Cliff Notes – Can English football embrace a German coach?
- After one game what do the English think of a having a German coach? It’s a bit of a mixed bag of reactions, but you get the sense, the media are itching to give it to him.
- Thomas Tuchel’s decision not to sing the national anthem ahead of his first match sparked debate, with some fans asserting that a manager should lead by example.
- Despite mixed reactions over his German nationality, most England fans at Wembley appeared supportive, prioritising his coaching credentials over national identity.
- Tuchel aims to win over critics through results and performance, setting his sights on securing the World Cup by 2026, while acknowledging the expectations for improvement.
- England host Latvia in Tuchel’s second match in charge tonight at 8:00 pm (GMT)
What do the English think of a having a German coach?
Thomas Tuchel said beforehand he had to “earn the right” to do so.He didn’t sing the anthem. Everyone knew he wouldn’t. It was a neat swerve of a somewhat heated question from a coach who has handled the unique off-pitch demands of the England job adeptly since October — without actually coaching a game until Friday.
But as England face Latvia at Wembley tonight in their second 2026 World Cup qualifier, he’s going to be judged in more detail. The English have a very short honeymoon period with the Germans.

“If he’s leading the team then he should be singing it,” England fan Chris Wilkinson told WTX SPORTS NEWS outside Wembley Stadium. “You’ve got to lead by example. I think there’s always going to be controversy with it. But if he’s a good manager for us, us English fans will accept him gracefully. Especially if he can take us that one step further.”
The singing of the anthem has, to the bafflement of many, become something of a lightning rod in English football despite Tuchel not being the first non-Englishman to manage the country.
Tuchel’s warm Wembley welcome

As Tuchel finally got going on the pitch, with a 2-0 win over Albania in a World Cup qualifier in London, his welcome seemed warm enough, if not overwhelming. A pre-match interview played on the big screens drew a smattering of applause, a song featuring his name failed to truly catch light and fans behind the goal unveiled a banner reading: “Welcome to the home of football, Thomas.”
England fans unfurled a banner to welcome their new coach before kickoff
The notion of England as the “home” of football has become deeply ingrained in the culture, even if it’s sometimes said, or sung, with tongue in cheek. The appointment of a German to the highest sporting office in the land caused something of a furor back in October. But for the majority of England fans at Wembley, Tuchel’s nationality was of little concern.
“I’m not bothered. We all know he’s German, that’s his nationality and this is his job. Whether he sings the national anthem or not doesn’t matter,” said Katen Amin. “He should always be proud to be German. That’s his heritage, that’s his background. Now he’s coaching England, that’s his professional position.”

While, for Tuchel, it may just be the next stop in a career that has included stints at Borussia Dortmund, Chelsea, Bayern Munich and Paris Saint-Germain, he is astute enough to realize that this is a little different. “I will do everything to show respect to this role and to this country.
This is the biggest one in world football and everybody can be assured, no matter what nationality my passport says,” he said.
“A dark day for England [as] Three Lions gamble on a GERMAN,” ran the back page of the Daily Mail the day he was appointed. “Can there be a more depressing, or more obvious, sign of national decline than this utterly abject capitulation at the sport we love most – the game we invented, for God’s sake – to our greatest rivals?” asked a column in the weekly magazine, The Spectator.
Tuchel plans to convince with ‘results’
These publications know their market. In a country that, since Brexit, has become increasingly polarized and saw the right-wing, anti-immigrant Reform UK party win 14.3% of the vote in the 2024 general election, there are plenty that see a German coaching the English national team as an affront. Elements of the English press had “unloaded all their anger on him even before his first game,” noted German publication Der Spiegel.

There are also plenty who lament that one of football’s best-resourced national teams can’t develop a homegrown coach with the pedigree of Tuchel. Gary Lineker, the former England striker turned podcast mogul considered by many to be a darling of the liberal left, was one.
“I genuinely believe national team football, particularly with the big nations, the manager should be from the national team. From the country that they are,” he said. “I don’t think it is imperative, I won’t lose sleep over it, but my personal preference would be England have an English coach. I respect Tuchel as a coach, he is really clever.”
Tuchel is also incredibly successful, having won the Champions League, Bundesliga, German Cup, Club World Cup and French Ligue Un. “We will try to convince them [those who oppose his appointment] by results and the way we play,” he said. Some may take more convincing than others.
World Cup — Tuchel’s only focus
His predecessor, Gareth Southgate, had nothing like that track record when he was appointed in 2013. But Southgate, as well as improving the team, managed to act as a statesman to the country and a father figure to his players: backing those who got racist abuse after missing penalties in the Euro 2020 final and speaking eloquently on societal issues in the country.
Tuchel’s plain speaking is already a contrast to the measured, almost diplomatic, words of Southgate and he made his feelings clear once more when he said: “We can do better, we have to do better.”
When it was all over, the first three points secured, Tuchel made a swift exit down Wembley’s tunnel, leaving his players to conduct a lap of appreciation – although thousands of fans had drifted away well before the end.
“We can do better, we have to do better,” said Tuchel of his first match. “I can understand it’s not the most exciting watch, but we still needed to do what we needed to do.”
So can England really embrace a German coach? Well, for now, it depends on which English person you ask. But if that German coach wins them the World Cup next year, you might struggle to find one that doesn’t.
This was not a night that carried the air of a glorious new era, but Tuchel has been brought to England with a simple brief – win.