Daily Mirror

England can put down a marker if they pick their best side tonight, and that has to include Bellingham

- STANCOLLYM­ORE

ENGLAND’S performanc­e against Hungary was disappoint­ing on Saturday – and so was the result.

But, that said, I understand Gareth Southgate wanting to have a look at one or two new faces.

And I get that, of the four matches in this get together, the Magyars away, in front of 30,000 school kids, will have been the most difficult to get up for.

Now it’s done and dusted, though, I don’t want any more experiment­ation from England.

I want to see Southgate playing his best team in as many games as possible between now and the World Cup, and especially against Germany tonight and Italy on Saturday.

If we can go to Munich, put in a good performanc­e and win 2-0, and the fans have enjoyed it, then it won’t half stand us in good stead for later in the year, because we’re close enough to the World Cup for these things to matter.

Let’s say we face Hansi Flick’s side in the latter stages in Qatar – if we beat them this week then we’d go into that game full of beans.

But if we lose 3-0 or 4-0, having made 16 substituti­ons, then we’ll have gifted Flick a team talk along the lines of, ‘Lads, we beat these easily six months ago, so let’s go into the game relaxed’.

That’s why we must be positive tonight and that means seeing Declan

Rice and Jude Bellingham paired together again in a midfield combinatio­n that has me salivating.

I was pleased with Jarrod Bowen’s contributi­on on Saturday and he certainly did enough to put himself at the forefront of Southgate’s mind.

But let’s have it straight, it’s not what he does in this gettogethe­r that will take him to Qatar, it’s what he does at the start of next season for West Ham. Which means Bellingham (above) is the one who is within a whisker already of getting into the first team. I’m getting really excited about him because I just can’t praise the kid highly enough.

People will say he didn’t do as much as they wanted him to against Hungary, but this is a lad who does all of the basics very well.

I know Kalvin Phillips will come back and get himself into the frame. But with Bellingham knocking on the door, the Leeds star is the obvious one to knock out of the way because, as good as the Rice Phillips partnershi­p is, the one between Rice (left) and Bellingham makes it look analogue in a digital age.

Bellingham is 18, he has played 100-plus games in senior football already and has 13 caps.

Yet the fact he’s going so far under the radar, rather than being shot up into the air out of a rocket, as Wayne Rooney and Dele Alli were, means this lad could get to 23 that way and then, all of a sudden, be recognised as the world’s best midfielder and someone who is courted by every club on the planet.

What I like about Bellingham is that there’s nothing in his lifestyle that detracts from his performanc­es, in the way they did with Rooney and Dele.

He’s a Rolls-Royce who behaves like a Rolls-Royce and that couldn’t be better news for England.

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