World Cup 2026: England boss Thomas Tuchel has Marc Guehi pushing for recall after uncertain John Stones, Ezri Konsa performances against Croatia
Marc Guehi seemed set to be one of England's first-choice centre-backs at the World Cup but was benched against Croatia; after the pairing of John Stones and Ezri Konsa failed to convince, should Thomas Tuchel make changes for Tuesday's game against Ghana?
Monday 22 June 2026 13:15, UK
England's attack caught fire against Croatia but their defence in Dallas was far less convincing.
The centre-back partnership of Ezri Konsa and John Stones raised eyebrows ahead of England's World Cup opener, given the selection meant Marc Guehi was left on the bench, and mistakes from both starters in the build-up to the two Croatia goals supported those pre-match suspicions.
"Is Konsa and Stones a partnership that can win us the World Cup?" That was the question posed by Sky Sports pundit Gary Neville at half-time on Wednesday on ITV, after watching Stones go to ground before Croatia's first goal and Konsa misjudge a chipped pass ahead of their second.
"[Midfielders Declan] Rice and [Elliot] Anderson are going to have to be outstanding and protect our defence rather more than they have in that first half," Neville said.
On top of the defensive errors, there was also jittery build-up play from deep in England's half, with Stones and Konsa each guilty of giving up possession when faced with an intense, high press from Croatia early on.
While Stones and Konsa posted good passing accuracy numbers by full-time, other stats did not make great reading.
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Stones made just one tackle, which did not come off, and one clearance in his 87 minutes. He won four of his seven duels.
Konsa won just three of his eight duels, one of his five aerial duels and did not make a single tackle or interception.
"We probably lack something defensively to go all the way," Jamie Carragher told Sky Sports News the next morning, pouring some pessimism on England's World Cup prospects, which had been lifted by an electric attacking display in the second half against Croatia.
But the restoration of Guehi to the starting line-up for Tuesday's next World Cup Group L game against Ghana could change that narrative. His stats for the past Premier League season show he can be more combative than Stones and Konsa.
The Manchester City defender was a first-choice pick by Gareth Southgate at the Euros two years ago, where the perception of England's strengths were the reverse: strong at the back, weak in attack.
Guehi, now 25, has gone to another level since then. He seamlessly stepped up at City when they signed him from Crystal Palace in January, picking up an FA Cup winners' medal for the second year in a row in May to underline his development.
Since his Premier League debut for City in January, Guehi ranked among the best in the division for both defensive and ball-playing metrics. Guehi was 10th for possession won in the defensive third, fourth for interceptions and, while sixth for forward passes, also fifth for passes completed in that period.
Importantly, it is Stones who has suffered from Guehi's arrival. He could not get in the City team ahead of him.
Stones, who leaves City this summer at the end of his contract, has made it clear he was fit and available for selection during the run-in. But City boss Pep Guardiola preferred Guehi. So should England manager Thomas Tuchel?
Stones played just five times for Man City in 2026. He only started five Premier League games for them in the past year - and City lost four of them.
Tuchel, though, is a big fan of Stones and made allowances to take him to this World Cup, treasuring his experience, leadership, defensive skill and quality on the ball.
So if Tuchel is eager to include Stones, was the error against Croatia to start him on the left side of the centre-back pairing to accommodate Konsa, who is used to playing on the right?
Tuchel gave that combination a trial run against Costa Rica in the final warm-up game. But in the modern age of specificity, it is notable that Stones has rarely played on that side for City.
Across the past three seasons he has recorded just 371 minutes at left centre-back. He has racked up 1,151 minutes on the right.
Guehi, in contrast, has spent much of his career on the left side, despite being right footed. He notably played on the left of a back three at Palace.
Like Stones, Guehi has the adaptability to play in both areas - and has played on the right of a centre-back pairing at times for City - but these details can make a difference.
"When you have been playing on one side for a long time and you switch to the other side it can throw you off a little bit," Guehi told Sky Sports in December.
Recalling Guehi and shifting Stones back to his more familiar right side of the centre-back pairing could restore some steadiness and security to the backline. It was the duo Tuchel went for in England's first World Cup warm-up game with New Zealand and seemed likely to be the combination of choice in this tournament.
But what then for Tuchel regular Konsa?
Only goalkeeper Jordan Pickford and captain Harry Kane have played more minutes for England during Tuchel's reign. Guehi has actually started more games at centre-back for England under Tuchel partnering Konsa than partnering Stones.
It would be ruthless if Konsa lost his spot after just one World Cup game which, let's not forget, England won.
An alternative idea would be that Tuchel fields all three of those players against Ghana.
Konsa played right-back with Stones and Guehi at centre-back against Wales in October and it is clear the Aston Villa man has the profile Tuchel is after in that position, having snubbed the likes of Trent Alexander-Arnold in favour of defenders with physicality.
The knock-on would be Reece James then coming out of the side, despite winning praise for the way he stepped into midfield late in the game against Croatia.
James appears to be Tuchel's preferred right-back choice. He has started five times for Tuchel in the position, the most of any player in this era.
But given James' injury record, the argument for managing his minutes early in this tournament has merit. James has started England's past two fixtures, against Costa Rica and Croatia, but before then he had not started back-to-back games for Chelsea since March.
Would the final group game against a weaker Panama side be the time to do that, rather than against Ghana, with England's qualification and final position in Group L still to be determined, though?
There are many factors at play. But Tuchel will need to come up with the right combination at the right time through this World Cup if England are to balance off their attacking qualities with defensive solidity and go all the way.