against Andorra and Senegal last we see such a progression from the class of 25?Newcastle full-back Tino Livramento is the obvious one to follow them after a good tournament and a fine season for the has played on the right for England this summer but could fill the problematic left-back role for Myles Lewis-Skelly started in the 3-1 defeat by Senegal and Livramento - given his senior debut against the Republic of Ireland by Carsley last season - will be a standout option next summer should his form returned to the Under-21s this summer after discussions with Tuchel and Carsley, with the pair eager for the 22-year-old to use his experience to help lead the Elliott had the big moments in Slovakia to be named player of the tournament - the opening goal in the final, two match-winning strikes in the semi-final, scoring against Spain and England's opening goal of the tournament against the Czech big moments amplify his talent and only strengthen his and Liverpool's attacker could leave Anfield this summer in search of regular football, after only two Premier League starts in Liverpool's title success, which should push him closer to senior team-mate Jarell Quansah will be expecting more top-level minutes at Bayer Leverkusen, once his impending move from Liverpool is confirmed, after struggling for game time for the champions this season, and, at 33, Dan Burn's England career will not go on City's James McAtee captained the U21s and excelled. But, like Elliott and Quansah, his future is uncertain with reports he could leave Etihad Stadium this summer. This highlights one of the conundrums facing the Premier League's academy products. Selling them on has become highly lucrative for clubs' balance sheets, as they go down as pure profit in the accounts because no transfer fee was paid for them in the first this affect their development, or will moves allow them to thrive like Palmer when he left Manchester City for Chelsea? Who else could be in the reckoning? Centre-back Charlie Cresswell impressed in Slovakia. The Toulouse defender was man of the match in the quarter-final win over Spain in follows a debut season in France during which the former Leeds centre-back was linked with Serie A side son of former Preston and Sheffield United striker Richard, played 33 times as Toulouse finished 10th in Ligue 1 following last summer's move from Elland Road, having made only six starts for his boyhood Forest's Elliot Anderson, who has also played for Scotland Under-21s, was a machine in Slovakia having impressed at the City dynamic and combative 22-year-old is now too old for the Young Lions and a repeat of his first season at Forest will make him hard to is also expected of Arsenal's Ethan Nwaneri, although, at 18, he is the youngest in the attacker started against Slovenia and Germany in the group stage - off the back of 37 appearances for the Gunners last season - but has time to are plenty of others to consider as well, with several missing from Carsley's Delap was named in the initial group for Slovakia but joined Chelsea and travelled to the Club World Cup. 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Progress for England's youth teams - but senior progress is never guaranteed Tuchel made the dash from the Club World Cup in the US to support the Young Lions against his home nation as they repeated the success of Dave Sexton's side in 1982 and two years ago was an outlier but now it is slowly becoming the had previously failed to get out of the group in five of the previous six of winning, though, manager Lee Carsley's role - along with his coaches and predecessors - has been to develop players and results over the past decade have proved and justified the Football Association's methods since the opening of St George's Park in U17s won the Euros in 2014 and U19s followed in 2017 and 2022. 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About half of those victorious in the 1982 and 1984 squads never won a senior cap for England - and none of them went on to be Three Lions Hateley, who was in both squads, won the most caps - 32 - with five more players reaching 10 caps or more, including Terry Fenwick with Owen, who scored twice in the 3-1 second-leg win over Germany, only managed seven England B caps and never made his senior total, 29 players have won the Under-21 European Championship and then a major senior tournament, including Laurent Blanc, Fabio Cannavaro, Gianluigi Buffon, Francesco Totti and Manuel is a list Carsley's victorious squad of 23 would love to join.


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
Chelsea receive glowing Jamie Gittens reference as transfer agreement reached
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Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Liverpool can offer Marc Guehi dream shirt number with summer transfer close
Liverpool's summer window appears to be falling nicely into place - and the same could be said of a deal for Marc Guehi. The Reds are closing in on the Crystal Palace star, who will become their latest big-money addition during a lucrative summer. Guehi will replace academy graduate Jarell Quansah, who is set for a move to German side Bayer Leverkusen. And while the formalities of a switch are still to be sorted, the centre-back could well receive a nice welcome present at Anfield: his dream shirt number. Guehi has worn the number six shirt during his entire time at Selhurst Park following a switch from Chelsea in 2021. He has also become the custodian of the shirt on a number of England camps. Usefully, that number is currently absent on Merseyside. The last owner of the shirt was former Barcelona and Bayern Munich midfielder Thiago Alcantara, who wore it between 2020 and 2024. Previous owners also include Dejan Lovren, Luis Alberto and Andrea Dossena. Guehi though could opt for a change which might require a bit more work. The defender also opted for the number 5 shirt during a loan spell with Swansea, a number he also wore during his time in Chelsea's academy and with the England youth ranks. As it stands, Ibrahima Konate currently owns that shirt and looks unlikely to let it go of his own accord. But that could potentially change should the Frenchman be sold any time soon. His future remains up in the air with just a year remaining on his contract at Anfield and there currently being no sign of a renewal. And while Guehi looks primed for a move to Merseyside, it appears that he is not going to allow himself to get wrapped up in a transfer saga. "I think the most important thing is just always doing the best that I can for this football club," the defender said about his future last year. "I come in every day and I try to be the same. Would Marc Guehi be a good signing for Liverpool? Share your thoughts in the comments below "I try to work hard. And you know, this football club has given me a lot. I'm still under contract at this football club, so my focus is always at this football club. So, you know, for me, the most important is just doing the best I can and seeing where the future holds." Palace have a £70m asking price for their star defender but are aware that his contractual situation would make a fee of around £40m more likely. Fresh talks are set to take place over the coming days. Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.