England’s 2-1 semi-final defeat to Argentina on July 15 was not merely a painful night in North America – it was the seventh consecutive occasion since 1998 that the Three Lions have been eliminated from a World Cup knockout round by a nation ranked inside FIFA’s top 10. The stat, surfaced by Sports Mole, is damning precisely because it spans managers, generations, and entirely different squads. The problem is structural, not personal.Context matters here. England’s path to the semi-final was notably undemanding at the elite level: a round-of-16 win over Mexico and a quarter-final victory over Norway, who were ranked 31st in the world. Argentina were the first top-10 opposition England had faced this summer, which means the quarter-final against Norway offered no genuine benchmark for how England would cope against genuine title contenders.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementThat soft draw kept the illusion intact longer than it deserved. When Argentina arrived, ranked among the planet’s elite and carrying Lionel Messi’s relentless tournament form, the gap was always going to be tested in the most unforgiving conditions.Anthony Gordon’s opener in the 55th minute should have been the platform. Instead, it triggered one of the most alarming tactical surrenders of Tuchel’s tenure. According to Sports Mole, between the 55th and 92nd minutes, England recorded just 12% possession – a figure that belongs in a damage-limitation exercise, not a World Cup semi-final from a side that had just taken the lead.Tuchel’s response to Gordon’s goal was to withdraw Reece James and shift into a back five, effectively conceding the midfield battle at the precise moment Argentina needed an invitation. It is only the second time in World Cup history that a team has scored first in a semi-final and failed to advance – the other occasion was England against Croatia in 2018, when a strikingly similar pattern of possession collapse cost Gareth Southgate’s side.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementThat parallel is not a coincidence. It is the same English problem, wearing a different manager’s name.Tuchel’s pre-tournament selections will now face extended scrutiny. He took a defensively weighted squad and left Adam Wharton and Trent Alexander-Arnold at home. The logic of protecting a lead with a back five collapses entirely if the squad lacks the midfield quality to retain possession under pressure once that lead is established.Against an Argentina side that had dismantled Switzerland in the quarter-finals with Messi in devastating form, England needed the capacity to play through a press and hold territory. They had neither the personnel nor the apparent tactical plan to do it.Tuchel was appointed precisely to go further than Southgate – not to replicate his ceiling. Reaching the semi-finals matches Southgate’s 2018 achievement, and falling in the same round, to a final defeat driven by identical tactical passivity, makes the appointm
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