‘Chip on shoulder’ may help Bellingham to best form

This post was originally published on this site.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

This video can not be played

Phil Cartwright

BBC Sport journalist

Jude Bellingham has said the external “noise” around his place in the England team may help him find his best form during the World Cup.

One of the main talking points around selection before England’s first group game against Croatia was whether boss Thomas Tuchel would select Real Madrid’s Bellingham or Aston Villa’s Morgan Rogers in the number 10 role behind captain Harry Kane.

Bellingham was chosen to start in Dallas and scored England’s crucial third goal just after half-time, with Marcus Rashford adding a fourth late on to complete a 4-2 win.

“For me personally, it was nice to put some of the noise aside and just show my country and my team-mates how committed I am to help us try to win football matches,” the 22-year-old, who is appearing in a fourth consecutive major tournament for England, told BBC Sport.

“To contribute, to help my team and help my country is one of the biggest honours and regardless of the noise outside, that honour doesn’t change for me at all.”

Bellingham conceded that it has been a “bit of a tougher season for me”, with the start of his 2025-26 campaign disrupted by injury, his club side in Spain ending up eight points behind eventual champions Barcelona and his place in the national team under scrutiny.

But Bellingham said he feels “fresh and sharp” heading into the tournament and it was “nice to hear” comments from colleagues such as Jordan Henderson, who said the former Birmingham City and Borussia Dortmund player gives England an “X-factor”.

Asked if he has entered the World Cup with added impetus, Bellingham smiled as he replied: “A little bit – I think I’ve got a little bit of a chip on my shoulder, haven’t I?”

And asked if he feels he plays his best in that scenario, he continued: “I think so – that helps me a lot to find that focus early in the game and find that intensity.

“I know that it’s part of being a footballer and I don’t hold a grudge against anyone who says bad things about me because sometimes I do deserve it.

“Today, it was nice to try to show people and remind people what I’m about.”

Bellingham netted in England’s World Cup opener against Iran in 2022 and repeated that feat in the 2026 tournament, collecting Elliot Anderson’s pass down the right touchline and cutting infield before sliding a low shot past the Croatia goalkeeper into the far corner.

It put England into the lead for the third time in the match, having twice surrendered a one-goal advantage in the first half.

Working as a pundit for BBC Sport, former England defender Micah Richards said: “Bellingham is a big-game player.

“Rogers is fantastic as well, but in the moment where you needed him, he comes up trumps and that is the difference.”

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

This video can not be played

Hot this week

Developing heatwave across Europe to send UK temperatures above 30C

Very warm weather is set to return to parts of the UK with temperatures of 30C plus expected as Europe experiences a 'heat dome' as Simon King explains.

Bird flu kills more than 75% of baby seals on remote Australian island, study finds

Scientists say 13,000 southern elephant seal pups on Heard Island have died of the H5N1 strain.

US and Iranian presidents sign deal aiming to end war

The fate of Iran's nuclear programme, a key reason cited by the US for starting the conflict, is still to be negotiated.

Apple to raise prices as AI boom pushes up chip costs

The firm's outgoing boss Tim Cook did not say when prices will rise or which products will be affected.

Teenager dies in horse-drawn carriage accident in New York

The horse bolted and toppled over after the carriage driver stepped down to take a picture of the passengers.

Topics

Developing heatwave across Europe to send UK temperatures above 30C

Very warm weather is set to return to parts of the UK with temperatures of 30C plus expected as Europe experiences a 'heat dome' as Simon King explains.

Bird flu kills more than 75% of baby seals on remote Australian island, study finds

Scientists say 13,000 southern elephant seal pups on Heard Island have died of the H5N1 strain.

US and Iranian presidents sign deal aiming to end war

The fate of Iran's nuclear programme, a key reason cited by the US for starting the conflict, is still to be negotiated.

Apple to raise prices as AI boom pushes up chip costs

The firm's outgoing boss Tim Cook did not say when prices will rise or which products will be affected.

Teenager dies in horse-drawn carriage accident in New York

The horse bolted and toppled over after the carriage driver stepped down to take a picture of the passengers.

Fans boo, players adapt – the view on World Cup hydration breaks

Supporters are booing them, coaches are using them, players are adapting to them - mid-half hydration breaks are affecting everyone at the World Cup in different ways.

US-Iran deal leaves core sticking points unresolved – and a $300bn question

Trump has insisted the deal ensures that Iran will never buy, develop or produce a nuclear weapon. But text of the agreement falls short of that.

What’s in the US-Iran agreement?

The 14-paragraph memo includes an end to fighting, an agreement that Iran will never have a nuclear weapon, and a $300bn redevelopment package for Iran.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img