World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
Thomas Tuchel filed a complaint with FIFA. He didn't complain about the pitch, nor did he criticize the locker room. The reason for the complaint was that during the national anthem, the cameraman's lens was too close to his face. FIFA accepted the complaint and adjusted the broadcast camera positions overnight.
Thomas Tuchel filed a complaint with FIFA. He didn't complain about the turf or nitpick the locker room. His reason for complaining was that the camera was too close to his face during the playing of the national anthem. FIFA accepted the complaint and adjusted the camera positions overnight.
At Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, the England manager tried to measure every inch of safe distance with the rules. Ghanaians don't operate that way. The same week Tuchel complained about the cameraman, a Ghanaian priest performed a voodoo ritual in front of a camera aimed at Harry Kane's photo.
Don't be fooled by the 4-2 score in the opening match. England beat Croatia to a pulp, with Kane scoring a brace. It looked lively, but underneath it all, it was all smoke and mirrors. Saka's chronic Achilles tendinitis and Rashford's muscle discomfort effectively drained England's flanks. Tuchel's 4-2-3-1 formation, without two explosive players who can take on defenders, turned possession in the attacking third into a rosary. No matter how fiercely Rice fought in midfield, it couldn't hide the poverty of positional play. Once the ball entered the final 30 meters, the only option was to force it through the middle. Without Saka's changes of direction and Rashford's sprints, Tuchel's tactical board was useless against a compact defense. He complained about the cameraman only because the stagnation in the attack made him jittery, and he needed a visible target to vent his frustration.
Ghana's situation is even worse. A 1-0 last-minute victory over Panama sounds impressive, but a substitute's stoppage-time goal masked a disaster in open play over ninety minutes. Mohammed Kudus and Mohammed Salisu are both absent. There's no cutting edge on the counterattack and no anchor in defense. Without these two, Ghana's tactical foundation is reduced to a physical brawl. The forwards make fruitless runs up front, and the midfield transitions are severed. The goalkeeper's availability is still unknown. Facing even a half-paralyzed England positional attack, Ghana's defense will likely be rolling in the mud. The priest's curse is, in essence, the only psychological straw a small-nation team can grasp when facing a talent disparity.
In the second round of Group L, on June 23, both teams have three points. The winner takes a direct ticket to the Round of 16, while the loser goes to the final round to calculate goal difference. The math is clear, and neither side will play conservatively. On the Gillette Stadium turf, there is no intricate calculation and no divine protection. Between Kane's boots and the priest's curse, one of them has to break first.