
Thirty years after Oasis released it, 'Wonderwall' is doing something nobody planned: it's become the song England fans are singing in American stadiums, in hotel bars, in the streets outside grounds, and — according to The Athletic — inside the England camp itself. Tournament football has a habit of finding its anthem, and the summer of 2026 appears to have found its.
There's no committee that decides these things. No FA playlist, no official endorsement, no moment where someone in a blazer said 'right, lads — Wonderwall.' It just happened, the way the best tournament anthems always do: organically, incrementally, then all at once.
According to The Athletic, 'Wonderwall' has emerged as the defining soundtrack to England's 2026 World Cup run in the United States — threading its way from the terraces into the broader identity of this campaign. Reporting from outlets including The Guardian and BBC Sport has similarly noted the song's ubiquity among travelling England supporters across multiple host cities. The Gallagher brothers wrote it in 1995, recorded it for What's the Story (Morning Glory)? and probably didn't have a sweaty American stadium full of England fans in mind. And yet.
England fans have always needed something to hold onto at tournaments — a shared frequency that turns a crowd of strangers into something that feels, briefly, like a community. 'Three Lions' carries too much history and too much irony to land clean every time. 'Vindaloo' is a novelty. 'Wonderwall' is something else: familiar enough that everyone knows every word, anthemic enough to fill space, and just emotionally open enough that it works whether England are winning or wobbling.
There's also the Oasis reunion factor. Liam and Noel Gallagher spent 2025 back on the same stage for the first time in sixteen years — which means the song arrived at this World Cup with fresh cultural momentum rather than pure nostalgia. It wasn't a throwback. It was current.
England away at a major tournament is one of football's stranger social phenomena — tens of thousands of people who didn't know each other last Tuesday, suddenly sharing something. The anthem that emerges from that is never really about the song. It's about the need for one.
The Athletic reports that the song has reportedly reached the England camp itself — uniting players and fans alike — though the sourcing on the player side is limited and no specific details have been confirmed independently. What's clear is that the line between the terraces and the dressing room has felt unusually porous this summer. That matters. England teams have historically struggled to feel like they and their supporters were experiencing the same tournament. In 2026, apparently, they're at least humming the same tune.
Somewhere, Noel Gallagher is almost certainly pretending not to care about this.
Thirty years after Oasis released it, 'Wonderwall' is doing something nobody planned: it's become the song England fans are singing in American stadiums, in hotel bars, in the streets outside grounds, and
Sources
The Athletic — Football
Flagside articles are original write-ups synthesised from multiple sources. We cite every outlet that fed into the piece.
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