
England are off and running at the 2026 World Cup — and they didn't do it quietly. A 4-2 win over Croatia in their group stage opener, with Harry Kane bagging a brace, is the kind of first impression that gets the rest of the tournament paying attention. Thomas Tuchel's side looked exactly like a team that had been told to go and enjoy themselves.
This wasn't a controlled, grind-it-out England win. It was open, ambitious, and at times breathless — the sort of football that, in previous tournaments, England fans had been promised and rarely received. Tuchel's attacking intent was visible from the off, and by the time the second half was done, Croatia had been picked apart in a way that would have seemed optimistic as a pre-match prediction.
Kane did what Kane does at international level: led the line, found space, and put the ball in the net. Twice. His international scoring record has long since made him England's all-time top scorer, and he showed here that the World Cup stage only sharpens his focus. At 32, he is still the gravitational centre of this England attack — and on this evidence, the tournament has arrived at exactly the right moment for him.
Credit where it's due: Croatia did not fold. The side that reached the 2018 World Cup final and pushed France to the wire still carries that competitive DNA, and their two goals were a reminder that 4-2 is a scoreline, not a rout. England were made to work for this. The fact that they kept working — kept pressing, kept creating — is the detail that will please Tuchel most.
The full scoresheet beyond Kane's brace has not been confirmed from available sources, but the shape of the game tells its own story: England scored four, conceded two, and looked like a side with more gears to find. For a group-stage opener, that is about as encouraging as it gets.
One game does not make a tournament. England fans know this better than most. But the manner of this win — attacking, fluid, with their talisman at the centre of it — gives Tuchel's squad exactly the platform and momentum they needed. Croatia were not a soft touch. England beat them anyway, and beat them well.
The rest of the group has been put on notice. Tuchel, for once, looked like a man who had exactly what he wanted.
England are off and running at the 2026 World Cup — and they didn't do it quietly. A 4-2 win over Croatia in their group stage opener, with Harry Kane bagging a brace, is the kind of first impression that gets the rest…
Sources
Sky Sports — Football, ESPN FC
Flagside articles are original write-ups synthesised from multiple sources. We cite every outlet that fed into the piece.
Pick of the night's matches, what the transfer window's doing, and the one column you should read today. No ads. No tips. No operators.
One-click unsubscribe. We do not share emails.
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
Daichi Kamada isn't hedging. The Crystal Palace midfielder used Japan's latest international window to restate his squad's collective goal without softening it: they want to win the 2026 FIFA World Cu
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
Daichi Kamada isn't hedging. The Crystal Palace midfielder used Japan's latest international window to restate his squad's collective goal without softening it: they want to win the 2026 FIFA World Cu