World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
In the player tunnel in Boston, the 22 year old Real Madrid No. 10 was cursing out a 73 year old Ghanaian old man. Morgan Rogers — a Villa midfielder half a head shorter than Bellingham — dragged him away like a piece of luggage.
In the tunnel of the Boston stadium, the 22-year-old Real Madrid No. 10 was cursing at a 73-year-old Ghanaian old man. Morgan Rogers — a Villa midfielder half a head shorter than Bellingham — dragged him away like luggage.
78.8% possession, nearly 20 shots, 9 corners, 1.28 expected goals. The Guardian called it the highest possession percentage for a team that failed to score in World Cup history.
All swallowed up by the Ghanaian.
The Ghanaians set up a low-density defense, dragged England into the mud, and turned possession into a rosary. Then Bellingham exploded in the tunnel.
Looking through his disciplinary record over the past sixteen months, the script is all copy-paste.
February 2025: Real Madrid vs. Osasuna. Bellingham swore at referee Munuera Montero in the 39th minute. Movistar+'s microphones caught it clearly: "I'm talking to you with respect, fuck off." He called it a "communication misunderstanding." Straight red, two-match ban.
Two months later, the Copa del Rey final: Real Madrid lost 2-3 to Barcelona. Rüdiger got a six-match ban for throwing ice at the referee; Bellingham and Vázquez each got a red card. His was later rescinded, but tunnel cameras caught him still shouting.
November vs. Albania: He sulked after being substituted. Tuchel publicly called him out: "That was a bad impression. Behavior is key. I need to review it."
April 2026: Champions League elimination. Camavinga got a second yellow, then a red. Bellingham walked through the mixed zone and dropped "It's a joke."
Five incidents in sixteen months. When things go wrong, he explodes.
Tuchel knows exactly when this bomb will go off.
At a press conference in June 2025, this German used his mother's aesthetic to evaluate England's most expensive star: "His hunger and desire to win sometimes manifest in a way that even my mom would find repulsive, but he's a special kid."
Repulsive. Half protectiveness, half laying his cards on the table.
Before the World Cup, Tuchel left Bellingham out of several squads and kept prodding him before the tournament: "He's one of the starters. He knows that. But we have 14 or 15 potential starters. Roles can change at any time."
Against Croatia in a 4-2 win, Bellingham said before the match he was "carrying a chip on my shoulder." He did score and win man of the match.
Against Ghana in a 0-0 draw, that chip turned into cursing at a 73-year-old.
Queiroz didn't even crack. That old man is a master of mind games.
73 years old, coaching in his fifth World Cup, tying Milutinović's record. Third-oldest manager in World Cup history, oldest winning coach this tournament. In 2002, when he took South Africa to the World Cup, Bellingham wasn't even born.
After the match, Queiroz said to the camera: "It could have been a second yellow, a red card, because he went after my player. But my first reaction was to stay calm."
All calculated. The 73-year-old fox dragged England into the mud with a bus, then chased the opponent's key player in the tunnel, and finally hinted to the camera, "He should have been sent off." Openly asking for a red, secretly handing the referee a knife.
Tuchel had no choice but to clean up. There's still a match tomorrow, and the locker room can't fall apart.
In the tunnel, Bellingham seemed to cover his mouth while saying something.
Under IFAB's new anti-insult rules this World Cup, covering the mouth during a confrontation is treated as masking discriminatory or abusive language, resulting in a straight red. Four days earlier, on June 20, Paraguay's Almiron was sent off for doing just that — the first red card under the rule this tournament.
The referee didn't see Bellingham's action.
He escaped a red card. The 0 on the scoreboard still hung there.