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Getty ImagesNewcastle United full-back Tino Livramento has been ruled out of England’s World Cup campaign with a calf injury and has been replaced by Chelsea defender Trevoh Chalobah.
Livramento, 23, sustained the injury during a training session on Sunday before England’s World Cup opener against Croatia on Wednesday (21:00 BST).
His involvement in the tournament had already been in doubt after he missed the final five weeks of the season with a thigh injury.
Chalobah, who has one cap, will not join up with the squad until after the Croatia match.
He is on his way to England’s camp in Kansas City as the rest of the squad head to Dallas.
Outfield players who sustain a serious injury or illness can be replaced in a World Cup squad up to 24 hours before the team’s first match of the tournament gets under way.
Livramento, who was handed his international debut under Gareth Southgate in November 2024, has featured five times during Tuchel’s reign, starting twice.
He came on at half-time during England’s 1-0 warm-up win over New Zealand but was left on the bench against Costa Rica.
Reece James is Tuchel’s first choice at right-back but there are also question marks about his fitness, following another injury-hit campaign.
The 26-year-old missed nine games for Chelsea at the end of the season because of a hamstring injury.
Other options who are already in the England squad include Djed Spence and Ezri Konsa.
Spence, who can play on both flanks, has featured six times under Tuchel while Konsa, predominantly a centre-back, has played 11 times, including nine starts.
Chalobah has not featured for England since June 2025 when he played the full 90 minutes in a friendly against Senegal, but was on the bench for multiple World Cup qualifiers under Tuchel.
Like Konsa, the 26-year-old’s preferred position is centre-back.
Chalobah’s inclusion marks the completion of a dream too – on the day of the World Cup final in 2018, as a 19-year-old, he tweeted “One day #Believe”.
Chalobah call-up fits Tuchel pattern
Thomas Tuchel’s decision to call up Trevor Chalobah after Tino Livramento’s injury makes sense if you follow the pattern of his squad selections so far.
Tuchel has a system that he is unlikely to change mid-tournament – and has opted for tall, positionally versatile players.
In addition to the 11 players who started the last game against Costa Rica, only Marc Guehi, Marcus Rashford, and Morgan Rogers are also likely to contest starting positions. These 14 will carry the load of England’s minutes.
The rest of the squad, in Tuchel’s words, are “specialists” who can provide tactical solutions depending on the state of the game – think Ivan Toney or Dan Burn, or players who cultivate a strong team environment like Jordan Henderson.
Trevor Chalobah ticks many of these boxes. A tall, versatile defender capable of playing as a centre-back or full-back commended for his worth ethic and personality within a squad environment.
It is important to note that Jarell Quansah, Ezri Konsa, John Stones and Djed Spence, also versatile defenders, have all played at right-back too.
Tuchel will be hoping Reece James, familiar with the demands of this system, will play every game, but in deciding not to call up the likes of Lewis Hall or Trent Alexander-Arnold, he is sticking true to picking a squad that minimises the potential outside noise asking why big-name bench players are not starting.






