17 Jun
Wed
•3:00pm
AT&T Stadium • Arlington
23 Jun
Tue
•4:00pm
Gillette Stadium • Boston
27 Jun
Sat
•5:00pm
MetLife Stadium • New York
23 Dec
Tue
•7:30pm
Prince moulay abdellah stadium • Rabat
30 Dec
Tue
•5:00pm
Prince moulay abdellah stadium • Rabat
14 Jun
Sun
•8:00pm
Estadio BBVA Bancomer • Monterrey
20 Jun
Sat
•10:00pm
Estadio BBVA Bancomer • Monterrey
25 Jun
Thu
•6:00pm
Arrowhead Stadium • Kansas City
Harry Kane embodies England’s attacking makeover ahead of the 2026 World Cup: a side that plays as a unit, builds calmly from the back, pushes the full-backs high, and floods the box with runners from deep.
Tunisia, meanwhile, offers a completely different challenge: a compact block, constant cover in defense, and lightning-fast breaks that explode the moment they win the ball back.
World Cup history already records some fiery meetings between them: a 2–0 win for the Europeans in 1998 and a 2–1 victory in 2018, sealed by a dramatic Harry Kane brace deep into stoppage time.
In a group stage where every point can be the difference between the last 16 and an early flight home, this England–Tunisia starts at full throttle from the very first whistle.
England arrive with the confidence of that 2018 semifinal run, their quarterfinal appearance at Qatar 2022, and a golden generation led by Harry Kane, Jude Bellingham and Bukayo Saka.
The North African side, a regular at World Cups, come in boosted by their performance at Qatar 2022, where they defeated France in the group stage and proved they can trouble any powerhouse.
Standout names like Wahbi Khazri and Ellyes Skhiri personify that fierce, ultra-competitive unit.
Don’t just watch it on TV: lock in your tickets and experience this England–Tunisia World Cup showdown live from the stands.