Football Atlas

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Football Atlas

Football Atlas

@FootballAtlas1

Tactics • Analysis • Culture The stories shaping the game. Contact: [email protected]

Global Se unió Ağustos 2011
1.5K Siguiendo1.5K Seguidores
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Football Atlas
Football Atlas@FootballAtlas1·
@Footballtweet Nasri was a very brilliant footballer during his days at Arsenal and then at Manchester City, but he didn't stay long as a footballer, I guess he has poor work ethics.
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Football Atlas
Football Atlas@FootballAtlas1·
@talkSPORT This shouldn't be debated, its a straight red card in all fairness
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talkSPORT
talkSPORT@talkSPORT·
Do you think this was a red card, YES or NO? 🤔
talkSPORT tweet media
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Football Atlas
Football Atlas@FootballAtlas1·
@TouchlineX Thas the best he can do at this point. Defend to the death and if anything then take it to extra-time and regroup
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Football Atlas
Football Atlas@FootballAtlas1·
England vs Mexico is exactly the kind of football we crave, high intensity, relentless drama, and end-to-end action. Both teams have delivered moments of brilliance, and the referee has managed the game with composure throughout. Can't wait to see how the final 20 minutes unfold. 🍿⚽ #MEXENG
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Football Atlas
Football Atlas@FootballAtlas1·
@certifiedsurur I actually the game to get to extra time. Both team have been outstandjng so far
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ManDatGuy𓅓
ManDatGuy𓅓@certifiedsurur·
VAR: PENALTY GIVEN FOR MEXICO 🇲🇽🫣
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virtue peace
virtue peace@virtue_peace·
Midnight check : who is active?
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Football Atlas
Football Atlas@FootballAtlas1·
@_theirGod I'll be shocked if it actually happens and will engage everyone who does same to me.
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Football Atlas
Football Atlas@FootballAtlas1·
Fxck, thats a red card for England against Mexico and its non negotiable. Quansah should have known and done better. This is bad, real bad
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Troll Football
Troll Football@TrollFootball·
Bellingham celebrating his goal against Mexico
Troll Football tweet media
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Football Atlas
Football Atlas@FootballAtlas1·
Mexico vs England: First-Half Analysis Mexico hadn't conceded a single goal in this entire World Cup, five games, zero against, until tonight. They've now let in two in ninety-eight seconds and trail 2-1 at altitude in front of their own raucous crowd. Here's everything that actually happened in a genuinely chaotic first half at Azteca. Context first: kickoff was delayed a full hour for lightning, England's bus was jeered and sprayed with foam on arrival, and mocking "En-gland" chants started before the whistle. Add 7,200 feet of altitude and a crowd that hasn't lost here in years, and this was built to be hostile. For the first twenty-five minutes, it was. Mexico were quicker, more physical, and England didn't manage a single shot until the 26th minute. Jordan Pickford is the reason this game didn't get away from England before they'd even settled. Three real saves inside the opening twenty minutes: a sharp low stop on a Jiménez header, a tap over the bar on a curling effort, and a hand save to force a corner off another Jiménez chance. Then his quick restart directly launched the move that led to the opener. A goalkeeper single-handedly keeping his team level and starting the breakthrough is not a stat line you see often. The opener itself was a flash of pure counter-attacking quality: Rice off Pickford's throw, into Saka, whose cross found Bellingham completely unmarked at the back post. Silenced a stadium of 87,000 in about eight seconds of build-up. Then the ninety-eight seconds that decided the half. Elliott Anderson won a loose ball high up the pitch, Kane had the simplest of tap-ins available and instead squared it selflessly for Bellingham to complete his brace, first through the legs of Érik Lira. Two goals, two different finishes, one midfielder having the game of his life in front of a crowd that wanted him silent. Mexico's response was immediate and deserved real credit, not sympathy. Roberto Álvarado's inswinging free-kick deflected kindly to Julián Quiñones, unmarked just outside the six-yard box, who volleyed instinctively into the roof of the net first time. His fourth goal of the tournament, and it's putting him firmly into the Golden Boot conversation. The closing stretch of stoppage time was end-to-end; Bellingham cleared a ball off his own line with the goal gaping, Jiménez then shot narrowly wide after a slight deflection off Konsa, and Pickford produced yet another sharp stop to deny him moments later. Both sides could have walked in at 2-2; both will feel hard done by that they didn't. Here's the debate already splitting timelines: one side is calling this the game of the tournament so far, entertaining, end to end, genuine quality from both squads. The other side is pointing out England only lead because of one six-minute spell against the run of play, and that for the twenty-five minutes either side of it, Mexico were the better, sharper, more dangerous team. Both things can be true at once, and that's exactly why the second half matters more than the scoreline suggests. Where this sits heading into the restart, England have the lead and the composure of players like Kane and Pickford who've been here before. Mexico have the crowd, the altitude, and a striker in Jiménez who's one moment away from dragging this level again. Nothing about a 2-1 scoreline at Azteca with this atmosphere is remotely settled.
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England@England·
Goal. Mexico have one back.
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The Touchline | 𝐓
The Touchline | 𝐓@TouchlineX·
📸 - JUDE BELLINGHAM REALLY SCORED 2 GOALS IN 99 SECONDS! JUST WOW!
The Touchline | 𝐓 tweet media
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Football Atlas
Football Atlas@FootballAtlas1·
Jude Bellingham rises to the occasion to score his third goal of the world cup to put England ahead against Mexico. #MEXENG
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