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    Jude Bellingham jokes Three Lions fans should ‘sack work’ to watch England’s march to World Cup glory

    JOKER Jude Bellingham yesterday urged fans to bunk off to watch England’s march to World Cup glory.The wonderkid, 19, scored in a stunning midfield display during the 6-2 demolition of Iran on Monday.
    Jude Bellingham told fans ‘Sack it! Don’t go to work when we’re playing!’Credit: Getty
    Millions bunked off work and school to watch the game in Qatar, which kicked off at 1pm UK time.
    Jude was shown a clip of fans in a beer-chucking frenzy at London’s Box Park as his header went in.

    The Stourbridge-born Borussia Dortmund star asked: “It would have been one o’clock there? Half one?”
    He joked: “Sack it! Don’t go to work when we’re playing!
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    “This is what you love seeing really. This is why we play, especially when so far away from home.”
    Jude — the first player born after 2000 to score in a World Cup — told how he was unable to sleep afterwards.
    He said: “I’m coming down from the high now and focusing on the next game.
    “It’s difficult to sleep to be fair — I was up all night.”
    Most read in The Sun
    But he added: “We have to back it up with a good performance and a good win against America.”
    A win on Friday will get the side to the knockout stage.
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    How Jude Bellingham went from footie-loving copper’s son to England’s wonderkid – & quirky reason he wears number 22

    AT the Adidas concession here in Doha’s sprawling fan zone, a giant picture of Jude Bellingham stares out alongside another of Lionel Messi.Before the tournament kicked off some were wondering if the marketing bods hadn’t got a little ahead of themselves.
    Jude Bellingham celebrates after scoring England’s first goal at the World CupCredit: EPA
    Toddler Jude with dad Mark at a non-league gameCredit: Tim Stewart
    Aged 19, Jude has only played 117 league games — 41 of which were for Birmingham City in the Championship.
    Messi is considered to be the greatest footballer of all time.
    But on Monday afternoon, at Qatar’s Khalifa International Stadium, Jude confirmed he had earned his spot next to the Argentinian.
    After a deft headed goal and a thrilling box-to-box performance in his first game in the World Cup finals, England fans awarded him a rousing rendition of Beatles song Hey Jude.
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    No English teenager has lit up the world stage quite so effervescently since Michael Owen burst on to the scene in 1998 with a wonder goal against Argentina.
    Born in Stourbridge, West Mids, to working-class parents, articulate Jude — with model good looks — remains remarkably grounded.
    “I’m just Jude,” he told a podcast for his German side Borussia Dortmund.
    “I don’t see myself as some sort of special person because I play professional football. I’m no better than anyone else just because I can kick a ball around.”
    Most read in Football
    It is a humility ingrained in him from childhood by his mum Denise and dad Mark.
    He has also said of both Mark, 46, and Denise, 54: “Before being great parents they’re great people. Both are working-class and filled me with the things you need to get along.
    “You can take those lessons in your personal life and social life, but also into football: Not giving up, working hard and if you want something, putting in the graft to go and get it.”
    His dad, a police sergeant before retiring last week, was a journeyman non-league striker.
    On blustery, mud-splattered afternoons, Jude, accompanied by his mum and little brother Jobe, watched his father at football outposts from Southend to Sutton Coldfield.
    One photo tweeted by Jude showed him being cradled by his crop-headed dad as he trudged off the pitch before a game for Southend’s Catholic United in Essex.
    Southend-born Mark reached 700 goals aged 40 at Midland League Division Two side Paget Rangers in 2016.
    The landmark — achieved in approximately 850 games — had begun with a strike for East Thurrock United in 1994.
    He had spells with some 15 different clubs, including Bromsgrove Rovers and Stourbridge, but described himself as “not very good!”
    The England midfielder said of his dad: “I used to watch him play all the time, it’s where I started to get that love for football.
    “That non-league style of toughness and being gritty when you need is reflected in my game, and I do think that comes from watching my dad play — even though he never tackled!”
    When Jude signed for Dortmund aged 17, he and Denise moved to the north German city and shared a flat.
    Jude showed ‘unreal’ raw talent at cricket & football aged just 11Credit: Tim Stewart
    Jude and his mum Denise share a cuddleCredit: Twitter
    Last May he said: “My mum keeps me in check on a daily basis, does pretty much everything for me. She keeps me level-headed and grounded, which is the most important thing.”
    Born in June 2003, Jude Victor William Bellingham’s footballing career began on a scrap of grass outside the family’s home in Hagley, near Stourbridge, West Mids.
    Former West Bromwich Albion winger Gary Hackett, who later managed Mark Bellingham at Stourbridge, remembers Jude and Jobe playing in a local park.
    He recalled: “Even if they weren’t involved in the session they would be running and kicking a ball and you could just see they had a passion for football.
    “You could see they were naturally gifted athletes. They could run and they had good technical skills.”
    Jude and Jobe also played cricket.
    Fady Jadayel, coach at Hagley Cricket Club, said: “At 11, Jude stood out as unbelievably talented. He had a raw sporting ability. It’s difficult to express it without sounding weird but he moved with a poise and a grace. His co-ordination was unreal.”
    Cricket would ultimately lose the boys to football.
    Jude signed for Birmingham City’s pre-academy aged seven. Former academy manager and mentor Mike Dodds remembered: “At under-sevens he was just like any other boy, really.
    “He was very good, obviously, but he wasn’t this mercurial, generational talent that people label him now.
    “He wasn’t the best at his age group, he wasn’t completely in love with the game. We liked him but if someone had said he would be in the England squad at 17 we’d have thought that person was crazy.”
    In 2015 Dodds had a conversation with a 12-year-old Jude which would help shape his young charge’s career.
    ‘Poise and grace’
    He explained: “I sat down with him and said, ‘I think you have the ability to play all areas of midfield’, so sitting midfield was a No4, No8 was a box to box and No10 was a scorer and creator.
    “We added all those numbers up and it came to 22. So we decided that was his number.”
    On August 6, 2019, Jude jogged out to face Portsmouth in the Carabao Cup with number 22 on the back of his Blues shirt.
    Aged 16 years and 38 days, he was Birmingham City’s youngest ever first-team player.
    He would play another 43 games for City that season, earning £145 a week, but the Championship was no place for his glittering talents.
    Soon Manchester United were sniffing round.
    But Premiership Big Six teams are tough places for youngsters to break through.
    Dad Mark was keener on Germany’s Borussia Dortmund, who offered a £25million deal and have a track record of blooding young talent, including England’s Jadon Sancho.
    Some believed Birmingham be- haved a little theat- rically when they retired the No22 shirt worn by a teenager on just 44 occasions, but they have been proved prophetically correct.
    In October 2020 he became the youngest Englishman to start a Champions League match, facing Italy’s Lazio aged 17 years and 113 days.
    A month later Gareth Southgate came calling.

    Wearing his beloved No22 shirt, Jude made his England debut as a substitute against the Republic of Ireland at Wembley.
    At 17 years 136 days he became England’s third-youngest full international behind Theo Walcott and Wayne Rooney.
    After his first start for England, against Austria in June 2021, Southgate said: “You can’t help but marvel at the performance of a boy that age. It’s a bit disrespectful maybe at 17 to call him a boy, and he certainly plays like a man.”
    Jude with his family signing for Birmingham City in 2019Credit: Birmingham City FC
    Jude’s dad Mark on patrol as a copperCredit: PA
    Former academy coach Dodds credits Jude’s close-knit family with nurturing his stellar career.
    He said: “They’re so consistent and the bond they have is so strong it’s made him very humble and incredibly focused. He’s so driven to be the very best and such a strong family bond is almost the perfect storm.”
    Brother Jobe, 17, is following his trajectory, making his debut for Birmingham last year.
    Last week Mark handed in his West Midlands Police warrant card, tweeting: “As of midnight I became a civilian after 24+ years service. Cops ain’t perfect but they’re trying their best under difficult circumstances. If we can show kindness to each other, we have a chance.”
    In his prime, Mark earned around £200 a week from football.
    Jude earns around £50,000 a week with Dortmund, but could more than triple that with a move to an English or Spanish giant.
    His opportunities off the field also appear limitless.
    So far he has used his new-found fame to fundraise for a school in Kenya.
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    But despite being showered with adulation and riches, Jude is quick to remember those windswept days watching his dad on the muddy playing fields of England.
    He may be billed opposite Messi but it’s the hotshot non-league striker Mark Bellingham who he calls his “first footballing hero”.
    Proud Jude joining Borussia Dortmund in 2020Credit: Getty
    Young Lion Jude in his England trackie with mum DeniseCredit: Twitter
    Jude celebrates with team mate Mason MountCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    The Sun reported on Jude leading England to thrash Iran 6-2 in their opening game More

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    Booze-free England fans throw victory party in Doha despite stadium beer ban

    IT was a roasting 28C and the prospect of a cooling beer little more than a desert mirage.But England’s travelling army of fans showed they can throw a victory party even after imbibing only the soft stuff.
    England fans cheer on the lads, as the Three Lions hammer Iran 6-2Credit: Rex
    They bellowed: “1, 2, 3, 4; Woaah, England are in Doha; Woaah, drinking Coca-Cola; Woaah, England’s going all the waaay.”
    Echoing from the rafters came the chant that may be their signature tune this tournament.
    Two days before the tournament the Qataris banned booze sales.
    The new ditty — based on Earth Wind And Fire’s September — was made popular at the Russia World Cup with lyrics about drinking vodka.
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    Portsmouth fan Brian Vass, 65, said: “It’s a long way to come and not have a pint. But what a start for England. A real party atmosphere.”
    Supping a £7 Budweiser Zero, Newcastle fan Alan Williams, 48, added: “We’ve hit the ground running. Everyone will fear us now.”
    The Khalifa was a sea of white England shirts and St George Flags from footballing outposts such as Frodsham, Ellesmere Port and Taunton.
    Wearing a black hijab and draped in a St George’s Flag, Sania Ghaus, 25, from Nelson, Lancs, insisted: “It’s coming home.”
    Most read in The Sun
    The teacher, on a placement in Doha, added: “The passion of the fans is amazing.”
    Also in the stands were England’s Qatar Fan Club, wrongly labelled fake fans when they welcomed the team to Doha.
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    England were cruising and their sober supporters were discovering how good watching the team can be without a beer.
    Then England’s sixth hit home — and that chant about the Coca-Cola rang out again: “England’s going all the waaay.” More

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    Joe Lycett ‘shreds’ £10,000 in protest at Beckham’s £10m deal with Qatar

    JOE Lycett has “shredded” £10,000 in protest of David Beckham’s £10 million deal with Qatar.The comedian, 34, put his money where his mouth is by destroying the currency after Beckham refused to pull out of his World Cup ambassador role.
    Joe Lycett, 34, destroyed £10,000 after Beckham refused to pull out of his World Cup ambassador roleCredit: PA
    The comedian posted the stunt to his Twitter pageCredit: PA
    He threw two large bundles of £5 notes into a woodchipper, leaving a shredded bundle of money on the floor before walking awayCredit: PA
    In a clip posted to his Twitter page, Lycett threw two large bundles of £5 notes into a woodchipper, leaving a shredded bundle of money on the floor before walking away.
    Openly pansexual Lycett gave England legend Beckham, 47, an ultimatum last Sunday, telling the star, who he called a “gay icon”: “Qatar was voted one of the worst places in the world to be gay.
    “If you end your relationship with Qatar, I’ll donate this £10,000 of my own money.
    “However if you do not, at midday next Sunday I will throw this money into a shredder, just before the opening ceremony of the World Cup.”
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    Beckham made his first public appearance at the controversial tournament on Saturday ahead of yesterday’s opening ceremony and first match.
    On Saturday FIFA chief Gianni Infantino defended Qatar’s human rights record in a bizarre rant, with the Swiss accusing Western nations of “hypocrisy” and “racism”.
    Some online slammed the comedian – and said he should have donated the money to charity.
    Former Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries said: “Shredding £10k will earn Joe Lycett far more than it will cost him and is in effect a paid-for publicity stunt which has worked.”
    Most read in The Sun
    One former fan said the stunt had changed his view of the comic, saying on Twitter: “I liked Joe Lycett but he’s just shown what a privileged life he lives that he can afford to shred £10,000.”
    But actor Chris Addison defended the comic, labelling Lycett: “A force for good”.
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    Mum of six Man City fan facing jail for groping male Everton supporter at Premier League match

    A MUM of six is facing jail for groping a man at a Premier League match.Man City fan Jemma Whiteside, 40, grabbed the Everton supporter’s privates just before kick-off, a court heard.
    Mum of six Jemma Whiteside is facing jail for groping a man at a Premier League matchCredit: Cavendish
    Whiteside faces up to ten years’ jail and wept after she was convicted of sexual assaultCredit: Cavendish
    She said: “I’m going to f*** him later and I don’t even know his name.”
    Then she stood on a step behind him at Everton’s Goodison Park ground and put her bum on his shoulder.
    The shocked victim told police who arrested “very drunk” Whiteside.
    Whiteside, of Worsley, Gtr Manchester, wept after she was convicted of sexual assault by Sefton JPs.
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    District Judge James Clarke said: “The victim on this occasion said he felt contact – and it was quite an unusual and unexpected type of contact.
    “The complainant gave a credible account in my assessment.
    “It was not something that could be misunderstood or mistaken.
    “I am not convinced it is something he made up.
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    “The defendant was a joker, and this is a prank that has gone very badly wrong whilst committed in drink and perhaps showing off to friends on the occasion.”
    She faces up to ten years’ jail and UK football stadium ban when sentenced next month. More

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    Female referees to make history by officiating at a men’s World Cup for the first time

    FEMALE referees are set to be used for the first time at a men’s World Cup.French-born Stéphanie Frappart, 38, Rwandan midwife Salima Mukasanga, 34, and Japanese fitness trainer Yoshimi Yamashita, 36, will all appear.
    French-born Stéphanie Frappart, 38, will appear in the World CupCredit: AFP
    It is the first time in the 92-year history of football’s most prestigious tournament that a woman will officiate a match.
    French-born Frappart, 38, previously made history as the first woman to referee matches in France’s Ligue 1, the UEFA Champions League and World Cup qualification matches.
    She became a FIFA-qualified referee in 2009.
    Frappart said of host nation Qatar, which places strict rules on women: “I will go there for the competition. I wouldn’t go there for the environment”
    “But perhaps this World Cup will improve women’s rights in the country.”
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    Rwandan midwife Mukansanga, 34, and Japanese personal trainer Yamashita, 36, have also been selected to officiate on the global stage.
    The fleet of female officials said they were confident refereeing in front of a worldwide audience scrutinising their every decision.
    Legendary official Pierluigi Collina, head of the referees’ committee, said: “For us, they are referees, they are match officials.”
    Collina, who refereed the 2002 World Cup final, added that the women were not picked because of their gender and would be allowed to officiate games involving conservative nations such as Saudi Arabia and Iran.
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    England boss Gareth Southgate vows to get England smiling again with rousing World Cup battle cry

    CHEER We Go! Harry Kane and Gareth Southgate vowed to get England smiling again with a rousing World Cup battle cry.Fans back home are struggling with the cost of living crisis and the soccer spectacular in Qatar has been dogged by grim human rights rows and a beer ban.
    Gareth Southgate vowed to get England smiling again with a rousing World Cup battle cry
    There were empty seats at the Qatar World Cup’s elaborate opening ceremonyCredit: Getty
    Captain Harry Kane wants to lead England to its first World Cup win since 1966
    The team’s One Love armband makes a stand for LGBT+ rights
    But the patriotic pair pledged to give lionhearts a tournament to make them forget their woes ahead of tomorrow afternoon’s Group B curtain raiser clash against Iran.
    Gaffer Gareth said: “We’re in the middle of an economic recession and life has been difficult for a lot of our people.
    “So we want them to enjoy their football and have a journey with the team that brings some real happiness.
    “Our country expects. The team are excited.”
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    England face minnows Iran at the 45,400-seat Khalifa International Stadium after reaching the semi-final at Russia 2018 and losing the final of Euro 2020 on penalties.
    But captain Kane, 29, spoke of his hunger to go one better in Qatar and end 56 years of hurt by landing our first trophy since 1966.

    The Spurs idol said “You have to appreciate these moments, and I am really looking forward to this one because we have got a really good team, a great blend of experience and youth.
    “In life in general you have to take opportunities that come your way.”
    Most read in The Sun
    Tomorrow’s opening England game kicks off at 1pm on a day that has been dubbed “Bunk-Off Monday” as millions of workers either throw a sickie or tune in while at work.
    School pupils – and soccer-mad staff – across the country will also take time out to watch the big game on TV.
    As many as one-in-ten schools will allow pupils – and footy mad teachers – to take a break, according to a survey by app Teacher Tapp.
    Chris Dyson, headteacher of Parklands Primary School, Leeds, said: “If the children know they can come in and watch the game, they’ll come in.”
    World Cup 2022 ambassador David Beckham watched hosts Qatar play Ecuador from a private boxCredit: Javier Garcia/Shutterstock
    There was a display of fireworks at the elaborate opening ceremonyCredit: Getty
    Hollywood legend Morgan Freeman performed at the opening ceremonyCredit: Getty
    He was on stage with disabled Qatari influencer Ghanim al MuftahCredit: Getty
    Apart from the football fans can expect to see the Three Lions take the knee as they back their campaign against racism.
    Southgate said: “We have discussed taking the knee, we feel we should. It is what we stand for as a team and have done for a considerable amount of time.”
    Kane and Southgate fired the opening shots of the Qatar campaign after a glitzy opening ceremony earlier today led by Hollywood legend Morgan Freeman.
    But the Arab hosts were stung by a 2-0 defeat to Ecuador – and catcalls from the South American fans demanding: “queremos cerveza” or “we want beer”.
    The jibe came as beer sponsors Budweiser showed off the mountainous stocks of cans going to waste thanks to Qatar’s last ditch stadium ban – and offered them to the nation which triumphs.
    Qatar tournament ambassador David Beckham took his seat in the VIP section at the Al-Bayt Stadium in Al Khor near under-fire Fifa president Gianni Infantino.
    The Fifa bigwig – who sparked a storm by branding Europeans racist for daring to criticise the hosts appalling record on migrant worker deaths – smiled benignly as the pageant began.
    Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani — who bankrolled the incredible £185billion spent on the tournament — also smiled and waved from the stands.
    Shawshank Redemption star Freeman, 85, narrated the opening of the show and chatted on stage in a segment with disabled Qatari entrepreneur and influencer Ghanim al Muftah, 20.
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    Empty seats could be seen in the 60,000 Al Bayt Stadium during the opening ceremony which filled only at kick-off when performers piled in and began cheering on the host nation.
    Big name performers shunned the ceremony where South Korean star Jungkook of boy band BTS topped the bill. More

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    England’s Harry Kane vows to end 56 yrs of World Cup hurt as Three Lions roar into action against Iran in Qatar

    ENGLAND captain Harry Kane roared into action in Qatar last night — pledging to end 56 years of World Cup hurt.The striker is aiming to lead the Three Lions to victory in their first group match today against Iran.
    Harry Kane is aiming to lead England to victory in their first group match today against IranCredit: Richard Pelham / The Sun
    The striker and captain revealed he is willing to defy any Fifa moves to ban the ‘One Love’ rainbow armband he will wearCredit: Richard Pelham / The Sun
    The World Cup began yesterday with a spectacular opening ceremonyCredit: Getty
    Two yellow cards in the first two group games will rule the Kane out of boss Gareth Southgate’s (pictured) side for the vital third clash with WalesCredit: Richard Pelham / The Sun
    And he revealed he is willing to defy any Fifa moves to ban the “One Love” rainbow armband.
    Pressure mounted last night as it emerged he could be booked the second the match kicks off if he wears it, or be forced to remove it in the dressing room.
    Two successive yellow cards in the first two group games will rule the Spurs goal-scoring ace out of boss Gareth Southgate’s side for the vital third clash with Wales.
    The move — backing gay rights and inclusivity — will defy a ban by football’s world governing body Fifa on promoting “political” issues at matches.
    READ MORE ON WORLD CUP
    Homosexuality is banned in the Muslim Gulf state and can still carry the death sentence.
    FA and Fifa bosses were last night wrangling over the issue as a Three Lions source confided: “We’ve had no clarity from Fifa but there are rumours.”

    Irked world football bosses issued an alternative armband to the 32 competing nations on the eve of yesterday’s opening game which saw hosts Qatar lose 2-0 to Ecuador.
    Harry, 29, said he was prepared to risk a fine or booking for making the gesture — and vowed to back the team’s core values.
    Most read in The Sun
    He said: “We have made it clear as a team and an organisation that we want to wear the armband.
    “I know that the FA and Fifa are talking and we will have a decision, but I want to wear it”.
    England are the first of eight European teams committed to the policy.
    A shadow also potentially hangs over Liverpool’s Dutch captain Virgil van Dijk and Wales skipper Gareth Bale, who also play today.
    Fifa declined to make any comment on “speculation”.
    Read More on The Sun
    But with the FA insisting Kane will wear the armband, there was support from Germany’s camp.
    Their FA president Bernd Neuendorf said yesterday: “We will play with it — and tomorrow England, Wales and the Netherlands will play with it.”
    Kane, 29, added: ‘We have made it clear as a team and an organisation that we want to wear the armband’Credit: Richard Pelham / The Sun More