
Alan Shearer has seen enough England half-times to know when something isn't right — and in New Jersey on Saturday, with the score 0-0 against Panama, he didn't hold back. According to CaughtOffside, the former England captain singled out Marcus Rashford and Bukayo Saka as particularly disappointing in a first-half display that will have made uncomfortable viewing for anyone expecting England to cruise through their final World Cup 2026 group stage fixture.
Shearer's criticism carries weight precisely because it isn't vague. Calling out Rashford and Saka by name — two of England's most prominent attacking players, two of the players the tournament billing was built around — is a specific, pointed verdict. Not the whole team. Those two.
Panama, for context, are not a side that should be keeping England quiet in a World Cup group game. That they managed it for forty-five minutes in New Jersey says something about the performance level, and Shearer, according to CaughtOffside — with the comments also picked up by Sky Sports — clearly felt the same.
Rashford's place in this England squad was never a given — he's had a complicated club season and his inclusion was always tied to the expectation that he'd deliver on the biggest stage. Saka, meanwhile, carries the weight of being Arsenal's most important player and one of the first names on England's teamsheet. When neither is clicking in a game England are expected to win, the noise gets loud fast.
Shearer saying it publicly at half-time — rather than waiting for the full-time whistle — is the kind of moment that sets the tone for how a tournament performance gets remembered.
The full extent of Shearer's comments, and crucially the final result, weren't confirmed from the available information at the time of writing. This story may look very different once the second half plays out. A Rashford or Saka goal changes the narrative entirely. A goalless draw against Panama does not.
Either way, the half-time hook is already out there — and England fans watching from home will have felt every word of it.
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Editor's note: This article was published at half-time. We'll update with the final result and any second-half developments as soon as the match concludes.
Alan Shearer has seen enough England half-times to know when something isn't right — and in New Jersey on Saturday, with the score 0-0 against Panama, he didn't hold back.
Sources
CaughtOffside
Flagside articles are original write-ups synthesised from multiple sources. We cite every outlet that fed into the piece.
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
England got the result. They got top spot. They got the easier side of the draw. What they did not get — not even close — was a performance that made anyone watching feel remotely confident about what
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
England got the result. They got top spot. They got the easier side of the draw. What they did not get — not even close — was a performance that made anyone watching feel remotely confident about what