July 1, 2026 at 04:45 PM
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Scouting DR Congo - where England can win the game
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In the knockout stages of a major tournament, there is a genuine risk of elimination irrespective of the opposition.
Germany's elimination at the hands of Paraguay - a team that started the World Cup losing 4-1 to Mauricio Pochettino's USA - proves that point well.
England's next opponents, DR Congo, finished their group in third place, beating Uzbekistan, drawing to Portugal and losing to Colombia, but how do they play and what challenges might they pose against head coach Thomas Tuchel's men?
DR Congo face England on Wednesday (17:00 BST), live on broadcaster One and iPlayer.
Throughout the tournament so far, they have set up in a 5-3-2 formation, a shape that has been consistent both on and off the ball.
Their average possession so far sits at 38.8% which pales in comparison to England's 65.7% - second only to Spain (70.3%). This suggests that DR Congo are a stubborn defence-first team looking to spring counter-attacks on their opposition.
And while this is mostly true, they are surprisingly front-footed in how they defend.
This could change against England, but against both Portugal and Columbia, opponents that dominated the ball, DR Congo pressed high against them from goal-kick situations.
From their defensive block, they look to hold their line higher than you would expect from a team with 38% possession, not dropping into their own box as often.
There is also a tendency for their players to apply pressure, particularly to the player on the ball, and nearby team-mates around the ball.
All of these decisions, although more proactive than simply camping in their own box, are quirks England could look to exploit.
From goal-kicks, we can see DR Congo's two strikers and three midfielders take advanced positions looking to press the opposition's keeper, centre-backs and holding midfielder.
Their wing-backs are tasked with pressing the full-backs and in defence, the three centre-backs are left to defend against three attackers.
They are ready to go man-to-man everywhere, which plays into England's hands.
While the pressure could force an England error but with a squad used to dealing with high presses particularly at club level in the Premier League, Tuchel will be hoping their technical quality does not fail them.
Where England may get some joy is in using wide full-backs in these deeper areas of the pitch. The idea being, by playing low, the marking DR Congo wing-backs have to press across larger distances.
The full-backs, if found in these situations, have more time and space on the ball so we could see England return to playing down the sides of the pitch, through what Tuchel describes as their "wide units" - full-back, midfielder and winger - rotating to pull the DR Congo players out of position, targeting this weakness.
Another key point to note is that Tuchel has built his squad to entice pressure, before "accelerating through the middle third" - a phrase used by England assistant coach Anthony Barry.
The idea being, by pulling the opponent's attack and midfield away from the defensive line, there is more space and there are fewer defenders between your attackers and the goal.
This concept explains why the likes of Elliot Anderson and Harry Kane, at times, launch direct passes from deep into powerful runners in behind, and why England looked better against a pressing Croatia side than they did against a smartly passive Ghana.
Whether pressing high or defending in a block in the middle of the pitch, DR Congo have continued to apply some forward pressure against Colombia and Portugal.
Tuchel will likely be hoping the opposition stick to that plan as his side will look to release the likes of Jude Bellingham, Marcus Rashford, Anthony Gordon and Noni Madueke in behind.
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In their defensive block, DR Congo's front two often apply pressure to the centre-backs on the ball while screening passes into defensive midfielder but if teams build with more than two players in the first line, their attackers are outnumbered.
It has then been the tireless job of the nearest central midfielder to push up and apply pressure - something of which England can take advantage.
Nico O'Reilly or a central midfielder like Jude Bellingham or Declan Rice, could pin that central midfield infield, opening up an unmarked pass out wide.
A third central defender playing in the role Jarell Quansah did in England's last game could trigger DR Congo's wide midfielder to press before England combine to mov

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