
England have released their squad numbers for the 2026 FIFA World Cup — and Thomas Tuchel hasn't been subtle about it. Jude Bellingham gets the No. 10. That's not an administrative decision; that's a statement of intent.
Shirt numbers at a World Cup are assigned, not earned through some informal dressing-room tradition — which is exactly why they carry weight. When a manager hands a player the No. 10, he is telling the tournament, the squad, and the player himself where the creative responsibility sits. Tuchel has made his answer clear: it sits with Bellingham.
The Real Madrid midfielder has spent the last two seasons operating in a hybrid role — part eight, part ten, part penalty-box forward — but the shirt number signals that Tuchel wants him central to England's attacking structure rather than tucked into a deeper position. Whether that means a classic ten role or something more fluid will become clear once the tournament kicks off, but the symbolism is hard to argue with.
According to Sky Sports and BBC Sport, Harry Kane and Marcus Rashford have also been handed notable numbers in the allocation, though the full list is yet to be fully detailed across all sources. Kane wearing the No. 9 — the natural assumption for England's all-time record scorer — would simply confirm what everyone already knows: he leads the line, full stop. Rashford's inclusion and number will be worth watching given the turbulence of his club season, but his presence in the squad at all is the bigger story there.
Tuchel has quietly assembled a squad with genuine depth in the final third, and the number allocations — even before a ball is kicked in North America — sketch out the rough shape of how he sees the XI.
England aren't the only side getting their tournament admin in order. Footy Headlines reports that the Netherlands have simultaneously revealed their 26-player squad and corresponding numbers for the 2026 World Cup, adding another layer of pre-tournament noise as sides begin to formalise their preparations.
The Dutch announcement is a reminder that the tournament is genuinely close now — squads are locked, numbers are printed, and the window for tactical ambiguity is closing fast.
Tuchel inherited a squad that had reached back-to-back major finals and then found new ways to fall short. The No. 10 on Bellingham's back is, in some ways, a reset — a deliberate reframing of who England build around going into a tournament they genuinely believe they can win. Whether Bellingham can carry that weight across seven matches in the heat of a North American summer is the question the number raises. The shirt doesn't answer it. The football will.
England have released their squad numbers for the 2026 FIFA World Cup — and Thomas Tuchel hasn't been subtle about it. Jude Bellingham gets the No. 10. That's not an administrative decision; that's a statement of intent.
Fuentes
Sky Sports — Football, BBC Sport — Football, Footy Headlines
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“Stays on Netherlands — different angle, same beat.”
Ronald Koeman has named his final 26-man Netherlands squad for the 2026 World Cup — and the headline isn't who's in. It's who isn't. Jeremie Frimpong, one of the most talked-about full-backs in Europe
“Stays on Netherlands — different angle, same beat.”
Ronald Koeman has named his final 26-man Netherlands squad for the 2026 World Cup — and the headline isn't who's in. It's who isn't. Jeremie Frimpong, one of the most talked-about full-backs in Europe