Soccer-Maligned Spence morphs into England super sub at business end of World Cup


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Quarter Final - Norway v England - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, U.S. - July 11, 2026 England's Djed Spence in action with Norway's Martin Odegaard IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Nathan Ray Seebeck

ATLANTA, July 13 (Reuters) - A controversial ⁠selection in the World Cup squad and panned for his performance against DR Congo in the Round ⁠of 32, Djed Spence has morphed into a key impact substitute for England at the business ‌end of the tournament.

Thrown on in the latter stages of the last-16 victory over Mexico and Saturday's quarter-final win against Norway, Spence has silenced his critics by bringing pace, energy and passion off the bench in impressive cameos.

Unmistakable for the chin strap he wears to protect a broken ​jaw sustained in a late-season Premier League match with his club Tottenham ⁠Hotspur, Spence has played a part in all ⁠six of England's matches at the tournament.

England's lack of resources at full back means the versatile defender is likely ⁠to ‌again be called upon to play some sort of role against Argentina in Wednesday's semi-final in Atlanta.

"Listen, I just want to make the country proud, the nation proud, my team proud, the manager proud," the 25-year-old ⁠said after the win over Norway in Miami.

"When I step on the ​pitch, I'll give 110% for this ‌country, I'm just grateful to do my part."

Spence took a lot of flak from critics after starting ⁠at right back against ​DR Congo, though, particularly after the Africans took the lead with a goal down his side of the pitch.

Those who felt that England manager Thomas Tuchel had made a huge blunder by not bringing Real Madrid's experienced Trent Alexander-Arnold to North America felt vindicated, ⁠even if Spence was left exposed by his teammates in central ​defence.

The storm of criticism also led to a focus on his relationship with Tuchel, who, critics pointed out, often targeted Spence with animated blasts from the sidelines.

There was what looked like another heated exchange of ideas when Spence was brought on ⁠in the 86th minute of normal time against Norway, but Spence said there had been no problem.

"I think it's just passion," he said. "Just psyching me up to go on the pitch and cause trouble, and, yeah, that's what I did."

Spence's pace was indeed a thorn in the side of the tiring Norwegian side throughout the rest of a match ​played in stifling humidity, and he would have earned England a penalty had VAR ⁠not intervened.

England ultimately progressed courtesy of Jude Bellingham's extra-time winner but the goalscorer was quick to praise Spence, his fellow ​defensive substitute Dan Burn as well as midfielder Elliot Anderson for protecting ‌the lead.

"Warriors, warriors," Bellingham said. "It's one thing to have quality, ​which all the lads in this group do, but you don't know how much heart and mentality they have until you're in a situation like that."

(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney, editing by Editing by Ken Ferris)

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