
FOXBOROUGH, MA – JUNE 23: Portrait of England national team head coach Thomas Tuchel before the 2026 FIFA World Cup Group L match between England and Ghana at Boston Stadium in Foxboro, USA on June 23, 2026. (Photo Credit: Richard Sellers/Sports Photo/All Star via Getty Images) (Image: Richard Sellers/All Star, Getty Images)
Thomas Tuchel is poised to prove his tactical fearlessness tonight as England look to secure top spot in Group L against World Cup-clinching Panama. The German head coach is under pressure to inject some serious energy into the Three Lions’ tournament activities following a nail-biting 0-0 stalemate with Ghana.
With midfielder Declan Rice suffering a foot injury and Reece James having an injury history, both players are expected to be protected ahead of the knockout phase. As a result, some interesting changes are set to be made to the starting line-up in New Jersey tonight (Saturday June 27th) at 10pm BST. To see exactly how a rotated team would perform, we went to the virtual dugout in EA Sports FC 26.

Harry Kane will surely have a better time against Panama than against Ghana. (Image: Richard Sellers/All Star, Getty Images)
EA FC 26 predicts England vs. Panama lineup
The simulation certainly contained a number of issues, the Mirror reported.
Our simulated tactical predictions see Tuchel making some bold decisions, bringing in veteran Jordan Henderson to help in the center of midfield.
Jed Spence started at right-back in place of James, but Bukayo Saka was released at the whistle for his first start in the competition.
England simulate their starting XI against Panama: Jordan Pickford. Jed Spence, Ezri Konsa, John Stones, Nico O’Reilly. Jordan Henderson, Elliot Anderson. Bukayo Saka, Jude Bellingham, Marcus Rashford. Harry Kane.

Thomas Tuchel has made some brave decisions about his starting XI against Panama (Image: EA Sports/Screenshot)
Simulate England vs. Panama World Cup match in EA FC 26
It took just 4 minutes for the virtual gamble to pay out. Anderson pounced on a loose parry from an uncharacteristic Kane mistake and immediately fed the ball to Bellingham from the penalty spot.
The Real Madrid superstar clinically smashed his first-time shot over the bar and into the net to give England the advantage. There was more drama in store in the first half.
England had the upper hand in the early stages, but Panamanian goalkeeper Luis Mejia briefly proved a stubborn obstacle, denying Saka three goals. Anderson also had an international goal chalked off for offside after he headed Henderson’s chip-through ball into the net.
The breakthrough finally came in the 41st minute, when Saka calmly scored with a bold no-look first pass from Bellingham. However, rather than going into the interval with a two-goal cushion, England were pulled back just seconds before the whistle.
A momentary lapse of concentration at the back allowed Godoy to break through and despite Pickford managing to contain his hand, Godoy fired.

Bukayo Saka scores in England vs. Panama World Cup simulation on EA Sports FC 26 (Image: EA Sports/Screenshot)
A 5-star feast for England fans
Any lingering fears at half-time quickly dissipated in the second period as the Three Lions embarked on a ruthless five-goal rampage. Kane finally found the back of the net in the 51st minute, with Rashford and Bellingham linking up to finish powerfully from six yards out to give England a 3-1 lead.
The fourth goal came quickly in the 57th minute, when Mejia saved Saka’s close-range shot before Rashford slotted it into an empty net.
With just over 20 minutes remaining, Tuchel opted to leave Kane, Saka and Andersson out. Ollie Watkins, Noni Maduke and Koby Mainu joined the fray, two of whom played key roles in the dying stages.
The drama came in the 71st minute, when Watkins saw his shot blocked by the hands of Panamanian defender Jose Cordova. In a moment that shocked the nation, Bellingham took a rare spot kick and sent it wide.
Fortunately, the Madrid talisman recovered himself almost immediately, with Watkins setting up a stunning fifth shortly after.

Jude Bellingham slides a penalty in our simulation, shocking New Jerseyans (Image: EA Sports/Screenshot)
Just four minutes later, in the 78th minute, Mainu put England ahead with a composed finish past the keeper.
With the result now certain, Tuchel withdrew Bellingham and O’Reilly to give them well-deserved rest, bringing on Morgan Rodgers and Reece James for the final 10 minutes.
There was still time for another goal, as Maduke scored England’s second with a precise finish inside the penalty area.
England won 7-1, equaling their biggest victory in the competition to date, and booked their place in the knockout stages as unbeaten group winners.
If tonight’s real-world execution is even half as good as the clinical one, England will go into the round of 32 with momentum.
