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Despite feeling hopeful before the match, Bukayo Saka (a star player for England and Arsenal football club) was not put in the starting group of 11 players (called the "starting XI") for England’s World Cup quarterfinal match against Norway on Saturday.
Important: Even though Saka said he felt ready, the coaches decided not to risk him from the start.
Before the game in Miami, Saka told reporters:
“Across the tournament, my minutes have been building. I’m building. Of course, I would have loved to come to this tournament 100%, but that wasn’t the case, and everyone’s realised that, and they’ve managed me in the best way possible. But right now, I’m feeling great, and I’m ready to go.”
However, his injury update turned out to be as tricky to trust as the usual comments from his Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta (who is known for not giving clear injury news).
Here is the list of players chosen to start, and the backups (subs). The formation (shape of the team) is 4-2-3-1, which means: 4 defenders, 2 defensive midfielders, 3 attacking midfielders, 1 striker.
Starting XI (the players who begin the game):
Substitutes (players who can come in later):
Important: Saka is only on the bench (substitutes list), not starting.
(A photo note from the original: Madueke was terrific throughout against Croatia in an earlier match.)
Because Saka (the first-choice right winger — a player who mostly stays on the right side and helps attack) is out, the England coach Thomas Tuchel again chose Saka’s Arsenal teammate Noni Madueke to take that spot.
Norway has a super striker named Erling Haaland (a "goal-gobbler" who scores lots). Tuchel was asked how to stop him.
Tuchel said:
“You can’t avoid focusing [on him], for sure not. There is so much quality in his moments and you have to make decisions. He will always arrive on the second post so the question is when to make contact with him.”
He explained two ways defenders might try:
If they stay zonal, he might jump over them. Tuchel says: “He has all the weapons.”
It seems Tuchel’s idea (if any solution exists) is to use players who know Haaland best from practice: his Manchester City club teammates.
Important: Haaland previously sent Norway into the World Cup quarterfinals with his scoring (as noted in the original image caption).
Not everyone agrees that using his friends/teammates is good. Wayne Rooney (old Manchester United striker, now a BBC commentator) said it would be “harder” for Haaland’s teammates to guard him.
He used a boxing example:
“There’s a reason why boxers, when they train for a fight, they spar fighters who aren’t as good as them because there’s a risk of getting hurt. When you’re coming up against a forward like that in training, in your memory he’s scoring a lot of goals in training, that’s not good. So, it’s actually the forward who’s got the advantage.”
Q1: What is an Achilles problem?
A: It’s an injury to the tendon at the back of your ankle. It makes running and jumping painful.
Q2: Why is Saka called a "right winger"?
A: Because in football, a winger plays on the side (right or left) and helps both attack and defend along that sideline.
Q3: What does "assist" mean?
A: An assist is when a player passes the ball to a teammate who then scores a goal. It’s like setting up the score.
Q4: Who is Erling Haaland?
A: He is a very strong Norwegian football striker who scores many goals for Norway and Manchester City.
Q5: What is the "2026 World Cup"?
A: It’s the big international football tournament held every four years; here it’s the version happening in 2026, and England vs Norway is a quarterfinal match.
The original report reminds fans they can read the latest World Cup news, analysis, and insight from SI FC (Sports Illustrated Football Club). You can also add SI as a preferred source on Google News to follow their updates easily.