Published: 11 June 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online.
The final countdown to the upcoming World Cup tournament has formally begun for England. This resounding victory provided Thomas Tuchel with critical answers for his final roster selections. The German manager effectively showed his preferred tactical blueprint ahead of the major tournament opener. England will encounter a formidable Croatia squad in Dallas next Wednesday afternoon with high confidence. His players brilliantly demonstrated exactly what can happen when they find their elite rhythm. The sharp attacking intensity and slick connections tore open the opposition defence quite effortlessly.
Of course, the overall weakness of the central American opposition must be factored in. Costa Rica barely even saw the possession during ninety minutes of total footballing dominance. It became an entirely desperate rearguard effort from the very first whistle to last. But there was nevertheless immense encouragement for the brand-new coaching staff to digest. Tuchel went incredibly strong with his starting lineup choices under the bright stadium lights. The entire sporting occasion was framed by who he picked at the very outset.
It was impossible not to read deeply into these fascinating tactical selection decisions. The biggest headline call was choosing Jude Bellingham over Morgan Rogers at number ten. Bellingham looked sharp and he was certainly not alone in impressing the boss. Tuchel preferred Newcastle winger Anthony Gordon over Marcus Rashford on the left attacking flank. The manager was rewarded with a driving performance from the direct English winger. The other eye-catching decision was selecting Ezri Konsa over Marc Guéhi at centre-back. Furthermore, Noni Madueke started because star Bukayo Saka was not at full fitness.
The international match was delayed by an hour due to severe adverse weather. The kickoff was set back to five o’clock local time after a massive downpour. The local skies delivered a storm of biblical proportions filled with thunder and lightning. Fortunately, England coped remarkably well with the unexpected schedule disruption and wet pitch. Their professional focus was immediately clear and they were on their way very quickly. High-energy midfielder Declan Rice gave his nation an early lead with a clinical strike. England could have easily had a hatful of goals before the final whistle. However, the coaching staff could be content with additional goals from their forward lines. Gordon hammered home a thunderous penalty following a clear handball in the box. Ollie Watkins added the definitive third goal towards the end of the match. The Aston Villa substitute tapped home on the rebound to seal the victory. He converted after Rogers had seen his initial powerful shot saved by the keeper.
Real Madrid star Bellingham was in the mood from the very first whistle. It took him precisely eight seconds to charge into his first block tackle. That intense defensive industry was replicated across the entire pitch by his teammates. It was a blistering start by England as they attacked with great ferocity. Gordon served notice of his intention to give the opposition fullback a nightmare. The Costa Rica defender, Shawn Johnson, suffered heavily under his relentless attacking pressure.
The breakthrough goal arrived up the productive England left wing after ten minutes. It was a beautiful piece of old-fashioned wing play by the Newcastle attacker. He produced a sharp dart around the outside of the struggling defender Johnson. The acceleration was truly explosive and caught the opposition defence completely off guard. When he pulled the ball back from the byline, Rice reacted quickest. The Arsenal midfielder swept a deflected left-footed shot into the far bottom corner.
It had been easy to fear that the match might be abandoned entirely. The heavy rain lashed down relentlessly from around half-past one local time. There was dangerous lightning, which was the major worry for stadium safety officials. All that was missing was the sight of animals assembling two by two. At half-past two, the grass surface looked waterlogged in several key parts. A massive nod must go to the stadium drainage system for working miracles. By three o’clock, the rain eased and the playing surface looked fine.
England’s total dominance remained absolute and their tempo stayed incredibly high throughout the match. This happened despite the intense heat and oppressive humidity inside the packed arena. Costa Rica barely crossed the halfway line during a completely one-sided first half. Chelsea winger Madueke blew a huge one-on-one opportunity on thirty-six minutes. He had been sent clean through by a magnificent pass from Bellingham. The clever attacking move was originally sparked by a trademark Harry Kane flick. The captain’s connections with Bellingham were highly encouraging for the upcoming group stage. Madueke danced beautifully around the goalkeeper, Patrick Sequeira, with a sharp body feint. However, he hit the near post when the open goal yawned wide. He took the final shot with his left foot from the right side. It was clearly the wrong decision given the angle of the goal.
Experienced striker Kane had worked Sequeira with a strong header after twenty-two minutes. That chance arrived from a pin-point Rice free-kick delivered into the penalty area. Meanwhile, Gordon was simply too much for Johnson to handle on the flank. Time and again, the rapid winger blasted away from his marker effortlessly. Gordon thought he had won a penalty in first-half stoppage time. He felt a little bit of physical contact in his back area. The winger went to ground hoping for a favourable whistle from the referee. The official, Katja Koroleva, pointed to the spot but quickly reversed her decision. She did this after receiving a critical nudge from her video assistant referee. Koroleva decided that Gordon had heavily exaggerated the minor contact from behind.
Tuchel raged furiously at the fourth official about the non-award during halftime. The manager vented his frustration as they left the field for the break. He could have been unhappy at a loose pass by Jordan Pickford. The Everton goalkeeper made a rare error around the half-hour mark. This mistake almost led directly to a dangerous Costa Rica scoring chance. It remained an isolated moment of alarm for the otherwise comfortable England team.
It had been quite an eventful day for young midfielder Elliot Anderson. His domestic club, Nottingham Forest, had just rebuffed another massive transfer bid. Manchester City had returned with a mega-money offer for his coveted services. Remarkably, the talented young player was able to blot the noise out completely. Perhaps he was simply determined to prove he was worth even more money. Anderson was incredibly easy on the eye as he sprayed passes around. England pushed forward with great intent for more goals in the second half. Madueke took a fizzed low diagonal pass from Kane on the wing. He sliced inside sharply before curling a shot just wide of the post. Despite his horror miss earlier, Madueke’s all-round game was actually very good. After a deep Rice corner, Nico O’Reilly could not finish the chance. The young player failed to score on the spin after Konsa headed.
Tuchel made six tactical substitutions just after the sixty-minute mark of the match. The headline item was introducing Rogers for Kane in a surprise positional move. This tactical switch saw Bellingham briefly push up as a central striker. It was Bellingham who teed up another replacement, Crystal Palace star Eberechi Eze. When his goal-bound shot hit the arm of Joseth Peraza, Koroleva pointed. The referee awarded a penalty to England without any hesitation from the VAR. It looked as though talisman Bellingham was about to take the spot-kick. However, Tuchel’s assistant manager, Anthony Barry, appeared to intervene from the dugout. He instructed that Gordon should take responsibility for the vital penalty kick. His finish was absolutely emphatic as he blasted the ball into the net. Rogers was guilty of another bad miss on seventy-six minutes of play. Ultimately, Watkins had the final word with his sharp predatory instincts to score.
























































































