Jude Bellingham’s monstrous magnificence the finest performance in a generation
Insuperable midfielder is owed a profound debt of gratitude after producing one of the greatest displays by an England player
Oliver Brown
Chief Sports Writer, at Azteca Stadium, Mexico City
Published 06 July 2026
It was a display of monstrous magnificence, so full of snarl and technique and lung-bursting defiance that you wondered how he was still standing at the end. Quite apart from scoring the two goals that detonated this game for the ages, Jude Bellingham produced one of the single greatest performances ever witnessed from an England player, epitomising the spirit this team needed to prevail in the teeth of ferocious hostility from an Azteca Stadium in full cry. But just as there is no amphitheatre quite like this, with Mexico’s comeback sparking almost a Krakatoan eruption from the stands, there is nobody in the mould of the insuperable Jude, who dispelled every doubt over his composure with this study in pure inspiration.
There are professional Ironmen who would struggle to summon the stamina that Bellingham brought to this unforgettable contest, confounding the drumbeat of doom about Mexico City’s rarefied air by providing the same intensity in the 111th minute as in the first. The received wisdom was that England would be husks by the end, wheezing with the lack of oxygen. And although Harry Kane sounded like Kermit the Frog in his post-match interviews, his voice ravaged by the screams of triumph and the overwhelming effort England had needed to prevail, Bellingham still looked remarkably fresh for a man who had gone the equivalent of 15 rounds.
Until the 36th minute of an astounding drama, Mexico had not conceded a goal all tournament, and then Bellingham came along to score two in 98 seconds. Both were miniature masterpieces of timing and positioning, as he showed lightning awareness to pounce first on Bukayo Saka’s cross from the right and then Kane’s pass to silence this broiling cauldron. Between them, Bellingham and Kane have scored 10 of England’s 11 goals to secure a quarter-final place against Norway. And yet the soul of this team – or the “heart”, as manager Thomas Tuchel puts it – is perhaps best encapsulated by the No 10, a man who is finally morphing into the colossus that everybody hoped he could be.
Amid the glorious delirium that greeted the final whistle, Bellingham gave his shirt to 17-year-old Gilberto Mora. El Crackito, the Mexicans call Mora, a label evoking both his youth and his extravagant talent. But it was in a player six years his senior that Mora glimpsed the level to which he needed to aspire. Bellingham is such an abashed alpha, so hardwired to project his authority in every area of the pitch, that you can forget sometimes he is only 23. On the most daunting stage in sport, though, he has discovered something else, a discipline that cements him beyond question as the finest English midfielder of his generation.
This was a star turn of which Bryan Robson would have been proud, so packed with decisive contributions in both attack and defence you had to check there was not more than one of him under the Azteca lights. One particular transition crystallised Bellingham’s brilliance. In the moments after scoring his two goals, he could have been forgiven for basking in his casting as the hero. Instead, he tracked back and conjured a remarkable goal-saving clearance. How could Tuchel ever have seen fit to criticise his temperament?
Ever since he broke through as a 16-year-old at Birmingham City, Bellingham has pursued his ambitions like a man possessed. And this win was one he chased with molten passion, proving so instrumental that Tuchel refused even to replace him amid a flurry of late substitutions to shore up the desperate defence. His logic was that, for as long as Bellingham stayed in the fray, the greater England’s hopes would be of clinging on, after a red card for Jarell Quansah threatened to undo all the early heroics. The calculation was correct, as his talisman made sure Mexico found no way through.
You wish that England could bottle Bellingham’s energy. It is so infectious, so seemingly inexhaustible, that it could yet ensure his side are still in this World Cup in a fortnight’s time. One of his first thoughts in the aftermath was to congratulate Djed Spence for his fine shift at centre-half in the closing minutes, lifting him up after the withering verdicts he had received in his previous two games. It was also heartening to hear him describe the Azteca ambience as the best he had experienced in his career. This, after all, was the type of crucible in which he had always backed himself to thrive.
Best of all, Bellingham’s combustible streak never crossed the line or made him resemble a red card waiting to happen. This was an evening when his psychological robustness was tested as never before, with Mexico desperate to antagonise him or to goad him into an injudicious tackle. He never took the bait. The noise was unrelenting, so ear-splitting at kick-off that it registered 149 decibels, the same volume as a firework exploding right next to you.
Bellingham channelled his own flammable tendencies constructively, refusing to accept that England’s World Cup adventure would reach its final destination here. With supreme willpower, he set the tone, demonstrating to his team-mates the meaning of resilience. While his request for the country to be given a day off to celebrate this achievement might not be granted, he has guaranteed that the bleary-eyed millions back home are waking up happy.
Once, England would have crumbled in an atmosphere so febrile. This time, they conquered. And for that delicious reversal of fortunes, they owe Bellingham, their one truly unstoppable force, a profound debt of gratitude.