OLIVER HOLT: My England starting XI for the World Cup - and how Thomas Tuchel can turn Jude Bellingham into the leader he needs
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On Monday evening, a strong gale swept in from the Baltic Sea, causing the trees surrounding Daugava Stadium, where England is set to face Latvia on Tuesday night, to sway and groan. Meanwhile, pedestrians braved the rain and biting wind, hunching over as their coats fluttered in the harsh weather.

Throughout the city, local mini-markets displayed newspaper headlines that expressed concern over recent Russian aggression. As commuters awaited their trams at dusk, strong gusts turned umbrellas inside out, signaling the inevitable approach of winter.

Despite the chilling weather, England’s coach, Thomas Tuchel, and his squad, who arrived after dark, had their sights set firmly on the upcoming summer. Following impressive victories against Serbia and Wales, a win in Latvia would secure England’s qualification for the World Cup finals in the USA, Mexico, and Canada, with two matches still left to play.

Tuchel must be pleased with the team’s current standing. Although England might not be at the top of the list of favorites, they boast a strong squad with promising potential. Key players like Harry Kane, Declan Rice, Marc Guehi, and Jordan Pickford are essential choices, leaving Tuchel with only positive dilemmas to solve.

The central dilemma for Tuchel is whether to find a place in his starting line-up for England’s first game in the competition next summer for Jude Bellingham – and if he does include him, where does he play him? Other decisions on personnel revolve around that choice.

England are in good form under Thomas Tuchel and will face Latvia away from home on Tuesday evening

England are in good form under Thomas Tuchel and will face Latvia away from home on Tuesday evening

The central dilemma for Tuchel is whether Jude Bellingham should be starting in the side

The central dilemma for Tuchel is whether Jude Bellingham should be starting in the side

Some consider the debate about the Real Madrid star a false construct and maintain that it is a contrived controversy, an issue that is only an issue until Bellingham regains full fitness after his recent shoulder surgery, whereupon they insist he will be reinstated in the first XI immediately.

But Tuchel’s view of Bellingham is more nuanced than that. He has made it clear both that he dislikes Bellingham’s dismissive attitude to team-mates on the pitch and that he is wary of being in thrall to a star player in the way that so many of his England predecessors have been. He wants to take a team to America, not a collection of preening individuals.

Those who chide Tuchel for his iconoclasm, for his reluctance to be dazzled by the light of a star, ignore the lessons of history in England’s 60 years of drought. As Steven Gerrard pointed out last week, it is not enough for a player to be blessed with talent. At a World Cup, he has to be a good team-mate, too.

My view is not that Bellingham has to play but that, if Tuchel is the coach we need him to be, then he will use the next nine months to build the best possible version of Bellingham and rehabilitate him so that he is not just an individual talent but a leader of men.

Roy Keane, in his prime, could often cut an uncompromising figure who demanded the highest of standards from team-mates and yet he was the best leader I have ever seen in the English game.

The difference is that I never saw Keane scream ‘Who Else’ after he scored a goal. The difference is Keane exhorted team-mates to reach higher standards rather than scorning them for not being as good as he was.

If Tuchel can teach Bellingham those differences, if he can help him mature, if his refusal to indulge him these past couple of weeks can help to turn him into the leader England needs, then Bellingham can still be the best and most important England player at the World Cup.

If he does not play, then that will be Bellingham’s failure and it will be Tuchel’s failure, too. Bellingham unleashed, Bellingham unbound, Bellingham liberated from his own hubris, could be the star of the tournament.

We must hope that Tuchel uses the next nine months to build the best possible version of Bellingham and make him a leader of men

We must hope that Tuchel uses the next nine months to build the best possible version of Bellingham and make him a leader of men

The midfield partnership of Declan Rice and Elliot Anderson means Bellingham would most likely play in the No 10 role

The midfield partnership of Declan Rice and Elliot Anderson means Bellingham would most likely play in the No 10 role

Oliver Holt’s England XI

Goalkeeper – Pickford

Defence –  James, Stones, Guehi, Lewis-Skelly 

Midfield – Rice, Anderson, Bellingham

Attack – Saka, Kane, Rashford  

But that brings more hard choices. The emergence of the partnership between Rice and Elliot Anderson at the base of the England midfield means that if Bellingham starts, it is most likely that he will start in his preferred No 10 role.

Because Tuchel is smart enough to have learned the lessons of the past and will eschew the temptation to cram the side with star players playing out of position, Bellingham at 10 almost certainly means no place for Cole Palmer in the starting XI.

Other managers might have compromised and moved Palmer to a wider position because of the clamour to find a place for him but Tuchel is unlikely to do that unless injuries force his hand. Bukayo Saka will be the favourite to start on the right of the forward three, with either Marcus Rashford or Anthony Gordon on the left.

Pickford, fresh from his record eighth consecutive clean sheet as England goalkeeper, is in an impregnable position as Tuchel’s No 1 and Reece James has eclipsed Kyle Walker as the preferred right back.

There are concerns about James’ injury record and whether he will be vulnerable to the demands of a six-week tournament and the same applies to Manchester City’s John Stones but both men should start if they are fit.

Guehi has established himself as the leading English centre half. At left back, even though Myles Lewis-Skelly is not yet the man in possession, even though Tuchel has warned him about the dangers of not starting for Arsenal, he is too good, too adaptable, too versatile and too strong to ignore.

‘We are building something,’ Tuchel said, as he sat in a room beneath the main stand on Monday night, ‘and we are going in the right direction.’ No one needs the glare from the evocative old Eastern Bloc-style floodlights that loom over the Daugava Stadium to see that.

Winter may have come to Riga but England’s dreams of challenging for the World Cup are peopled with choices and flooded with sunlight.

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