‘Gutted’ England star Marc Guehi hits out at Three Lions’ negative approach to disastrous World Cup exit – as under-fire boss Thomas Tuchel feels the heat for nightmare second-half substitutes

England star Marc Guehi hit out at England’s negative approach following the Three Lions spectacular capitulation in the World Cup semi-final, with boss Thomas Tuchel under fire over his substitutions.Anthony Gordon had opened the scoring in the 55th minute after the Three Lions were put through an attritional first-half which saw midfield stars such as Jude Bellingham and Elliot Anderson repeatedly targeted with fouls by Argentina’s players. But over 20 minutes plus injury time left to play, Thomas Tuchel made a succession of defensive changes which allowed little room for England to extend their goal cushion. Enzo Fernandez duly scored an 85th-minute equaliser, with England punished further when Lautaro Martinez headed his injury-time effort into the back of the net. But while Tuchel has been roundly criticised by voices outside of the camp, Guehi was one of those in the squad to suggest that England’s approach had not been right for the occasion. ‘Once we went 1-0 up, we seemed to just try and hold on, which at this level is just not enough, so I’m gutted,’ the Manchester City defender told BBC Sport after the final whistle.  England defender Marc Guehi has hit out at England’s negative approach in the World Cup semi-final defeat by Argentina  The Manchester City defender appeared to suggest a tactical mis-step from Thomas Tuchel’We should have carried on. We should have carried on pushing. It kind of felt like we scored and the mentality was, go back, defend.’ Tuchel later threw on Marcus Rashford and Ivan Toney as the game ticked into added time, but it was too little, too late, for England to force extra time and seek a potential winner. When asked whether he thought that this was the squad that could finally win England silverware, Guehi continued to cut a deflated figure. ‘I don’t know. I don’t know,’ he said. ‘It’s hard to think about the future right now. ‘At the moment, it’s just disappointment. That’s all.’ Tuchel defended his decision-making in the aftermath of his defeat, suggesting that his critics would have had a different view with an alternative outcome. ‘If it doesn’t go well, it’s easy to say that it was wrong,’ Tuchel told the BBC – and then suggested England were on the back foot before his changes.’We just tried to help the players. We conceded straight away. We decided to go to a back five because the gaps were far too open.’Straight after our goal, without a substitution we conceded way too many crosses and chances. We tried to help but the responsibility was on the coach.’Between Gordon’s opener and Fernandez’s leveller, England had just 12 per cent of possession.’We couldn’t get out,’ Tuchel said. ‘Of course we wanted to go for the second goal but I didn’t feel an offensive substitution would help.’We stayed in our 4-4-2 but we became passive, couldn’t win any balls or keep the ball. It wasn’t a structure problem.’We changed nothing after the goal but the match changed completely. I understand these discussions are out there and other coaches know it better after the game.’Among those to hit out at Tuchel were Alan Shearer and Wayne Rooney, who claimed that his tactics had ‘cost’ England their meeting with Spain in New York. World Cup-winning goalkeeper with Spain Iker Casillas described his coaching as ‘cowardly’, while Chris Sutton was unafraid to speak out, dubbing it a ‘coaching catastrophe’ from the former Chelsea manager. Argentina talisman Lionel Messi himself also noticed England’s dwindling fight, with the Inter Miami star saying that he believed the Three Lions ‘didn’t want to win anymore’ in the latter stages of the match.   Lionel Messi appeared to gloat over England not wanting to win the match as much as his teamEngland might have however considered themselves unlucky in the first-half after a number of rough Argentine challenges went unpunished. In the third minute of the match, Fernandez ploughed into a heavy challenge on Anderson which left the England player clutching the back of his neck.Anderson, who was repeatedly targeted throughout an attritional first 45 minutes, took a minute or two to haul himself off the turf as England and Argentina players came together in an early showing of the bitter rivalry between the two teams. Referee Ismail Elfath battled to separate the sets of players, but did not hold up a card of either colour to punish Fernandez. An extended replay for television audiences however shows Fernandez barrelling into Anderson with little thought for the ball at his feet, and appearing to chop him in the neck with his elbow. Arguably an outright red, Fernandez might have at least seen a yellow card for his clumsy play – with the Chelsea star then dodging a second punishment minutes later for skittling an on-rushing Jude Bellingham yards from the Argentina penalty area. It was instead Anderson himself who received the first yellow card of the match, the midfielder lashing out at Messi after suffering persistent tackles. Some England fans watching from home also claimed that Martinez’s winner should not have stood, with Messi appearing to foul Djed Spence in the build-up. After Alexis Mac Allister hit the post for the second time, the ball cannoned back out on England’s left-hand side, leading to a foot race between Spence and Messi in the penalty area. Spence beat Messi to the ball but appeared to be caught by him in the process.Immediately the full back spun around in some discomfort but the referee waved play on – and just seconds later England were punished as Messi crossed to an unmarked Martinez to score.How much is David Beckham set to pocket from his World Cup brand deals? 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