Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

HE’S UNBELL IEVABLE

England midfield legends weren’t as good as Jude at such a tender age claims Rio

- SIMON MULLOCK

FROM in Doha JUDE BELLINGHAM took the World Cup by storm to show why he is the most coveted teenager in football.

The 19-year-old scored his first England goal with a towering header to send the Three Lions on their way to a thumping victory.

But it was the maturity of his midfield performanc­e, in what was only his 18th appearance for the Three Lions, that had the nation purring.

“I told you I was saving that goal,” said the Borussia

Dortmund star. “I thought I had missed. It took ages to loop into the goal.

“I said I wanted to score more goals for Dortmund and England this year and to get in the right positions. It was a brilliant ball in from Luke Shaw and I was just there to flick it away. It’s a really proud moment for me.”

Former England centre-half Rio Ferdinand believes Bellingham is a generation­al talent.

The Stourbridg­e-born midfielder is already on the wish-lists of Real Madrid, Manchester City, Liverpool and Paris Saint-germain and his current £130million valuation will continue to rise if he can maintain this form throughout the tournament. Ferdinand said: “We talk about the great midfielder­s that we’ve played with and seen in England in our generation. None of them were doing what Bellingham is doing at this age, on this stage.

“I’m not saying he’s better or going to be as good as all of them but at this age none of them were doing what he was doing and it’s fabulous to see.”

Bellingham’s header (above) opened the floodgates, with Bukayo Saka (below, left) scoring twice and Raheem Sterling, Marcus Rashford and Jack Grealish also on target.

Gareth Southgate’s decision to unleash the teenager was fully vindicated. Bellingham (celebratin­g, above right) said: “That’s how we want to be – that’s how we want to carry our mentality through the rest of the tournament.

“It was a really good day for us. Six goals in a World Cup game is really impressive, regardless of who you are playing against.

“Iran came out really well, really strong, hard to break down, and we didn’t have anything clear for quite a while. With the goals we opened them up, but the start was tough and we had to dig it out when we weren’t getting it all our own way.”

Bellingham said victory is a huge confidence-booster ahead of the clash with USA on

Friday night, with Wales to follow next week.

“The manager just said to enjoy the wins because it would have been a very

different reaction had we not got the result,” he said.

“But we’ve got to get ready for the next game and realise that a new challenge is incoming.

“Wins take the pressure off. When you win games, you’re at ease for a little bit longer.”

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