Lionhearts! England Battle Past Brave Norway to Reach World Cup Semi-Finals — Now Argentina Stand Between Us and Glory - NATIONAL NEWS - The Bromsgrove Standard
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Lionhearts! England Battle Past Brave Norway to Reach World Cup Semi-Finals — Now Argentina Stand Between Us and Glory - NATIONAL NEWS

England are one step closer to footballing immortality.

In a night of raw courage, gritted teeth and a captain’s inspiration, Thomas Tuchel’s Three Lions fought back from behind to beat Norway 2-1 after extra-time in Miami, booking a place in the World Cup semi-finals for the first time since 2018, and setting up a titanic showdown with defending champions Argentina in Atlanta on Wednesday.

It was not pretty. It was not comfortable. But it was grit, it was heart, and it was, in the truest sense, English.

A Nation Holds Its Breath

Andreas Schjelderup gave Norway the lead in the searing Florida heat, silencing the travelling army of English supporters at Hard Rock Stadium and threatening to end our dream on the brink of history. But this England side, forged under Tuchel’s steel, do not know how to lie down.

Enter Jude Bellingham. Just as he did against Mexico in the last 16, the Real Madrid superstar produced a moment of magic on the stroke of half-time to drag England level, sending the ground into raptures and reminding the watching world exactly why he is fast becoming this nation’s greatest footballing son.




The drama did not end there. Norway thought they had snatched a dramatic lead when Torbjørn Heggem turned the ball home, only for VAR to intervene and rightly chalk off the goal after Erling Haaland, Norway’s talisman and a man born on these shores, was penalised for a push on England’s Elliot Anderson in the build-up. It was the kind of moment that could have broken lesser sides. England held firm.

With the match locked at 1-1 after a punishing 90 minutes in brutal heat and humidity, it went to extra-time, and it was Bellingham, inevitably, who delivered the killer blow. Pouncing on a spill from Norwegian goalkeeper Ørjan Nyland after a driving effort from substitute Morgan Rogers, Bellingham smashed home the winner just three minutes into the additional period to send the Three Lions through, 2-1.


England survived a nervy VAR review of their own moments later, when a penalty award for a foul on Djed Spence was overturned, but by then Norway’s spirit, and their remarkable run as first-time World Cup quarter-finalists, had been broken.

Tuchel’s Brutal Honesty, Bellingham’s Fire

True to form, Thomas Tuchel refused to sugar-coat matters after the final whistle, admitting his side had been “lucky” to progress and branding the performance “sloppy,” with too many technical mistakes.

It was a verdict that did not sit well with the hero of the hour. Bellingham hit back at his manager in typically fearless fashion, pointing to the gruelling conditions and the calibre of the opposition England had just overcome.

“Maybe he doesn’t know what it’s like to play in those kind of conditions against Erling Haaland, Odegaard, Nusa, Sorloth,” Bellingham said. “That’s not an easy team to play against. You’re not going to win every game popping the ball and making a thousand passes. Sometimes you have to win dirty, and we’ve done that again tonight.”

It is exactly the kind of defiant, never-say-die spirit that has carried England through this tournament, and precisely the character English football has been crying out for.

The Nation Celebrates

The victory sparked celebration at the very top of British public life. The Prince of Wales declared the result was “never in doubt,” while Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer could not resist a cheeky dig at his Norwegian counterpart, joking on social media that Norway had “took one hell of a beating”, a message that will have been read with good humour, if gritted teeth, in Oslo.

Argentina Await in Atlanta

England’s reward is a mouth-watering semi-final against Lionel Messi’s Argentina, who booked their own place in the last four with a dramatic 3-1 extra-time victory over ten-man Switzerland. Julián Álvarez’s stunning strike from distance and a late Lautaro Martínez finish sealed the win for the defending champions after Switzerland had been reduced to ten men following Breel Embolo’s second-half sending-off.

It promises to be a colossal test. Argentina remain the team to beat at this tournament, built around the irrepressible Messi, and will arrive in Atlanta full of belief after seeing off Cape Verde, Egypt and now Switzerland in a run littered with late drama of their own.

But England have shown throughout this World Cup, against Mexico, and now against Norway, that this is a side with an unbreakable spirit, and in Bellingham and Harry Kane they possess two players in irresistible form, each with six goals in the tournament so far.

Sixty years of hurt have never felt closer to an end. England now stand just two victories away from a first World Cup final since that famous day at Wembley in 1966.

How to Watch

England’s semi-final against Argentina kicks off at Atlanta Stadium on Wednesday, 15 July at 20:00 BST, live on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.

Come on England.