Tuchel's attacking depth papers over a defence that has not yet convinced
A four-goal second half against Croatia in Dallas answered one question about Thomas Tuchel's England and sharpened another: whether the back line can hold its nerve when the opposition is built to punish it.

A second-half scoring burst, four goals in roughly half an hour, settled England's friendly against Croatia at the AT&T Stadium in Dallas on 17 June 2026, but the margin of victory did not quieten the conversation that has been gathering around Thomas Tuchel's defence. The forwards, finally given the kind of platform Tuchel had promised since his appointment, produced the headline. The back line spent the preceding hour reminding everyone watching that the manager's more difficult work lies behind them.
The headline numbers flatter England. They flatter them in a way that, in the run-up to a major tournament, is more dangerous than an honest defeat would have been. The Guardian's Jacob Steinberg, reporting from Dallas, framed the performance in terms that cut both ways: the second-half surge masked defensive frailties that, in his judgement, may cost Tuchel dear at the tournament's sharp end. The question is not whether England can score. It is whether they can stop anyone good enough to make them need to.
A squad built the other way up
Tuchel arrived with a reputation for organising defences — three Champions League winners' medals, two of them earned at clubs whose identity was built from the back. His England, though, is a side whose talent pools deepest in the final third. The Dallas performance made the point empirically: the forwards, given territory and time, are capable of producing the kind of stretch that turns a tight international into a rout. The structural problem is that the same eleven cannot do both jobs at once.
Steinberg's report is explicit about the pattern. Even as England's attacking players delivered, the defensive structure that preceded the goals was not the structure of a side that has spent a year being drilled. That is not a sentence the England manager can afford to have written about him with a major tournament on the horizon.
The counter-narrative: rhythm, not repair
The natural counter-argument is that pre-tournament friendlies are not where repaired defences are on display. They are, by design, environments for testing combinations, managing minutes and sharpening the forward patterns that the rest of the squad will be asked to execute when the games carry weight. A 4–1 win — the kind of scoreline that lets a manager withdraw a key attacker at sixty minutes with the result already settled — is, in that reading, the most useful possible rehearsal.
There is something to that. International managers have always been at the mercy of their fixture list, and the value of a high-scoring friendly in June is partly the data it produces on combinations further forward. England's second-half movement suggested that the attacking understanding Tuchel has been building is closer to fluency than to experiment. By that measure, Dallas was a successful afternoon.
What the underlying structure says
The trouble is that the same underlying structure is now visible across two windows. England's defence has looked uncertain against organised opposition for long enough that the pattern is no longer a sample-size problem. The broader story is the standard one for elite national teams in the modern era: the front six carry a wage-and-talent premium that the back four cannot match. A manager's job is to design a system that hides the gap; Tuchel's reputation was built on doing exactly that. The Dallas performance suggests the design is not yet finished.
There is a second-order point underneath the football one. England's pathway to the latter stages of a major tournament almost always runs through sides that are organised, physical and content to absorb pressure. The teams that have beaten England at tournaments in the last decade have tended to be the ones who do not need to score three to win — the ones who can score once and then make the game ugly. Against that profile, a forward line that needs four to feel comfortable is a forward line playing the wrong match.
What the next four weeks decide
The window between Dallas and the tournament's opening game will tell us which read of the friendly is correct. If Tuchel uses it to fix the structural problem the second half obscured — a settled back four, a defensive midfield that screens rather than strides, full-backs whose positioning is a starting point and not a work in progress — then Dallas will be remembered as the moment England's forwards announced themselves and the defence caught up before it mattered. If he does not, the scoreline in Texas will be a footnote next to whatever happens when the opposition has a striker who can punish the space between England's centre-backs.
The honest answer, at this point, is that the sources do not give us enough to choose between those outcomes. Steinberg's report is a warning, not a verdict. Friendlies produce noise. The signal comes later.
This publication framed the friendly as a structural question about how a forward-led squad plans to defend, rather than a verdict on Tuchel's tenure — the wire read treated the win as the story; the more revealing story is the shape of the eleven behind the scoreline.