“It makes no sense” – Tuchel names one aspect of England win over Latvia he was unhappy with | OneFootball

“It makes no sense” – Tuchel names one aspect of England win over Latvia he was unhappy with | OneFootball

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Football Today

·25 March 2025

“It makes no sense” – Tuchel names one aspect of England win over Latvia he was unhappy with

Article image:“It makes no sense” – Tuchel names one aspect of England win over Latvia he was unhappy with

England manager Thomas Tuchel got off to a steady start with wins over Albania and Latvia in their 2026 World Cup qualifiers.

The Three Lions sealed a comprehensive 3-0 victory over the latter yesterday, making it two from two for the German tactician.


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Tuchel is the first permanent manager to win his first two competitive games in charge of England since Fabio Capello in September 2008.

England have not been flashy, but they got the job done against a Latvia side that was difficult to break down.

They needed a free-kick from Reece James for the game to spark into life. The Chelsea captain curled in a brilliant effort to give the Three Lions the lead on his first start in almost three years.

Harry Kane doubled the lead against Latvia before Eberechi Eze scored his first goal for England after unlocking the defence with excellent mazy dribbling.

Despite the win and the overall performance, Tuchel was unhappy with one aspect of the game.

Speaking to ITV, Tuchel said: “I guess (we were better). It was not an easy match. We had to unlock it.

“We had a good result. We created a lot from set pieces. We needed a free-kick to unlock it, but, in general, I am happy with attitude and energy.

“There was better acceleration in the second half. We slowed the game down too much. It makes no sense to play without movement.

“The second goal we had acceleration. It came from one of the sixes, and we encouraged people to do it.

“We struggled a bit until the goal, but you also saw the goal gave us freedom, and everything felt a bit easier.”

Tuchel and England have not met a top side they can test themselves against.

Upcoming games against Andorra and Senegal do not offer the kind of threat the Three Lions will face in the latter stage of the 2026 World Cup.

England’s next set of fixtures will provide further opportunities for Tuchel to refine his tactics and instil his high-intensity philosophy.

While the early results have been positive, the true test will come when they face elite opposition capable of punishing them.

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