Pickford backs England to keep cool in tense Argentina World Cup semi
Everton's English goalkeeper Jordan Pickford celebrates the team's second goal during the English Premier League football match between Everton and Newcastle United at Goodison Park in Liverpool, north west England on December 7, 2023.
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England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford is confident his team
will keep their cool in the heat of Wednesday's World Cup semi-final against
Argentina.
The rivalry between the two teams is one of the spiciest in
world football, influenced by events on and off the pitch.
Pickford said England had largely avoided flashpoints during
the 2026 tournament and can cope with the pressure.
"I think you've seen throughout the tournament our
desire to win tackles. We've not got into any scuffles or anything," he
said Monday at England's training base in Kansas City.
"We've been very well respected within the game.
Decisions go our way, they don't go our way, we just reset, we go again and we
let the football do the talking.
"I think that's what we've done throughout the
tournament. Apart from Jarell (Quansah's red card in Mexico), we've not had any
suspensions, no second yellow cards or anything like that."
Lionel Messi will be the focus in the build-up to the
semi-final in Atlanta but Everton goalkeeper Pickford talked up England's own
stars.
"Everyone will talk about Messi because he's one of the
GOATs (greatest of all time) of the game," he said.
"But you can't look past the ability and the talent
we've got in the squad –- going forward, defensively, togetherness. We've got
it all there and that's what we need to put on a show on Wednesday."
The history of matches between England and Argentina is
peppered with incidents, set against a lingering sovereignty dispute over the
Falkland Islands, known in Spanish as the Malvinas, in the South Atlantic
Ocean.
The most famous encounter between the teams was a 2-1
victory for Argentina at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico featuring two goals from
Diego Maradona -- one the infamous "Hand of God" goal and the other a
dazzling solo effort considered one of the best ever.
But the historical background is of little relevance to
Pickford as England seek to get over the line in a major tournament for the
first time since 1966.
"It's us against them to get a place in the final, and
it's a game of football. 90 minutes, 120, penalties," he said.
"We're ready for anything, and it's us against them and
it's about who comes out on top. We're fully prepared for that."

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