Harry Kane: Tuchel's Half-Time Speech Inspired England's World Cup Opener Win
L'essentiel
- Harry Kane credits Thomas Tuchel's half-time speech for inspiring England's 3-2 victory over Croatia in their 2026 World Cup opener.
- Despite Croatia equalizing twice, England dominated the second half after Tuchel's motivational talk, securing the win with goals from Kane, Declan Rice, Jude Bellingham, and Marcus Rashford.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
England secured a victory in their opening match of the 2026 World Cup against Croatia, with Harry Kane highlighting a half-time speech from manager Thomas Tuchel as a key factor in their improved second-half performance.
Harry Kane revealed that a half-time speech from Thomas Tuchel inspired England to victory in their opening match of the 2026 World Cup.
Croatia equalised twice before half-time after Kane had equalled Gary Lineker’s record for goals scored by an England player at the World Cup finals with a penalty and a goal from a Declan Rice corner. But a much-improved performance in the second half saw Jude Bellingham re-establish England’s lead before Marcus Rashford came off the bench to wrap up the victory late on.
“The manager gave us a speech at half-time just to say: ‘Look, if we lose, we lose in our way,’” the England captain told ITV. “And I think you saw that. We came out in the second half full gas and they couldn’t live with it, and that’s the level we have to set in every game.
“Without the ball, we went a bit more aggressive. It was difficult. They have players like Luka Modric dropping in and you’re trying to figure out who to pick up. The way we controlled the game once we went ahead, we never really looked like we were in danger and then scored on the counterattack.
“We had a spell where we could have scored three or four. Credit to everyone: the first game of the tournament and a great result against a tough side.”
There were concerns for England when Rice appeared to limp off in the second half, while the defence looked shaky at times. Tuchel’s assistant, Anthony Barry, acknowledged his concern in a television interview at half-time.
“I think there was a lot of nervous energy early on – maybe that should be accepted and expected in the opening game of a World Cup,” he said. “From there we made some decisions where the energy was not free in our mind, playing long when we should play short, playing short when we should play long, not playing through the gaps, so not allowing us to accelerate our game the way we wanted.
“Then you think the penalty would free us up, allow us to play more like ourselves, but again we fall back into some fearful patterns.”
Questions ouvertes
- What was the specific content of Tuchel's speech?
- Will Declan Rice's apparent injury affect future matches?
- Can England maintain this level of performance throughout the tournament?






