Hindustan Times (Noida)

Jude hits the right notes

- Rajesh Pansare rajesh.pansare@htlive.com

MUMBAI: If anyone had the slightest doubt why Jude Bellingham is Gareth Southgate’s preferred choice in the midfield over far more experience­d options, it was laid to rest by the 19-year-old with a stellar display against Senegal that secured England’s passage into the World Cup quarter-finals with a 3-1 win on Sunday.

The Borussia Dortmund player was England’s heartbeat in the midfield, displaying an array of skills that left everyone in awe of him—on the field, in the stands and around the world.

When England were struggling to get going in the initial phase, he played the role of a disruptor by making decisive tackles and intercepti­ons. He was at the forefront when the Three Lions got into their groove, setting the tempo, playing a role in both of England’s goals in the first-half.

For the first goal, Bellingham received a pass from Harry Kane and drove through the inner left channel and timed his cut back for Jordan Henderson inside the box to perfection. The Liverpool midfielder steered it into the goal.

The seasoned Henderson’s celebratio­n with Bellingham, and then pointing his young teammate to the crowd as they walked triumphant­ly back said it all. England had been desperate for the goal to calm their nerves.

Bellingham had just started. As the first-half added time was running out, Bellingham wrested possession back on the top of the England penalty box, controlled and drove down the middle, beating two Senegal midfielder­s before passing to Phil Foden on the left. who crossed first time to Kane. The England striker, anxious for his first goal in this World Cup, had all the time to control and fire home past Senegal goalkeeper Edouard Mendy.

Bellingham’s ability to play box-to-box has allowed Southgate to settle for a 4-3-3 formation in the last two matches and play with just one holding midfielder in Declan Rice. At Euro 2020, where England lost in the final to Italy, Southgate fielded two holding midfielder­s in Rice and Kalvin Phillips. Phillips though is not fully fit, having just recovered from injury.

In Qatar, Rice has patrolled the area in front of the centreback­s while Bellingham and Henderson have had the leeway to push forward to make it a front five, stretching the opponents. That has made England’s attacks more potent than they were in Euro 2020. There, England scored just four goals till the Round of 16. In the World Cup they have already netted 12—the joint most with Spain.

“I don’t think we could have predicted how quickly Bellingham could mature. In the last five months that has gone to another level,” Southgate said.

According to Squawka, the teenager completed 30 of the 33 passes he attempted, won nine duels, was involved in five ball recoveries, four successful tackles and two intercepti­ons.

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