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England changing its World Cup narrative with ‘resilient’ run after years of criticism

Ethan Sears England changing its World Cup narrative with ‘resilient’ run after years of criticism By Ethan Sears Published July 12, 2026, 1:18 a.m. ET Erling Haaland and Marc Guéhi fight for possession July 11. Anadolu via Getty Images MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Any semblance of the usual discourse around an England team, which even in the national team’s best moments so often veers toward melodrama and has a default state of over-the-top, seems to have evaporated into the Miami heat.

If that wasn’t true after England’s 3-2 win over Mexico in Mexico City’s altitude, it certainly is now, after the Three Lions gutted out an extra-time 2-1 win over Norway here Saturday night.

England manager Thomas Tuchel isn’t wrong to say his team still has more to go. It was second-best for long stretches of Saturday, lucky to escape Congo in the Round of 32 and put in a terrible performance in a 0-0 draw against Ghana in the group stage.

What it has, though — and what has changed the conversation around this team — is guile.

Read original at New York Post

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