Thomas Tuchel has named his 26-man England squad for the 2026 World Cup, and this is not a safe, reputation-led selection. It is a squad built around athleticism, defensive trust, tactical flexibility and current role fit, with several high-profile names left out in one of the boldest England squad announcements in recent memory.

The headline calls are impossible to ignore. Trent Alexander-Arnold, Phil Foden, Cole Palmer, Harry Maguire and Luke Shaw have all missed out, while Djed Spence, Jordan Henderson, Jarell Quansah, and Ivan Toney are included. Tuchel has not picked the most glamorous England squad available. He has picked the one he clearly believes gives him the best chance of controlling tournament football.
The Biggest Story: Tuchel Has Prioritised Trust Over Talent
The immediate reaction will focus on the players left behind, and rightly so. England have omitted elite-level names who, on pure ability, would walk into most international squads. Alexander-Arnold’s passing range, Foden’s technical quality and Palmer’s final-third output all make their exclusions feel seismic.
But this squad tells us exactly what Tuchel values. He wants defensive reliability, tactical flexibility and players who can execute specific tournament jobs. That explains the inclusion of Spence, Livramento and O’Reilly as full-back options with athletic upside. It also explains why midfielders such as Anderson, Mainoo and Rogers have made the cut. England are not short of star power, but Tuchel appears more interested in balance than reputation.
Elite on the ball, but Tuchel has clearly leaned toward defensive security and full-back athleticism.
A clear system pick, offering pace, recovery defending and direct running from right-back.
A penalty-box option, penalty specialist and late-game target if England need a different route to goal.
The Squad Shape: England Look Built For Multiple Systems
This does not look like a squad selected for one fixed formation. Tuchel has enough defenders to play a back four or a back three, enough full-back variety to change the width profile, and enough hybrid midfielders to alter the press without making substitutions that weaken the team.
The most likely base shape still looks like a 4-2-3-1 or 4-3-3, with Declan Rice central to everything. Jude Bellingham will almost certainly be used as England’s most aggressive midfield runner, while Bukayo Saka and Harry Kane remain automatic starters in the front line. The interesting question is who wins the roles around them. Marcus Rashford, Anthony Gordon, Noni Madueke, Eberechi Eze and Morgan Rogers all offer different profiles, but none are guaranteed starters.
This is an early projection, not a confirmed XI. Tuchel has enough flexibility to use Livramento, Spence, Eze, Gordon or Rogers depending on opponent and game state.
What The Omissions Tell Us
Leaving out Alexander-Arnold is the clearest sign that Tuchel is not willing to carry a player unless he fully trusts him in the role. England have often tried to fit their best passers into imperfect structures. This time, Tuchel has gone the other way. He has removed a world-class distributor and selected full-backs who better fit his defensive and transition demands.
The Foden and Palmer decisions are just as revealing. England have had a long-running issue with trying to squeeze multiple No. 10s into the same side, and Tuchel has avoided that trap. Bellingham is clearly the central attacking reference point, while Eze and Rogers offer ball-carrying and between-the-lines options without forcing the team to become too narrow. However, Tuchel should be prepared for some blowback if England fail to unlock a stubborn defence later in the tournament having left arguably his most creative forwards at home.
Maguire and Shaw missing out also marks a changing of the guard. England are moving away from several key Southgate-era tournament staples and into a younger, faster, more malleable squad. That may bring risk, but it also gives Tuchel more ways to solve problems during knockout games.
England’s World Cup Group
England will begin their World Cup campaign against Croatia in Dallas on June 17, before facing Ghana in Boston on June 23 and Panama in New York/New Jersey on June 27. It is a group England should expect to win, but it is not a group that allows Tuchel to coast into the tournament.
Croatia will test England’s midfield control immediately. Ghana will bring pace, physicality and transition threat. Panama should be the game where England dominate territory, but tournament football has a habit of turning comfortable-looking fixtures into awkward evenings if the first goal does not arrive early.
Quick Verdict
This is a ruthless England squad announcement. Tuchel has made it clear that he is not managing by public consensus, club reputation or previous tournament loyalty. He has picked a group that gives him athletic defenders, flexible midfielders, multiple wide profiles, Kane’s elite penalty-box quality and enough bench weapons to change knockout games.
The risk is obvious. If England struggle to create chances, the absence of Foden, Palmer and Alexander-Arnold will dominate every post-match debate. If England concede from deep defensive pressure, the Maguire and Shaw omissions will be questioned. Tuchel has left himself exposed because he has taken ownership of every major call.
But that is also why this squad is fascinating. It feels like a manager’s squad, not a committee squad. England have not simply named the 26 most famous eligible players. They have named a tournament group with a clear tactical identity. Whether that proves inspired or reckless will define Tuchel’s first World Cup with the Three Lions.
England still have enough talent to win the World Cup, but this announcement makes one thing clear: if they do, they will do it Tuchel’s way.

