Thomas Tuchel has vowed to avenge England’s ‘Hand of God’ heartache when they return to the Azteca Stadium on Sunday.The Three Lions boss watched from his home in Germany as a teenager when Bobby Robson’s side were beaten by Diego Maradona’s Argentina in the quarter final of Mexico ’86. The first of Maradona’s goals in the 2-1 win was with his hand, his second a solo dribble from his own half.England return to the iconic Mexico City venue for the first time this weekend to take on the hosts in the World Cup last 16 – and Tuchel will use the ghosts of the Azteca as motivation.‘It is karma – karma will come back for us!’ he said. ‘We will turn it around. It will reward us. We will get it back!‘I just love football and the old tournaments. These pictures from Mexico are in St George’s Park where we stay. These big, framed pictures of Gary Lineker scoring, the coaches and Peter Shilton. Big pieces of history. This is a big moment to make peace with the stadium and turn things around.’Tuchel added: ‘I didn’t have a connection to it (Hand of God) but it means something. I was 13 years old and Germany then played Argentina in the final. Thomas Tuchel has vowed to avenge England’s ‘Hand of God’ heartache when they return to the Azteca Stadium on Sunday for the first time since the 1986 World Cup Diego Maradona famously scored with his hand in a World Cup quarter-final win over England’I remember the coffee table book and the pictures with all these flags. I remember the shadow of something hanging in the centre of the Azteca and it never moved. The sun was so steep that the shadow was always there in the middle.‘I am super excited to have this match. It’s an iconic match. It’s an iconic stadium. It will be against the whole country, the energy of the whole stadium.’England will arrive in Mexico City on Friday evening, 48 hours out from kick off, and will train the following day. That, says Tuchel, is the best-case scenario available to them for adjusting to altitude, and the FA have consulted the likes of Team GB for advice.’We will go one night earlier, it makes sense,’ said Tuchel. ‘The ball will fly differently. It will fly maybe five yards more. It’s just difficult. We need the experience.‘The recommendation is you either go 10 days before – which is too long for us – or last minute, which is not allowed. We have spoken to teams who do it and they say they travel very, very late on matchday if they can’t have time to adapt. We will find a mixture in between. It’s a huge advantage (for Mexico).’Meanwhile, Tuchel says that Declan Rice has reassured him he will be available for the game despite coming off late in the 2-1 win over DR Congo with hamstring pain.‘I asked him (late in the game) and he said, “I can do it for the team but I am in terrible pain”,’ revealed Tuchel. ‘When Declan tells you he is in terrible pain then you know he cannot take it anymore. ‘He was grateful we took him off but he said after the game it’s not an issue. There is no injury, I think he will recover. He was just in pain and I hope he is right. It’s more nerve pain.’Reece James (hamstring) and Jarell Quansah (ankle) remain doubtful ahead of Sunday.How much is David Beckham set to pocket from his World Cup brand deals? Take our quiz in our newsletter HERE