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Jun 30, 2026

Jude Bellingham Suffers From Same Problem As Thomas Tuchel’s England

Jude Bellingham Suffers From Same Problem As Thomas Tuchel’s England

Bellingham once again rode to the rescue for a deeply misunderstood side.Grey Whitebloom|
Jude Bellingham forced through England’s breakthrough.
Jude Bellingham forced through England’s breakthrough. | ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images

Jude Bellingham didn’t try to hide his disdain for the sleek silver Player of the Match trophy handed to him after England’s goalless draw with Ghana last Tuesday.

“I didn’t deserve it, to be honest,” the Real Madrid man shrugged. “It probably should have gone to one of their lads who defended so well.” He emphatically deserved all the individual recognition thrust his way on Saturday.

As England labored towards another frustrating stalemate with Panama in the murky conditions of a rainy New Jersey day, Bellingham’s ferocious endeavor finally bore fruit. It was the 22-year-old phenom who swatted the Three Lions in front from a corner before rubber-stamping a 2–0 victory which confirmed top spot in the group by teeing up Harry Kane’s header.

This was the latest example of Bellingham assuming center stage, all main character energy and alpha male aura encapsulated by that signature celebration of puffed-out chest and outstretched arms. Yet, that isn’t his character at all. Bellingham suffers from the same problem as Thomas Tuchel’s England team: they are both chronically misunderstood. That may help them make each other better.


Bellingham a Victim of His Own Success

Jude Bellingham celebrating.
Jude Bellingham delivered. Again. | Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated

The treatment of Bellingham, particularly in the English media, is as unfounded as it is depressingly predictable. Like so many talented, young Black players before him, any whisper of confidence is decried as “arrogance.” Former England and Arsenal striker Ian Wright eloquently captured the contradiction perfectly on the Stick to Football podcast last year.

“He goes out there, he performs, he does what he does. It’s too uppity for these people,” Wright pointed out. “They all love N’Golo Kanté. He’s a humble black man, gets on with what he’s doing. But if you get a [Paul] Pogba or a Bellingham, and you get that kind of energy, that does not sit well with people. Someone like Jude frightens these people because of his capability and the inspiration he can give.”

Jordan Henderson reflected earlier this summer that he “finds it hard to read” criticism of his amiable compatriot. “If you ask any player in the group, they’ll tell you how much of a good teammate he is, how well he trains,” the veteran midfielder insisted. “We all know what he can do, and how much we all love him inside the camp, and I suppose that’s the main thing.”

Once again, Bellingham proved precisely what he could do when his team needed it most.

Jorge Gutiérrez had two arms wrapped around England’s No. 10, who flung out a left leg while still locked in the embrace. Only once the ball had nestled in the bottom corner did Bellingham shed Gutiérrez’s clutches to celebrate.

Not content with a single-goal advantage, Bellingham burst behind the loosening stitching of Panama’s rearguard with the sort of movement which no one else in red had bothered (or conceived) to make across the preceding hour. A drop of the shoulder created enough space to pick out Kane who couldn’t miss this glaring opportunity.

With three points secured, Tuchel removed his difference maker at the next break in play to preserve him for the round of 32. It was telling that the team quickly reverted to the tepid play which had defined the first 62 minutes of another stodgy encounter.


This England Is Built for a Different Challenge

Harry Kane (center) heading the ball.
Harry Kane (center) struggled to find space. | Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated

Bellingham is as misunderstood as this England roster is as a collective. Tuchel did not select a side to break down low blocks for two principle reasons: this is not the challenge which will decide the biggest World Cup knockout ties and there is arguably no set of players on the planet guaranteed to succeed in these conditions.

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