Thomas Tuchel hones an England squad to suit his tactical vision The head coach will not necessarily pick the better player, or the one in form, but the one who best fits a specific role. Amid the intrigue of the final weeks of the domestic season, there is a reminder that the World Cup is fast approaching. England have just four more warm-up games before they face Croatia in their first group game in Arlington in June. Tuchel’s plans are coming into focus: these friendlies against Uruguay and Japan are the last chance for experiments or tests before the final honing in the USA. Tuchel has been refreshingly consistent in prioritising balance over individuals. Even Gareth Southgate fell into the celebrity trap near the end, his Euro 2024 squad a shapeless gaggle of stars who scrambled to the final despite an old-fashioned incoherence. For Tuchel, the stars-versus-system question crystallises around the central attacking midfield role, where Morgan Rogers has been preferred to Jude Bellingham in recent games. Although Cole Palmer has shown some signs of returning to form, that still feels like the highest-profile selection decision for Tuchel, particularly given his apparent disquiet around Bellingham’s robust self-confidence and the impact that may have on the rest of the squad. Bellingham hasn’t played since sustaining a hamstring injury at the beginning of February and will not feature against Uruguay. Rogers is one of 11 players who will not join up with the squad until after that first game, so with Bellingham unable to make his case, this is perhaps an opportunity for Palmer or Phil Foden. Given his capacity to play from the right and deputise for Bukayo Saka, Palmer would presumably go to the World Cup anyway; Foden’s place is less secure but bolstered by his versatility.#jude_bellingham #morgan_rogers #trent_alexander_arnold #thomas_tuchel #gareth_southgate
