FIFA World Cup 2026 USA

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tico
Posts: 195
Joined: Fri Sep 20, 2024 9:18 pm

Hi Folks,
Nowzthetime :)
WORLD CUP betting England to win the world cup is 13/2 on BF . This means they are there with the favourites but IMHO 33/1 would be more applicable .What do people think ? I reckon 7s is a cracking laying opportunity ,and anything under 7s pure luxury. But there is a good chance that it may well drop to well below 6.5 to 7s once sentiment kicks in nearer the time .
Kind Regards
Tico
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Kai
Posts: 7344
Joined: Tue Jan 20, 2015 12:21 pm

tico wrote:
Tue Sep 16, 2025 12:02 pm
Hi Folks,
Nowzthetime :)
Erm... it's 2025 still

But I like the way you think :)
tico
Posts: 195
Joined: Fri Sep 20, 2024 9:18 pm

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: Be prepared . Starts June next year but as the crow flies that's just 10 months away to prepare master strategies . :lol: :lol: :lol:
Kind Regards
Tico
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Dallas
Posts: 23976
Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2015 10:57 pm

Expect far more VAR incidents in this years World cup
https://news.sky.com/story/more-inciden ... 6-13497220


Its going to resemble American football matches and wouldn't surprise me if this has been cooked up just to insert more advertising
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jamesedwards
Posts: 5769
Joined: Wed Nov 21, 2018 6:16 pm

I hate VAR so much. Ruining the game.
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ODPaul82
Posts: 857
Joined: Sun May 08, 2011 6:32 am

Applying transfermarkt player valuation with dutching plus laying individual games and opposing in to qualify market with overpriced favs imho still a decent shout, particularly with the extended number of matches.
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Kai
Posts: 7344
Joined: Tue Jan 20, 2015 12:21 pm

Looking ahead to the World Cup, idk how others feel but the scheduling looks messy AF, with kickoff times all over the place

Should be the biggest longest market yet but Europeans will be basically pulling all-nighters for a whole summer month which sounds very challenging

I've flipped sleep schedules many times for stuff like tennis and such but never to this extent, almost considering going abroad somewhere to trade on a more reasonable schedule
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Euler
Posts: 27228
Joined: Wed Nov 10, 2010 1:39 pm

England World Cup squad confirmed: -

Goalkeepers: Jordan Pickford (Everton), Dean Henderson (Crystal Palace), James Trafford (Manchester City)

Defenders: Reece James (Chelsea), Tino Livramento (Newcastle), Marc Guehi (Manchester City), Ezri Konsa (Aston Villa), John Stones (Manchester City), Jarell Quansah (Bayer Leverkusen), Nico O'Reilly (Manchester City), Dan Burn (Newcastle), Djed Spence (Tottenham Hotspur)

Midfielders: Declan Rice (Arsenal), Elliot Anderson (Nottingham Forest), Jude Bellingham (Real Madrid), Jordan Henderson (Brentford), Morgan Rogers (Aston Villa), Kobbie Mainoo (Manchester United), Eberechi Eze (Arsenal)

Forwards: Harry Kane (Bayern Munich), Ivan Toney (Al-Ahli), Ollie Watkins (Aston Villa), Bukayo Saka (Arsenal), Noni Madueke (Arsenal), Marcus Rashford (Barcelona, on loan from Manchester United), Anthony Gordon (Newcastle)
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Euler
Posts: 27228
Joined: Wed Nov 10, 2010 1:39 pm

Ivan Toney? Henderson?
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Euler
Posts: 27228
Joined: Wed Nov 10, 2010 1:39 pm

Interesting reading: -

https://x.com/EBL2017/status/2057753013532463393

Let me take you inside the mind of Thomas Tuchel… 💭

Tuchel prioritises profiles over names.

Gareth Southgate tried to fit all of the best names into the team to start the Euro's last time around and that resulted in England playing poorly in every game in the entire tournament.

Alright, they got to the final, but they were seconds away from being KO'd by nations like Slovakia and Switzerland which would have been a natural disgrace.

The media said 'you have to play Foden, Trent, etc'.

Tuchel doesn't buy into that primitive way of thinking, and rightly so.

He has a tactical system and the players must fit into that.

It's a 4-3-3 base with a #6, #8, #10 balance in midfield. Rice has freedom to 'feel the spaces' and play slightly lower than the #10 who must stay high and between the lines.

However, the balance in each wide triangle is the priority. On each side, when England have the ball in open play, there must be 1 player high and wide, 1 player high and between the lines in the half space, and 1 player low in a central position at the base of that triangle.

This gives England the best possible balance to interchange, combine, rotate, occupy the 5 lanes across the final third, AND maintain compactness in defensive transition in the initial line of counter-pressing and in the second line of managing the defensive transition.

Within those triangles, each player must be comfortable in each area (high and wide, in the half space between the lines, and at the base of the triangle) whilst each collective trio offer a balance of showing to feet and running in behind.

Take the left triangle, for example. O'Reilly can play in each of the three areas but also run in behind. So can Gordon and so can Rice.

On the right, the same is true for James, Saka, and Rogers.

With Kane as the #9, England will need players who penetrate the space in behind the defensive line as he drops deep to link play (this might explain why Palmer, for example, missed out).

But football is not just a 'with the ball' game.

You need to excel defensively, too. Tuchel's England press in a diamond shape from the goal kick. To press zonally, you need reliable defensive players, especially alongside someone like Kane.

Saka, Gordon, Rice, and Rogers are some of the most reliable defenders in the game. The same is also true for Bellingham. Gibbs-White would have been closer to selection than Foden and Palmer for these reasons. Not only does he run in behind more, but he is also a much better defender.

Similar can be said for Mainoo in midfield over Wharton. Mainoo has played that exact pressing role at the tip of Carrick's diamond at Manchester United, so he is an apt alternative to Declan Rice should he or Elliott Anderson get injured/suspended (Rice could then play in the #6 with Mainoo as the #8, for example).

England also try to transition into a man-to-man press at times or they defend low in a 4-4-2, and they do this via a central rotation (centre back jumps to the #10, #6 jumps to the #6, and the #10 jumps to the centre back – think Guehi, Rice, and Rogers).

Tactical discipline and collective balance relative to Tuchel's system is why he has made some eyebrow raising selections.

He likes Spence at fullback because he can play in the 3 lanes in the left triangle and provide cover at right back if James/Livramento get injured. Burn can also provide cover at left back in that context.

Someone like Henderson in midfield is unlikely to get many minutes (if any), especially because Rice is versatile to play in the #6 and #8, but his presence is crucial in the camp because of his leadership qualities. Similar can be said for Dan Burn. Levi Colwill is a better player than him, but Burn is #1) heavily underrated and #2) an incredible standard setter and character. Harry Maguire will feel unfortunate to have been left out because he profiles similarly to Burn whilst being a better player, but he is not as versatile to cover at left back in case of an injury crisis.

Quansah is also positionally versatile. It could even see Reece James play in midfield at some point because of the presence of lots of right back profiles in the squad (Konsa included).

An argument can certainly be made for a guy like Harry Maguire to be in the squad over John Stones, for example, and I can see that, but the reality is Stones also happens to be a special player who has incredible experience at the highest possible level.

Tuchel has had the luxury to leave out Maguire, Shaw, Foden, Bowen, Gibbs-White, Trent, Wharton, Palmer, Colwill, Hall, and others I'm sure that I'm forgetting like Welbeck and Calvert-Lewin… there was always going to be uproar or unhappiness at certain choices with that level of depth at his disposal.

However, from Tuchel's perspective, he strives for balance relative to his system and style of play. I think it's a risk to not bring another left-footed fullback over someone like Spence, for example, as that can negatively impact build-up dynamics as he gets trapped on his right foot (especially with Guehi being right footed on the left too), but outside of that the squad makes a lot more sense to me than it seems to to the average person…

Tuchel will give England balance at the World Cup and they are one of the favourites to win it because of that. They have always had the talent, but now they have guaranteed tactical balance on top of that. Something Southgate failed to provide at crucial moments in previous tournaments (despite doing a good job overall).
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