England vs DR Congo: the low-block riddle nobody at the desk fancies solving
Let us begin with the obvious, because the market already has. England at 1.33 to win is fair to the point of being dull — they topped Group L, out-class the Leopards man for man, and knockout survival concentrates the mind wonderfully. Backing that price is not analysis; it's paying full retail for a foregone conclusion.
The intriguing question lives elsewhere: not whether England win, but by how comfortably. And on that, the evidence points somewhere the bookmaker seems reluctant to look.
England and the parked bus: a recurring nightmare
Two of England's freshest outings read like a warning label. A goalless afternoon against a compact Ghana, where Kane was starved of service; then a laboured 2-0 over a parked-bus Panama that only cracked after the hour, courtesy of a five-minute Bellingham burst.
Neither screamed attacking fluency. Both confirmed the same chronic ailment: against a disciplined deep block, England generate patience, territory and set-pieces — but not the sheer volume of chances that floodgate scorelines require. Tuchel himself framed the task as "wearing opponents down," which is coach-speak for "this may take a while."
DR Congo have read the same script
And here comes an opponent who has practically rehearsed the role. A compact five-man rearguard, physical centre-backs in Mbemba and Tuanzebe who kept Ronaldo quiet, and a point taken off Portugal. They lost to Colombia only via a 76th-minute goal, with Mpasi-Nzau repeatedly bailing them out between the sticks.
Desabre's men are, in his own words, "difficile mais pas insurmontable" — happy to surrender the ball, defend first, and pounce on the counter. That is the exact recipe Ghana used to blunt England.
Add the personnel wrinkles: an enforced right-back reshuffle with Reece James and Quansah spared, and Saka's minutes managed after an Achilles niggle. Hardly the profile of a side about to pour goals through the roof.
The most probable script, then, is a controlled England win by one or two — a 1-0 or a 2-0 that keeps the Under comfortably alive, arriving late rather than early.














