World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
The final whistle sounded in Boston, and Reece James instinctively touched the back of his right thigh.
The final whistle blew in Boston, and Reece James instinctively touched the back of his right thigh.
0-0 against Ghana, 19 shots, zero goals. England turned 78.8% possession into a rosary, bead by bead, never finding the net. James played the full 90 minutes, felt his hamstring tighten afterward, and skipped the next day's recovery session.
Meanwhile, Trent Alexander-Arnold was in Madrid. A Real Madrid right-back, left out of England's 26-man World Cup squad. Tuchel had tied their fates into a knot with his own hands. Now the rope snapped, and it was his own neck in the noose.
The trap was set on August 29, 2025. That day, Tuchel announced his World Cup qualifying squad, and Alexander-Arnold was out. For the first time in an official window, an England manager dropped the Real Madrid right-back. His replacement: Jed Spence, a player who had been filling in at left-back for Tottenham.
Six months later, the preliminary 35-man squad came out. Alexander-Arnold still wasn't there. When pressed, Tuchel said, "I knew excluding him would cause noise. We spoke on the phone. I tried to explain, but he just has to accept it."
Just has to accept it. The manager's arrogance in four words. Kyle Walker didn't hold back: "A Real Madrid player can't get into the England squad? Unheard of."
Tuchel threw away England's most reliable asset in recent years, a Champions League-level crossing machine. He dared to do it because he thought he had a like-for-like replacement.
That replacement was Reece James. Look at the Chelsea captain's medical record, and the numbers are staggering: 10 hamstring injuries since December 2020; 21 total injuries in his career; 753 days missed. 753 days, over two years. The prime of a player's career, spent on a treatment table.
The most absurd moment came this March. On the 13th, Chelsea announced James had signed a contract extension until 2032. On the 16th, the club confirmed his 10th hamstring strain. From signing the contract to tearing his thigh again, just three days.
Did Chelsea's medical staff not assess that leg before the extension? Did Tuchel not see the full medical history before calling him up? They must have. But he still had James play 90 minutes against Croatia and another 90 against Ghana. 180 minutes on a repeatedly torn hamstring, grinding through three hours in the June humidity of the United States.
What does James think? Last November, when BBC asked about his injuries, he said, "At first, I cared about the labels, but after a while, it just becomes boring."
A national team player in his prime, calling his injury history "boring." That's not acceptance; it's resignation. It's going to happen again anyway, so why think about it? Tuchel needed someone who wouldn't think.
Tuchel's gamble on dropping Alexander-Arnold was backed by Livramento. That card shattered on June 16 when Livramento withdrew with a calf injury. Tuchel scrambled for a replacement and called Trevoh Chalobah.
Chalobah didn't answer.
He was wandering around Times Square in New York, Tuchel's text sitting in his pocket for two hours. Chalobah later recalled, "When I saw the message, my heart just sank."
A center-back, getting a national team emergency call in the middle of New York's loudest tourist trap. How did Tuchel explain it? "Bringing in Chalobah allows Konsa to play full-back, and Spence can cover both sides."
Translation: Bring in a center-back so another center-back can play full-back, and a player who's spent two years at left-back for his club can be the backup. Spence himself admitted in a Guardian interview, "I'm naturally a right-back, but I've played left-back for two years at Tottenham. I'm still learning."
Konsa, center-back. Quansah, center-back. Chalobah, center-back. Spence, left-back. England's World Cup knockout stage right-back options: not a single natural right-back in the bunch.
The Ghana game was instant karma. 78.8% possession, 579 accurate passes, 19 shots, zero goals. That style of play, treating possession like a rosary, is death by a thousand cuts for a hamstring that's been torn 10 times. Low intensity, long duration, endless stop-start running. Muscle fibers snapping silently.
June 25, Kansas City. In the training session preparing for Panama, Rice returned to full training. James did not. BBC and The Times reported the same day: The official word was still waiting on scan results, but no one in the dressing room expected a miracle. James would likely miss the final group game and the subsequent round of 32 knockout match. Konsa was the most likely candidate to fill the right-back hole.
Before the tournament, Tuchel had said, "I have no doubts about James. Comparing him to other right-backs on social media makes me laugh. I've coached him."
Now, on the training ground in Kansas City, four players rotated through the vacant right-back spot. Konsa, Quansah, Chalobah, Spence.
Alexander-Arnold was in Madrid.