Thomas Tuchel Concerned Despite England's World Cup Quarter-Final Win
L'essentiel
- England manager Thomas Tuchel expressed concern over his team's performance despite their World Cup quarter-final victory over Norway.
- He highlighted issues with possession, technical mistakes, and a lack of speed, despite commending the players' effort and team spirit in overcoming adversity.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
England manager Thomas Tuchel is concerned about his team's performance despite winning their World Cup quarter-final against Norway, citing technical mistakes and a lack of speed. He believes the team can play better and is focused on improving their tactical execution.
England fought hard to beat Norway in the World Cup quarter-final on Saturday, but manager Thomas Tuchel is clearly concerned.
"We made life very difficult for ourselves," Tuchel said. "The result is fantastic but I'm not happy with the performance."
He did follow these quotes up by commending the players for their heart: "I'm impressed with the effort, team spirit and belief to overcome adversity.
"But I am also a football coach and I think we can play better. We had a lot of momentum swings for both teams. We made life difficult in the way we played, sloppy, a lot of technical mistakes, not fast enough, not repetitive enough."
So, what did he want to see? And more importantly, if the side are not playing as they should be, why do they keep on winning?
When Tuchel selected his World Cup squad, it was clear that he had a specific style of play in mind.
Players were selected based on how well they could perform in predefined roles – think Jude Bellingham and Morgan Rogers competing for the number 10 shirt pre-tournament.
These fixed roles are underpinned by a number of key principles, some of which are:
Dominate possession
Press aggressively
Play deliberate passes to entice opposition pressure
After enticing pressure, accelerate play, looking to find forwards in space
Against defensive blocks, attack down the flanks, using wide triangles and rotations to create chances
Throughout the World Cup we have seen these in glimpses, but Tuchel is unsatisfied.
Almost all of the issues Tuchel mentioned after the game were about how his side played on the ball, so for context, we need to look at England's attacking and Norway's defensive set-up.
Stale Solbakken's men defended in a 4-5-1 shape, blocking space, with England attacking in a 3-2-5 shape on the ball.
Marc Guehi, John Stones and Ezri Konsa made up the first line. Declan Rice and Elliot Anderson formed the two in midfield. Left-back Nico O'Reilly joined the front four, giving them an extra player against Norway's back line.
In his post-match critique Tuchel said England were "not repetitive enough", an uncommon phrase.
What he was most likely referring to was that he did not see his side have longer spells of possession consisting of lots of short passing, aimed at drawing Norway out.
This is something the German manager wants because it opens up space to find attackers in, either out wide or with long balls over the top.
In the group stage against Ghana, who also defended in a 4-5-1 block, Tuchel was heard telling his players to play "short, short, short" before looking for a "long switch", something we actually saw from England in the first quarter against Norway.
The wide midfielders of Norway did not drop into the defensive line, instead holding their position in line with the central midfielders. Behind them, Norway kept a narrow back four.
This gave England multiple possible solutions through their wide triangles.
Using Anthony Gordon, Anderson and O'Reilly as an example below, we see the England winger move from a left-wing position into a more narrow position inside the Norweigan right-back, Julian Ryerson.
Norway's right midfielder, Alexander Sorloth, holds his zone, which means O'Reilly or Anderson could move into the space out wide behind him.
The zonal defending of Norway meant they were not tracking the movement of the England players, but instead looking to defend whoever arrived in their zone.
If England players were to run, off the ball, into spaces that were empty, they would have found themselves free. Playing quickly into these wide players then would have almost certainly given England numbers around the opposition full-back.
Frustratingly for Tuchel, similar patterns worked for Iraq and France against Norway, both sides who arguably don't put as much emphasis on this approach compared to the ex-Chelsea manager's England.
Continuing with the example below, the ball isn't played into the free players out wide quickly enough and instead Guehi finds himself on the ball at a walking pace.
England fail to recognise where the space is early and instead of looking to play through the wide areas, the Manchester City defender forces a pass through the middle, losing the ball in a dangerous area.
This is an example of what Tuchel was likely eluding to when using the word "sloppy".
Assistant coach Anthony Barry's half-time quotes provide valuable insight at this tournament. In England's opener against Croatia, he said: "[We were] not playing through the gaps, not [accelerating] our game the way we wanted to. We fell back into some fearful patterns."
Although England have found a way to arrive at the semi-finals, this assessment still holds elements of truth five games later.
Interestingly these details cropped up in England's opening goal against Mexico. After a quick turnover against a disorganised defence, Rice powerfully carried the ball up the pitch, running at the full-back and delaying him from getting out to Saka.
The late run of Bellingham is found with the Mexican centre-back being pulled away from England's number 10 – this time by a forward run from Kane.
It's a testament to England's players taking advantage of the opposition's momentary disorganisation and showcasing skills that come naturally to them. It's hard to coach Bellingham's timing and instinct, or Rice and Anderson's ball-carrying.
Post game, Bellingham said: "The game is split into loads of different facets – technical, tactical, and, the biggest one is psychological, managing adversity."
The manner in which England's players have stepped up, appearing to thrive in chaotic game-states, is commendable, and shows not only a psychological strength but a level of individual footballing quality too.
For Tuchel, "performance helps you win games", and it is his job to create the conditions that more reliably give England chances throughout a match.
With Argentina in the semi-finals, a team that have shown vulnerabilities out wide, he will undoubtedly remain fixated on getting his wide triangles to work.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
Tuchel will focus on improving wide triangle play against Argentina.
Probable · Court terme
Questions ouvertes
- Why do England keep winning despite poor performance?
- How will Tuchel address the tactical issues?
- Can England improve their performance against stronger opponents?






