LiveSunday · 12 July 2026Vol. VIII · No. 193
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Bellingham reaching heights of World Cup legends with Messi next

Jude Bellingham again dazzles England and the World Cup with his brilliance, matching some records of the all-time greats.

Bellingham reaching heights of World Cup legends with Messi next

Jude Bellingham has carried England through the altitude of Mexico City then the searing heat and humidity of Miami on what increasingly looks like a personal mission to end a 60-year wait to win the World Cup.

The World Cup can sometimes turn into one player's destiny, carrying an unstoppable momentum towards the sport's greatest prize.

Think Diego Maradona with Argentina in 1986. Think Ronaldo's redemption with Brazil in Yokohama in 2002. Think Lionel Messi finally claiming his personal Holy Grail with Argentina in Doha in 2022.

Despite the England star again coming to his nation's aid with two goals that overcame Norway in the Miami furnace, Bellingham has a long way to go to be bracketed with those iconic figures.

Indeed, there are huge barriers to cross just at this tournament with Messi and Argentina waiting in Atlanta in the semi-final after they beat Switzerland.

And, even then, there is the prospect that Spain, or Kylian Mbappe and a brilliant France side, will be the final frontier to cross in ending the agonising barren years that have stretched back to 30 July 1966 when Sir Alf Ramsey's England won the World Cup.

Formidable barriers, but sometimes world-class players find the force of will to shape a World Cup as they wish - and Bellingham is threatening to do that after the latest in a string of magnificent displays.

Bellingham equals World Cup greats

While not daring to place Bellingham in the stratosphere of Pele or Maradona - which would be ridiculously premature given their history and legendary status - his match-winning performances against Mexico in the Azteca, then against Norway in Miami, at least allow a flattering statistical comparison.

Bellingham is the first player to score two or more goals in consecutive knockout stage games at a single World Cup since Maradona's great tournament in 1986.

He is also, at 23, the second youngest player to achieve this feat behind Pele, who did the same at 17 in 1958 when Brazil won the World Cup in Sweden.

And he is worthy of wearing the famous number 10 jersey they wore at World Cups, only this time in the white of England.

Bellingham's personal statistics, apart from his two goals, in the win against Norway were a compelling indicator of his influence.

He had five shots, the most by an England player, and was also top of the categories measuring most touches in the opposition box (6), most duels won (8) and fouls won (4).

And Bellingham continued his trend of delivering key England goals.

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Bellingham: England's game changer

Bellingham famously uttered the words "who else?" in the direction of England's fans when he spared them the embarrassment of defeat by Slovakia at Euro 2024.

It was after a spectacular overhead kick equaliser with the clock reading 94 minutes 34 seconds in Gelsenkirchen. It laid the platform for an England win in extra time in the last 16.

He has had his ups and downs since, even being excluded from head coach Thomas Tuchel's squad at one point.

This World Cup has only been an upward curve.

Bellingham could be forgiven for revisiting that "who else?" message after his double in the 3-2 win in Mexico City, then the two goals that saw off Norway.

It was also the latest example of Bellingham's ability to score goals at vital times, to make the defining contributions when England need them most.

Of his 12 goals for England, nine have been at major tournaments. Five have put England ahead and two have been equalisers.

Only Gary Lineker - with six in 1986 - has scored as many non-penalty goals in a single World Cup, with Bellingham having the chance to add more before this tournament ends.

And just to decorate his status as the complete world-class player, Erling Haaland is the only other player at this World Cup to score with his left foot, right foot and head.

In short, he is showing an incredibly impressive dynamism in the type of goals he scores. Some have been classic poacher goals, others arriving at the right place at the right time in the box and then those moments of sheer individual brilliance with power, pace and skill on display.

Bellingham on course to join greats

Those of us who are now covering our seventh World Cup have seen this before, when a player simply elevates his own performances, and his team's, to match the environment and pressures in which the sport's greatest prize is won.

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