Mentality monster Bellingham sees England top the group

Mentality monster Bellingham sees England top the group

Harry Kane broke Gary Lineker's England World Cup scoring record — and Lineker admitted he'd been "bored" of holding it for 40 years.

Jun 28, 2026 28:49 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

England topped their World Cup group with a 2-0 win over Panama, with Jude Bellingham the standout performer — scoring and assisting Harry Kane's record-breaking goal [1]. Kane overtook Gary Lineker's long-standing England World Cup scoring record, prompting warm congratulations from Lineker himself [2]. The panel debated whether England's cautious first-half display should worry fans heading into the knockouts, with Alan Shearer and Micah Richards flagging defensive vulnerabilities against better sides [3]. Five-time Ryder Cup winner Ian Poulter joined to discuss mentality under pressure. Key takeaway: England need Bellingham at his best to go deep in this tournament.

#England World Cup 2026 #Jude Bellingham #Harry Kane scoring record #England vs Panama #Marcus Rashford form #Ryder Cup pressure #England defensive concerns #Thomas Tuchel tactics #Morgan Rodgers #Ian Poulter #World Cup group stage #England knockout stage #England #World Cup 2026 #Harry Kane #Gary Lineker #Alan Shearer #Micah Richards #Harry Maguire #Panama #Marcus Rashford #Thomas Tuchel #Ryder Cup #knockout stage #group stage #mentality #defence

Gary Lineker, Alan Shearer, and Micah Richards are joined by five-time Ryder Cup winner Ian Poulter and England reporter Rob Jones to reflect on England's 2-0 win over Panama that saw them top the group, with Jude Bellingham outstanding. Harry Maguire reacts to Harry Kane breaking Gary's all-time England World Cup scoring record.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with a trio of ad reads unconnected to football. The first promotes Tremfya, a prescription medication for adults with moderate to severe Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, including a safety advisory and a reminder to consult a doctor. The second covers Peyronie's disease awareness, describing its causes, emotional impact, and encouraging men to consult a urology specialist, with a signpost to talkaboutpd.com. The third is a Chevrolet trucks brand spot celebrating the archetypal hard-working truck owner. All three sit outside the editorial content of the episode.

  • Gary Lineker formally opens The Rest Is Football, introducing an unusually stacked panel: Alan Shearer, Micah Richards, Ian Poulter, Harry Maguire, and England reporter Rob Jones. He sets the scene immediately — England are through the group stage as winners and will face DR Congo in the Round of 32. He notes the show is available on Netflix every day, before turning to welcome Ian Poulter warmly.

  • The opening exchange with Ian Poulter immediately throws up a surprise: the five-time Ryder Cup winner had a trial as a centre-half with Tottenham Hotspur in his youth. The trial, by his own cheerful admission, went badly — 'They said, oh shit' — but Poulter shrugs it off with a perfectly-timed punchline: 'It's okay, I'm an Arsenal fan.' The panel then briefly celebrates Arsenal's Premier League title, with Poulter admitting he was nervous over the final five or six games but was thrilled to see Declan Rice and the squad get over the line.

  • Gary Lineker reveals Ian Poulter was in the stands for England's game against Panama — caught on camera in a poncho with his hair going floppy in the rain. Poulter laughs that he had waited 50 years to attend a World Cup and could not face two draws in a row. He had already attended the Ghana game with his family. Alan Shearer, who was present doing radio co-commentary, offers the first analytical take: the big picture is England won the game and topped the group, with three outstanding individual performances from Elliott Anderson, Jude Bellingham (man of the match, goal and assist), and Harry Kane.

  • Gary Lineker moves to the big talking point — Harry Kane has broken his World Cup scoring record for England, a mark Lineker held for 40 years. Alan Shearer shows Gary the social media photo of his face at the moment Kane scored, which Lineker insists does not show devastation but the panel delights in suggesting otherwise. Lineker gets his line in early: 'I had the record for 40 years, I was getting bored of it.' Micah Richards (appearing later) goes further, theatrically declaring Lineker 'irrelevant', before Gary shuts him down with mock outrage. A pre-recorded message from Kane himself — warm, proud, and diplomatic — adds a genuine moment of history to the banter.

  • Maguire joins from a villa in Portugal where he is staying fit for preseason. He frames England's win in context — the Croatia game was the most important in the group, and Panama games are always tough. But he is emphatic on Bellingham: the best player on the pitch, a man who steps up when the country needs him, and someone who has been in four major tournaments at a remarkably young age. When Lineker raises the media narrative that Bellingham had been 'too big for his boots', Maguire pushes back firmly: it was never arrogance, always confidence — confidence he has had since he was 18 years old. Maguire's view is clear: if England are going to succeed, they need Bellingham and Kane at the top of their game.

  • Gary Lineker is an enthusiastic advocate for Rashford's display, praising his directness, his sharpness, and even a Barcelona-style cut-inside with his right foot that caused problems. Maguire, who played with Rashford for years at United, goes further: 'When he's in that frame and he's in that direct mode, he's unstoppable on his day.' The pair then pivot to Rashford's club situation — it is still unclear where he will play next season, with a possible return to Manchester United on the table. Maguire is diplomatic but warm, saying if Rashford comes back he would be welcomed, but it must be right for both player and club.

  • Lineker poses the tactical question at the heart of England's group campaign: playing two 10s in Bellingham and Rodgers made England more creative but also more vulnerable to counter-attacks, which must be a concern for the centre-backs. Maguire acknowledges this is something that needs to be managed — constant communication between defence and midfield about transitions — but he is confident Tuchel will not take that gamble against high-quality opposition. Against a team sitting in a low block like Panama, the twin 10s work. Against a side with dangerous forwards and real quality on the break, it would be a different proposition entirely.

  • The episode breaks for two sponsor segments. The first features a short comedy sketch for Carvana, built around a 'buyer's remorse' scenario that is subverted when the buyer reveals they purchased their car on Carvana with a 7-day return policy — 'buyers rejoice.' The second is a straight read for Duluth Trading Company, pitching their hardworking workwear with the new ultra-tough No Quit utility shirt, equipped with cooling and wicking tech.

  • With Micah Richards now on camera, the panel dig into the Bellingham question in depth. Alan Shearer identifies the key moment: it wasn't just a brilliant header from the corner, the ball wasn't even a great delivery — Bellingham made it great through sheer strength and technical brilliance. Rob Jones adds a telling detail: in a pre-tournament conversation, Morgan Rodgers described Bellingham as the most competitive person he had ever met, and Kane confirmed post-match that he had had 'the bit between his teeth' since camp in Florida. Lineker wonders aloud whether the debate over the number 10 shirt might have fuelled Bellingham's edge. Ian Poulter — who knows something about delivering under pressure — draws a direct parallel with the Ryder Cup: some players need to be loud and energise the room, and Bellingham is that player.

  • Lineker presses Poulter on the 2012 Ryder Cup — when Europe were being hammered and the atmosphere was miserable, Poulter made five consecutive birdies (Lineker initially says six, Poulter corrects him with a grin) to help spark an extraordinary comeback. The question is whether that mental state — the ability to find a zone when the pressure is highest — is something you can train, or whether it is innate. Poulter's answer is subtle: you need to build the environment, help teammates who are low on confidence, and be the energy in the room. He adds that Bellingham is exactly that kind of player for England — someone who can shift momentum when a team needs it most.

  • Micah Richards makes his characteristically boisterous entrance and is immediately asked about Bellingham. His answer is comprehensive: Bellingham's career trajectory — from Birmingham City teenager to Borussia Dortmund to Real Madrid to Champions League winner — speaks for itself. He lives for big occasions. Richards says he is a big fan of Morgan Rodgers too, and thought the pair could potentially play together, but the idea that Bellingham should not start for England was one he could never understand. Every aspect of his game — pressing, creating, driving, scoring — is elite. He describes Bellingham's performance as 'sensational in a difficult fixture.'

  • After Micah Richards's theatrical declaration that Lineker is now 'irrelevant', the episode plays Kane's pre-recorded message: warm, proud, and diplomatic — 'one ahead of you now, but I'm sure he'll send congratulations.' Lineker responds with total sincerity, saying he is genuinely thrilled it is Kane who broke the record and that 40 years was a long time to hold it. The conversation pivots to Kane the golfer: Poulter confirms he plays off 2, has played with him at the Dunhill Links pro-am for 24 years (Lineker protests he played too), and that Kane recently teed it up with Brooks Koepka. Shearer then raises the question of whether Kane could return to the Premier League and threaten his own all-time record — approximately 48 goals ahead of Kane's current tally.

  • This chapter captures the most substantive analytical tension in the episode. Lineker — who was messaging calm in the WhatsApp group chat during the game — argues you should not judge a group-stage performance too harshly, England are a counter-attacking team, and they never need to peak in the group stage. Shearer and Richards are less sanguine. Shearer points out that Ghana attacked only twice and England were lucky to escape without conceding a penalty. He adds that England gave away chances to weaker opposition and worries what better forwards would do. Richards agrees: when England were going one-on-one in the channel, they looked open; against a side like Argentina who score first and park the bus with better defenders, that could be fatal. Both agree that Tuchel is still searching for the right combination, particularly in the fullback and winger positions.

  • Rob Jones closes the episode with the injury update that will dominate England's preparations. Tuchel has confirmed Quansah's ankle twist is a 'classic ankle twist' and his fitness is 'a very tight race' for the next game. Combined with Reece James's absence, England are running out of options at right-back. Jones identifies Jed Spence as the most likely replacement, with the alternative being to shift Ezri Konsa across and reintegrate John Stones in the middle — though Stones has not played since the first group game and may also be carrying a knock. Lineker and Shearer discuss the concern, before Gary signs off the episode: knockout time, it all starts now.

Mentality monster
A colloquial phrase for a player who thrives under pressure and in high-stakes moments; used in the episode specifically to describe Jude Bellingham.
Low block
A defensive tactic where a team defends deep in their own half with many players behind the ball, making it difficult for opponents to play through them.
Mid-block
A defensive shape where a team holds a medium-height defensive line, neither pressing high nor sitting very deep — between a high press and a full low block.
Counter-attack
A rapid attacking move launched immediately after winning possession, designed to exploit the space left by an opposing team that has committed players forward.
Two 10s
A tactical arrangement where two attacking midfielders (number 10s) play in the same team simultaneously, sacrificing defensive cover for creative output.
Ryder Cup
A biennial team golf competition between Europe and the United States, widely regarded as one of sport's most intense pressure environments.
Pro-am
A golf tournament format pairing professional players with amateur partners, often used as a corporate or celebrity event.
Handicap (golf)
A numerical measure of a golfer's playing ability; a handicap of 2 indicates a near-professional standard of play.
Zimmer frame
A metal walking aid for the elderly; used humorously by Ian Poulter to joke about his age as he heads into the US Senior Open.
Preseason
The training period before a football season begins, typically involving high-intensity fitness work; dreaded by most professional players.
Set play
A rehearsed or structured attacking move from a dead-ball situation such as a corner or free kick.
Round of 32
The first knockout round of an expanded 48-team World Cup format, equivalent to the last 32 in other contexts.
Epitomise
To be a perfect example of something; used by Micah Richards to describe Bellingham as the embodiment of what England should be.
Tenacity
Determined persistence and refusal to give up; used to describe Bellingham's relentless pressing and work rate.

Chapter 3 · 03:29

Ian Poulter's Football Past and Arsenal Fandom

The opening exchange with Ian Poulter immediately throws up a surprise: the five-time Ryder Cup winner had a trial as a centre-half with Tottenham Hotspur in his youth. The trial, by his own cheerful admission, went badly — 'They said, oh shit' — but Poulter shrugs it off with a perfectly-timed punchline: 'It's okay, I'm an Arsenal fan.' The panel then briefly celebrates Arsenal's Premier League title, with Poulter admitting he was nervous over the final five or six games but was thrilled to see Declan Rice and the squad get over the line.

Claims made here

Ian Poulter had a football trial with Tottenham Hotspur as a young player, playing as a centre-half.

Ian Poulter no source cited

Chapter 4 · 05:00

Ian Poulter at the England Game — and His World Cup Week

Gary Lineker reveals Ian Poulter was in the stands for England's game against Panama — caught on camera in a poncho with his hair going floppy in the rain. Poulter laughs that he had waited 50 years to attend a World Cup and could not face two draws in a row. He had already attended the Ghana game with his family. Alan Shearer, who was present doing radio co-commentary, offers the first analytical take: the big picture is England won the game and topped the group, with three outstanding individual performances from Elliott Anderson, Jude Bellingham (man of the match, goal and assist), and Harry Kane.

Claims made here

Harry Kane overtook Gary Lineker to become England's all-time top scorer at the World Cup.

Gary Lineker no source cited

Chapter 6 · 07:35

Harry Maguire on England's Win and Jude Bellingham

Maguire joins from a villa in Portugal where he is staying fit for preseason. He frames England's win in context — the Croatia game was the most important in the group, and Panama games are always tough. But he is emphatic on Bellingham: the best player on the pitch, a man who steps up when the country needs him, and someone who has been in four major tournaments at a remarkably young age. When Lineker raises the media narrative that Bellingham had been 'too big for his boots', Maguire pushes back firmly: it was never arrogance, always confidence — confidence he has had since he was 18 years old. Maguire's view is clear: if England are going to succeed, they need Bellingham and Kane at the top of their game.

Claims made here

Jude Bellingham has featured in four major international tournaments for England.

Harry Maguire no source cited

Chapter 7 · 09:50

Marcus Rashford: Sharp Form and Uncertain Club Future

Gary Lineker is an enthusiastic advocate for Rashford's display, praising his directness, his sharpness, and even a Barcelona-style cut-inside with his right foot that caused problems. Maguire, who played with Rashford for years at United, goes further: 'When he's in that frame and he's in that direct mode, he's unstoppable on his day.' The pair then pivot to Rashford's club situation — it is still unclear where he will play next season, with a possible return to Manchester United on the table. Maguire is diplomatic but warm, saying if Rashford comes back he would be welcomed, but it must be right for both player and club.

Chapter 9 · 13:50

Carvana and Duluth Trading Company Ad Reads

The episode breaks for two sponsor segments. The first features a short comedy sketch for Carvana, built around a 'buyer's remorse' scenario that is subverted when the buyer reveals they purchased their car on Carvana with a 7-day return policy — 'buyers rejoice.' The second is a straight read for Duluth Trading Company, pitching their hardworking workwear with the new ultra-tough No Quit utility shirt, equipped with cooling and wicking tech.

Chapter 10 · 14:15

Bellingham Panel Discussion: Born Winner, Born Leader

With Micah Richards now on camera, the panel dig into the Bellingham question in depth. Alan Shearer identifies the key moment: it wasn't just a brilliant header from the corner, the ball wasn't even a great delivery — Bellingham made it great through sheer strength and technical brilliance. Rob Jones adds a telling detail: in a pre-tournament conversation, Morgan Rodgers described Bellingham as the most competitive person he had ever met, and Kane confirmed post-match that he had had 'the bit between his teeth' since camp in Florida. Lineker wonders aloud whether the debate over the number 10 shirt might have fuelled Bellingham's edge. Ian Poulter — who knows something about delivering under pressure — draws a direct parallel with the Ryder Cup: some players need to be loud and energise the room, and Bellingham is that player.

Claims made here

Morgan Rodgers described Jude Bellingham as the most competitive person he has ever met.

Rob Jones no source cited

Ian Poulter has won the Ryder Cup five times.

Gary Lineker no source cited

Chapter 11 · 16:40

Ian Poulter: The 2012 Ryder Cup and Finding the Zone

Lineker presses Poulter on the 2012 Ryder Cup — when Europe were being hammered and the atmosphere was miserable, Poulter made five consecutive birdies (Lineker initially says six, Poulter corrects him with a grin) to help spark an extraordinary comeback. The question is whether that mental state — the ability to find a zone when the pressure is highest — is something you can train, or whether it is innate. Poulter's answer is subtle: you need to build the environment, help teammates who are low on confidence, and be the energy in the room. He adds that Bellingham is exactly that kind of player for England — someone who can shift momentum when a team needs it most.

Claims made here

Ian Poulter made five consecutive birdies at the 2012 Ryder Cup, helping spark Europe's comeback.

Ian Poulter no source cited

Chapter 12 · 18:20

Micah Richards Arrives — and Bellingham Summed Up

Micah Richards makes his characteristically boisterous entrance and is immediately asked about Bellingham. His answer is comprehensive: Bellingham's career trajectory — from Birmingham City teenager to Borussia Dortmund to Real Madrid to Champions League winner — speaks for itself. He lives for big occasions. Richards says he is a big fan of Morgan Rodgers too, and thought the pair could potentially play together, but the idea that Bellingham should not start for England was one he could never understand. Every aspect of his game — pressing, creating, driving, scoring — is elite. He describes Bellingham's performance as 'sensational in a difficult fixture.'

Chapter 13 · 19:55

Harry Kane Breaks the Record — Panel Reaction and the Golf Story

After Micah Richards's theatrical declaration that Lineker is now 'irrelevant', the episode plays Kane's pre-recorded message: warm, proud, and diplomatic — 'one ahead of you now, but I'm sure he'll send congratulations.' Lineker responds with total sincerity, saying he is genuinely thrilled it is Kane who broke the record and that 40 years was a long time to hold it. The conversation pivots to Kane the golfer: Poulter confirms he plays off 2, has played with him at the Dunhill Links pro-am for 24 years (Lineker protests he played too), and that Kane recently teed it up with Brooks Koepka. Shearer then raises the question of whether Kane could return to the Premier League and threaten his own all-time record — approximately 48 goals ahead of Kane's current tally.

Claims made here

Gary Lineker held England's World Cup scoring record for 40 years.

Gary Lineker no source cited

Harry Kane plays golf off a handicap of 2.

Ian Poulter no source cited

Alan Shearer's Premier League scoring record is approximately 48 goals ahead of Harry Kane's current tally.

Gary Lineker no source cited

Sports
Data point 2 hdcp

Mentality monster Bellingham sees England top the group · Jun 28, 2026 Sports

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.

Chapter 14 · 23:00

England's First-Half Display: Should We Be Worried?

This chapter captures the most substantive analytical tension in the episode. Lineker — who was messaging calm in the WhatsApp group chat during the game — argues you should not judge a group-stage performance too harshly, England are a counter-attacking team, and they never need to peak in the group stage. Shearer and Richards are less sanguine. Shearer points out that Ghana attacked only twice and England were lucky to escape without conceding a penalty. He adds that England gave away chances to weaker opposition and worries what better forwards would do. Richards agrees: when England were going one-on-one in the channel, they looked open; against a side like Argentina who score first and park the bus with better defenders, that could be fatal. Both agree that Tuchel is still searching for the right combination, particularly in the fullback and winger positions.

Claims made here

Jordan Pickford brought down a Ghana player but received a free kick rather than conceding a penalty.

Alan Shearer no source cited

England conceded two goals against Croatia in the group stage.

Alan Shearer no source cited

Sports
England's Defensive Frailties: A Real Concern?

Mentality monster Bellingham sees England top the group · Jun 28, 2026 Sports

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.

Chapter 15 · 26:00

England's Injury Crisis at Right-Back and the Knockout Outlook

Rob Jones closes the episode with the injury update that will dominate England's preparations. Tuchel has confirmed Quansah's ankle twist is a 'classic ankle twist' and his fitness is 'a very tight race' for the next game. Combined with Reece James's absence, England are running out of options at right-back. Jones identifies Jed Spence as the most likely replacement, with the alternative being to shift Ezri Konsa across and reintegrate John Stones in the middle — though Stones has not played since the first group game and may also be carrying a knock. Lineker and Shearer discuss the concern, before Gary signs off the episode: knockout time, it all starts now.

Claims made here

Thomas Tuchel described Jarell Quansah's ankle injury as a classic ankle twist and said his availability for the next game will be a very tight race.

Rob Jones Thomas Tuchel post-match comments

No indexed bits in this chapter.

Show stoppers

Sports
England's Defensive Frailties: A Real Concern?

Mentality monster Bellingham sees England top the group · Jun 28, 2026 Sports

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.

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1 / 12 cited (8%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

Jude Bellingham has featured in four major international tournaments for England.

Harry Maguire no source cited

Harry Kane overtook Gary Lineker to become England's all-time top scorer at the World Cup.

Gary Lineker no source cited

Gary Lineker held England's World Cup scoring record for 40 years.

Gary Lineker no source cited

Ian Poulter has won the Ryder Cup five times.

Gary Lineker no source cited

Ian Poulter made five consecutive birdies at the 2012 Ryder Cup, helping spark Europe's comeback.

Ian Poulter no source cited

Harry Kane plays golf off a handicap of 2.

Ian Poulter no source cited

Jordan Pickford brought down a Ghana player but received a free kick rather than conceding a penalty.

Alan Shearer no source cited

England conceded two goals against Croatia in the group stage.

Alan Shearer no source cited

Morgan Rodgers described Jude Bellingham as the most competitive person he has ever met.

Rob Jones no source cited

Thomas Tuchel described Jarell Quansah's ankle injury as a classic ankle twist and said his availability for the next game will be a very tight race.

Rob Jones Thomas Tuchel post-match comments

Alan Shearer's Premier League scoring record is approximately 48 goals ahead of Harry Kane's current tally.

Gary Lineker no source cited

Ian Poulter had a football trial with Tottenham Hotspur as a young player, playing as a centre-half.

Ian Poulter no source cited

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