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Jude Bellingham and Jamal Musiala grew up as England U21 friends but could go on to have rivalry like Messi and Ronaldo

JUDE BELLINGHAM and Jamal Musiala are stand-out global ­talents.

The whole world of football is watching them at this tournament and asking the same questions of them both: can they sustain this and end up building careers like Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi?

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Jamal Musiala looked electric for Germany on Friday night[/caption]
Jude Bellingham has been one of the best players in Europe this season
Rex

That’s how good they both are and they are starting to confirm as much with the starts they have made at these Euros — even though Musiala is 21 and Bellingham just 20.

The two of them are friends who played together for England’s age-group teams, up until the Under-21s.

But luckily for us Germans, ­Musiala — who was born in Germany but spent most of his childhood in England — chose to play for us.

When a player like him chooses you, it’s like winning the lottery.

But don’t be greedy — you have Bellingham and he is exceptional.

That goal he scored against Serbia on Sunday just made me go ‘wow!’
Bellingham is so physically strong.

When scoring that goal, he went in there and said, ‘Even if I clash heads and get hurt, I don’t care’.

He went in with all his power — he has such courage and confidence.

Instagram @jamalmusiala10
Bellingham and Musiala played together for England at youth level[/caption]

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He was saying, ‘I believe in my own physical presence. I don’t care if I go up against a big central defender and get an elbow in my face’.

He just said, ‘This is my ball, I’m going to score’.

That mentality is really crucial in a tournament because it’s contagious to your team-mates.

They will say, ‘He went in there when it really could have hurt — if there’s a 50-50 ball I am going to go in there and smash it as well’.

It’s unusual to have exceptional ­talent and great physicality but Jude has both.

Often, you have an exceptionally talented player and, as team-mates, you have to protect him because they are physically not the strongest.

But Jude doesn’t need to pull back if he’s clashing with a tough No 6 or whoever. He is very complete.

Bellingham’s physical presence is greater than Bayern Munich star Musiala, who is lighter and a bit of a different player.

Both of them, though, can leave opposition teams already beaten in their own minds before the game starts.

Within a team you need that feeling of having somebody capable of doing something special out of nothing — and both Bellingham and Musiala can score goals, get assists or win penalties and create something from nowhere.

It’s a mental advantage you create. The opposition look over at these players in the warm-up and there’s a real fear.

They can talk about trying to close them down — but can they really do it for 90 minutes?

Jude’s growth since moving to Real Madrid from Borussia Dortmund last summer has been ­exceptional because his team-mates recognise how calm he is in front of goal.

They know if you put him in a goalscoring position, there’s a high probability he will score.

Real’s players have the class, technique and vision to get him in those positions.

But for him to go there and play so freely and with so much joy is amazing, for such a young kid, at such a big club — and in a country where he doesn’t speak the language yet.

He takes that confidence into the England side and they also have the quality to provide for him. It’s similar for Musiala.

I was in Munich to watch Germany’s 5-1 win over Scotland.

While the Scots helped by having such a bad day at the office, it was a night when I really felt the German team reconnected with the nation. It was crucial that they started the tournament so well.

The Scottish fans made a lot of noise but after it was 2-0, they were quiet and you could only hear the Germans.

Tomorrow, Germany play Hungary, who are dangerous when they’re underdogs — they are always giving us trouble . . . and England, too.

They are unpredictable, physical and good on the counter-attack.

But I am more confident about Germany after such a great performance and result against Scotland.

I loved watching Musiala and ­Florian Wirtz really enjoying themselves in forward areas and both scoring early on.

Trent showed he's a central character for England... he deserves to keep spot, says Wilshere

THIS game felt a bit like an audition for Trent Alexander-Arnold in centre midfield, writes SunSport columnist Jack Wilshere.

I think he passed it and deserves another chance to show all the qualities that he can bring to the role.

I was pleased when I saw Trent in the starting line-up.

It’s a little bit braver than we have normally seen from Gareth Southgate and I like that.

It was: ‘Go on, go and play!’ It didn’t necessarily work out like that but that wasn’t Trent’s fault.

Southgate was experimenting with him in there, seeing if it worked.

If we get later in the tournament against the big teams, you will need someone who has played in there a few times and understands the position a bit.

The combination between Trent, Kyle Walker and Bukayo Saka is a promising one.

You see Trent naturally drift over to that right side and receive it almost like a full-back.

It’s interesting what happens then with Walker.

He was still getting involved in and around the outside, which was good to see, and it was Walker who got forward to help create the Jude Bellingham goal.

That link-up is something we need to exploit more. We should probably have used it more last night as well.

At the start, he was a little bit shaky. He gave the ball away a couple of times, and one of them led to that decent chance for Aleksandar Mitrovic.

When he plays for Liverpool he comes inside. But it’s different when you’re in there from the start. It’s 360 degree pressure, from all sides.

I always found international football that bit quicker. You’ll often receive it with your back to the game and you’ve scanned, but you need to get more on the half turn to see what’s coming.

But it was difficult for Trent, especially in the first half, for him to show his range of passing. When you’re playing against a back five, with four in front, and they’re stubborn and just waiting . . . it is very hard.

There’s no space in behind, they’re very tight and organised.

And when the ball is going over your head, your job then becomes jumping on second balls, disrupting and trying to shield the big two up front.

Trent’s positioning was good and he made some good interceptions. I think he can — and should — hold on to the ball a bit more, draw the pressure, and then play the ball forward.

If someone comes to him, that frees up space for  someone else. And he and Declan Rice have the ability to find Bellingham and Phil Foden through the lines. I would like to have seen more of that. As the game opens up, Trent is a player who can pick the right pass.

Especially in transition, like he did with a lovely one down the side for Saka in the first half and another early in the second.

It was also good to see him get forward for a decent long-range shot.

But Trent was not helped by England’s performance in the  second half. We weren’t aggressive enough, we didn’t press well enough.

Trent’s audition lasted just under 70 minutes in the end. I believe  it is something Gareth should  persist with.

He is more than intelligent enough to work it out. And as the tournament goes on, I’m sure he will be fine in there.

At their ages — Wirtz is also 21 — they can play without their heads being too full of tactics or pressure.

When Musiala chose Germany over England, it was important.

Recruitment is so much part of international management in this global society when so many young players have dual citizenship.

During my six years as head coach of the United States, we were fighting the Mexicans for so many kids who could have played for either country.

My own son, Jonathan, is a goalkeeper who has played for the United States up to Under-23 level.

These kids often feel more of a pull towards the country they have spent more time in.

My son feels more Californian than German but he’s just moved to Cesena in Italy and, who knows, one day Germany could come calling for him.

Musiala may go to the Premier League one day and may feel more English — but we’ve got him locked in for Germany now!

I want to see Bellingham and Musiala continuing to put their stamp on this tournament.

Major tournaments don’t come around often and this is when you can write history.

I admire both kids for keeping their feet on the ground and dedicating themselves to football when they have so much attention.
In the social media age, this really isn’t easy.

Both England and Germany are footballing powerhouses with the same ambition — to win the tournament — and perhaps we can meet in the final.

Reuters
Musiala bagged a goal in Germany’s opener against Scotland[/caption]
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Bellingham scored England’s only goal against Serbia on Sunday[/caption]

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