
The knockout stage is here, and England have DR Congo standing between them and a place in the last 16. It is the kind of fixture that should, on paper, be navigated — but this is England, and 'should' has a complicated history.
England face DR Congo on 30 June in the round of 32, with both Football365 and BBC Sport running full previews covering team news, predicted lineups and the match outlook. No confirmed venue or kick-off time has been provided at this stage, and lineups remain unconfirmed — so everything below is built on what we know heading into the tie rather than what's been officially announced.
Knockout football at a World Cup demands one thing above everything else: control. England's group-stage performances — whatever they looked like — are irrelevant now. The round of 32 is a clean slate, and DR Congo will arrive with a shape designed to frustrate, absorb, and hit on the break. England need to be patient without being passive, and clinical when the moments arrive. That combination has not always come naturally.
The key question in the final third is whether England can break down a low block without resorting to aimless crosses. If the wide players are given licence to cut inside and the midfield is willing to arrive late into the box, the chances will come. The problem is converting them — and that pressure lands squarely on whoever leads the line.
No confirmed team news is available yet, but the selection decisions heading into a knockout game always carry extra weight. Who starts in the number ten role, whether there's a double pivot or a more attack-minded midfield three, and the balance of the full-backs — these are the calls that tend to define England's tournament shape more than any individual.
DR Congo are not a side to be taken lightly. They qualified for this stage for a reason, and any England setup that treats this as a training-ground exercise will be punished. The manager will know that.
England have reached this point. The next step is the one that actually matters. Thirty June. No more warm-ups.
The knockout stage is here, and England have DR Congo standing between them and a place in the last 16. It is the kind of fixture that should, on paper, be navigated
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
INTEngland are in the World Cup last 16. That sentence should feel bigger than it does right now — because by all accounts, the win over DR Congo was the kind of performance that gets discussed in hushed
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
INTEngland are in the World Cup last 16. That sentence should feel bigger than it does right now — because by all accounts, the win over DR Congo was the kind of performance that gets discussed in hushed