England locked down Group L last night, beating Panama 2-0 at MetLife Stadium to bank first place and secure a favourable path into the Round of 32. T. Tuchel stayed loyal to his 4-1-4-1, and the patience finally told against Thomas Christiansen’s 5-4-1 blockade.
The first hour was traffic in one direction. Jude Bellingham and Elliot Anderson kept rotating lanes between the lines, while Bukayo Saka and Marcus Rashford tried to stretch the flanks. England’s control was obvious in the numbers, 67 percent possession and 557 passes, yet Orlando Mosquera’s penalty area stayed untouched until the interval. Panama even carried a sporadic threat in transition, especially through José Luis Rodríguez before he was withdrawn in the 71st minute.
Christiansen made his first call immediately after the restart, sending José Fajardo on for Tomás Rodríguez in the 46th minute. The forward brought energy but collected a yellow card for a foul in the 53rd minute, a sign of Panama’s rising desperation. England finally cracked the code in the 62nd minute when Bellingham converted Saka’s pass to finish what had been their cleanest move of the night. Relief washed over MetLife and, understandably, the England bench had the change signal ready: Noni Madueke replaced Saka in the 63rd minute and Djed Spence came on for Jarell Quansah, who had just been booked for a foul in the 60th minute.
The cushion arrived five minutes later. Harry Kane scored in the 67th minute off Bellingham’s assist, a neat reward for the captain’s disciplined hold-up work against José Córdoba and Fidel Escobar. With the job done, Tuchel protected his star man, replacing Bellingham with Eberechi Eze in the 71st minute, the same moment Christiansen rolled the dice with Azarias Londoño and Ismael Díaz for José Luis Rodríguez and Yoel Bárcenas.
Panama never located the reset button. Andrés Andrade entered the referee’s book for a foul in the 84th minute just as Tuchel refreshed the front line, bringing on Ollie Watkins for Kane and Jordan Henderson for Anderson. Late changes from Christiansen in the 88th minute, Éric Davis for Jorge Gutiérrez and Alberto Quintero for Carlos Harvey, merely ate up the clock. Jordan Pickford, with two saves, and the Konsa-Guéhi axis managed the closing stages without incident.
The structural gap was stark. England’s back four, marshalled by Ezri Konsa and Marc Guéhi, limited Panama to 0.57 expected goals, and Bellingham’s 17 duels asked constant questions of a midfield that struggled to keep its shape. Anderson’s 63 completed passes added control, even if Rashford’s finishing touch deserted him. For Panama, Cristian Martínez’s work rate could not offset the lack of progressive outlets once England tilted the field.
Match stats
- Possession: Panama 33 percent, England 67 percent
- Shots: Panama 12 (2 on target), England 17 (6 on target)
- Expected goals: Panama 0.57, England 1.49
- Corners: Panama 3, England 7
- Fouls: Panama 16, England 13
- Yellow cards: José Fajardo 53', Jarell Quansah 60', Andrés Andrade 84'
England will learn their Round of 32 opponent once the crossover brackets are confirmed, but the priority now is recovery ahead of a knockout tie that Tuchel expects to play next week. Panama exit without a goal yet with a benchmark for the rebuild Christiansen wants. For more on Group L’s fallout, see Croatia 2-1 Ghana.







