England’s 1-0 home loss to Japan highlights the critical role Harry Kane plays in their World Cup aspirations. The defeat occurred without the star striker, sidelined by a minor injury from the final training session.
Challenging Lineup Experiment
Manager Thomas Tuchel tested alternatives ahead of the summer tournament in the United States. Before training, Tuchel addressed reporters on contingency plans for Kane’s absence, following a 1-1 draw with Uruguay where Dominic Solanke and Dominic Calvert-Lewin featured. He responded thoughtfully: “Good question… you’ve seen my answer already that I’m maybe not close. I have some ideas, but I will not make them public.”
Against Japan, Tuchel deployed Phil Foden as a false nine, Cole Palmer centrally, Morgan Rogers on the right, and Anthony Gordon on the left in a narrow formation. Palmer’s error led to Kaoru Mitoma’s match-winning goal, marking Japan as the first Asian nation to defeat England.
Foden struggled visibly, recording zero shots from 22 touches before substitution at the hour mark. England fired 19 shots total, but goalkeeper Jordan Pickford had 39 touches. Substitutions included Solanke up top, Rogers to No. 10, Jarrod Bowen on the right, and Marcus Rashford for Gordon. Late pressure via set pieces saw Harry Maguire and Dan Burn threaten, with Lewis Hall testing Japan’s Zion Suzuki, who saved sharply.
Ben White faced boos pre-kickoff, and the team drew jeers at full time from the remaining 79,233 attendees, most of whom departed early.
Kane’s Indispensable Impact
Kane stands as one of the world’s top strikers, netting 53 goals in 45 appearances for Bayern Munich and England this season. As captain, his leadership sets high standards. Since the 2018 World Cup—where he claimed the Golden Boot—England boasts a 65% win rate in 88 starts with him, dropping to 57% in 14 without.
Tuchel acknowledged the void: “In the absence of Harry Kane, we don’t have the same threat. Bayern Munich in the absence of Harry Kane has not the same threat. No team in the world has the same threat, it is just normal.”
He added: “If top teams and nations rely on top players, that’s just absolutely normal. On top of that, Harry dropped out, so we lost not only him as a player but also him as a personality. It’s always a bit disruptive if the captain leaves the last training after 15 minutes and is out of the squad. We can win games without Harry, we will win games without Harry, we have won without Harry, but it is easier to win matches with Harry.”
Squad Depth Concerns Ahead
Beyond injuries, extreme U.S. heat demands rotation, as seen in Euro 2024’s final run. Ollie Watkins sat out this squad, but Solanke, Calvert-Lewin, and Foden’s underperformance strengthens his case for the final 26. Brighton veteran Danny Welbeck, the Premier League’s top English scorer at 35, also emerges as a contender.
England qualified impeccably, winning all eight games without conceding. Yet under Tuchel, results against top-20 nations—Senegal, Uruguay, Japan—stand at one draw and two losses. Jude Bellingham, Declan Rice, and Bukayo Saka return soon, but Tuchel must refine Kane-less solutions as the World Cup nears.

