
In the European group stage of the World Cup preliminaries, the England team defeated Albania 2-0 away from home. Bellingham was a little unhappy when he was substituted in this game, which sparked discussion. Post reporter Craig Hope wrote about this incident.
The following is an excerpt of the content:
You can't accuse Bellingham of lacking personality recognition. He is a representative of irritability and irritability. Beilein's protest at Tuchel's decision to substitute him was a trademark display of anger.
What he expressed was not "Why not someone else?", but "Why is it me?". In fact, Bellin had just received the yellow card not long ago. If he received a second yellow card in the last six minutes, he would miss the opening game of the World Cup. Tuchel's decision is very wise. He has already reminded the players to pay attention to the risk of suspension.
But Bellingham disagrees. He raised his arms and glared at the coach. He was about to be replaced by Rodgers, his face full of displeasure. To make matters worse, England had just celebrated Kane's second goal at this time. Bellingham should have been immersed in the collective joy instead of being ruined by his own sense of grievance and ego. Although his dissatisfaction started seconds before Kane's goal, it continued afterward.
That's why in June, Tuchel called his on-field behavior "disgusting". This is why Tuchel excluded him from the last training squad despite the player claiming that he could play after shoulder surgery. The German tried to send a message to the Real Madrid star, but Bellin obviously did not listen.
Bellingham failed miserably in taking responsibility. He should have been a good teammate, but he challenged the authority of the head coach. What message does his selfish indulgence send to Rodgers, who is trying to focus on Tuchel's tactical instructions? What does it mean for Kane, who has just scored his 78th goal for the national team and should have been the center of attention? The signal this sends is: everything will always revolve around me, not you, let alone us.
Don’t forget, this game is still a qualifier in the nature of a friendly match that has already been won and has nothing to do with qualifying, even in the last few minutes. Hopefully this will not happen in the future: If Tuchel wants to replace Bellingham for the benefit of the team in the World Cup semi-finals or finals, what will he do?
