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Published 10 minutes ago There are lots of reasons to be positive about England so far at this World Cup but having a settled side is not one of them. The main aim was to top our group, and we did that, but we have arrived in the last 32 after so much chopping and changing in several positions that we are no closer to knowing what our best team is. It feels like Thomas Tuchel is still searching for some solutions, three games in. You don't have to have all the answers, even at this stage of a tournament - injuries and suspensions mean teams always have to adapt ideas and personnel as they progress - but Tuchel has quite a lot to sort out before we face DR Congo in Atlanta on Wednesday. There is no doubt he is trying to find which combinations of full-backs and wingers work best for the team on both flanks - there have been nine different ones already across 270 minutes, involving eight different players. The reason Tuchel has tried so many is that he has not quite worked it out yet. Obviously the injuries to Reece James and Jarell Quansah at right-back have not helped and neither has Bukayo Saka not being 100% fit. But, for whatever reason, we have not posed a consistent threat down the flanks and constantly changing the back four has not helped our defensively stability either. We've looked uncomfortable whenever teams have attacked us, which is a worry. At the same time, though, there have been several players who have produced. Elliot Anderson was absolutely superb against Panama, while Jude Bellingham was man of the match and rightly so, and Harry Kane got his goal, again. Along with Jordan Pickford and Declan Rice, they are the spine of the team and you know you can hang your hat on them when it matters. We know our big-hitters will step up To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, Bellingham puts England ahead against Panama Maybe we haven't seen as much from every part of Tuchel's team as we'd like, but we still know we can rely on our big-hitters to step up and produce something brilliant to change the course of the game. Ideally, we wouldn't be relying on someone to get us a goal out of nothing, like Jude Bellingham did when he turned in Saka's corner against Panama. I'd prefer it if our system was providing us with a platform for creating lots of chances in open play, but there are going to be times like that in every game where things are not working for you. It is not as if we were looking dangerous before we scored, but we already knew how important set-pieces are and it's certainly not a bad thing to have big players you can rely on to provide a magic moment like that when the team needs it. It wasn't even a particularly good ball in, but Bellingham made it into one. Say what you like about the defending, but it was still impressive how he got on the end of it, showing his strength, balance and skill. After he scored, there was only going to be one winner. DR Congo
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