Speaker
Harry Maguire
Appearances over time
2 episodes
Episodes
2Podcasts
Quotes & moments
Harry Maguire recalled England drawing their second game against USA at the previous World Cup — they were disappointed but stayed in control of the group.
Jude Bellingham has appeared in four major international tournaments for England, a remarkable feat given his age.
Thomas Partey effectively nullified Harry Kane throughout the match, barely giving England's striker a touch.
The panel dismantles the idea there was ever a genuine debate about whether Bellingham should start. From Birmingham to Dortmund to Real Madrid to Champions League winner, Bellingham lives for these moments — and Morgan Rodgers himself called him the most competitive person he has ever met.
England played Bellingham and Rodgers as two 10s against Panama, creating real exposure on the counter. Maguire is pretty confident Tuchel won't take that risk against better opposition — the knockout stages demand discipline the group phase never required.
England fans and media turned on Bellingham over the past year with rumours he was 'too big for his boots.' Lineker calls it a typically English trait — discomfort with overt confidence. Maguire pushes back hard: it was never arrogance, just the self-belief of a born winner.
Bellingham isn't just talented — he's the guy who shows up when the whole country needs him. Maguire explains that in the tightest, most pressured moments, Bellingham is the one who changes the game, as he proved against Panama with a goal and an assist.
Ian Poulter knows more than most about producing under pressure. He draws a direct line between what it takes to deliver in a Ryder Cup singles and what Bellingham brings to England — the ability to lift a team when momentum has drained away, as he did with five birdies in a row in 2012.
England won the group but the panel is worried. Shearer highlights that Ghana attacked twice and England were lucky not to concede a penalty; Richards adds that against a team like Argentina, going a goal down could be devastating because they'll park the bus with better defenders. Lineker pushes back — but not everyone is convinced.
Before five Ryder Cups, Ian Poulter had a trial with Tottenham as a centre-half. It did not go well. His response? 'It's okay, I'm an Arsenal fan.' The revelation gets a priceless reaction from the panel.
Harry Kane plays golf off a handicap of 2 and recently teed it up with Brooks Koepka in World Cup pre-camp. Poulter, who has played with him at multiple pro-ams, confirms he is a seriously good player. Not just a footballer who dabbles.
Reece James is already out. Now Jarell Quansah has twisted his ankle and Tuchel called it 'a very tight race' for the next game. The options are limited: Jed Spence, or shifting Konsa and slotting John Stones back in — if he is fit at all.
Gary Lineker urges calm: getting through the group and winning it is the only objective at this stage. You don't want to show everything in three group games. Poulter agrees — peaking too early is as dangerous as starting slowly.
Rashford looked a constant threat against Panama — direct, sharp, and putting crosses in from the first whistle. Maguire, who played with him for years at United, says when Rashford is in that direct mode he is unstoppable. The elephant in the room: where will he play next season?
Harry Kane became England's all-time leading scorer at the World Cup, ending Gary Lineker's 40-year reign. Lineker responded with characteristic wit, saying he had been holding the record so long he was 'getting bored of it' — but his warmth for Kane was entirely genuine.
England's 0-0 draw with Ghana in Boston felt like a familiar Southgate-era hangover. The panel agrees the result isn't catastrophic — England are through — but the performance raises real questions about creativity and tactical flexibility.
Against a deep defensive block, patience is a trap. England moved the ball too slowly, played into congested areas, and only found their rhythm when they went direct in the final 15 minutes — exactly the opposite of what they did for most of the game.
When you're up against a low block, the conventional wisdom says be patient. Harry Maguire disagrees. England's best spells came when they were direct and quick — and the slow, sideways passing was exactly what Ghana wanted.
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