England supporters have shared mixed emotions ahead of the World Cup semi-final against old rivals Argentina.

England fans have said they are optimistic that the Three Lions can secure a place in the World Cup final, but highlighted concerns that Lionel Messi may stand in their way.

Thousands of England supporters have descended on Atlanta ahead of Wednesday’s semi-final against defending champions Argentina.

The old rivals go head-to-head at the air-conditioned Atlanta Stadium – and superfan Gary Holliday said he spent around £2,500 on a ticket for the match.

England fans in Atlanta
Fans are flocking to the stadium ahead of an 8pm UK time kick-off (James Manning/PA)

Mr Holliday, 46, from Birmingham, told the Press Association: “I’ve been chatting to the lads in the WhatsApp group and I’m mildly optimistic, to be honest.

“If Bellingham turns up, I honestly don’t think these are as good as, certainly what they think they are.

“I think Bellingham is going to run all over them, to be honest – Kane has been off the boil for the last couple, I think he owes us a game as well.

“So I’m quite optimistic – I’ve spent a small fortune on a ticket for the final so fingers, toes and anything else long enough crossed.”

Colin Leslie, 63, originally from Salisbury, told PA: “I’m absolutely petrified.

“It’s going to be a long trip home if it goes wrong.”

Asked if he was confident of a result, he added: “The same as every tournament – yes. And we’ve got a Bellingham so we should be all right, and we’ve got a Kane as a back-up for Bellingham, and I believe Mr (Declan) Rice might be joining us today.”

Mr Holliday conceded that he was “mildly concerned” about the threat posed by Argentina captain Messi.

“You’ve got to be mildly concerned haven’t you?” he said.

“But Messi of four years ago is not the same player he is now.

“I think he looks brilliant against really, really average teams, and I don’t think we’re average – I think Elliot Anderson and Declan (Rice) will get around him and hopefully smash him.”

Argentina v Egypt – FIFA World Cup 2026 – Round of 16 – Atlanta Stadium
England fans have said they are ‘mildly concerned’ about Messi (Martin Rickett/PA)

He added: “I’ve been to every tournament since 2014 and I have literally waited my entire life to see England play Argentina.”

There is more at stake for Mr Holliday than many fans as he said he has spent around £7,000 on a ticket for Sunday’s final – and hopes to be seeing his team take on Spain.

England manager Thomas Tuchel said his side were ready to face an Argentina team “fuelled by history” as they bid to reach a first men’s World Cup final since 1966.

He told reporters on Tuesday that much of the challenge would be preventing Messi from producing another moment of brilliance.

Fans preparing to watch the semi-final have been mulling over Diego Maradona’s controversial “Hand of God” goal, 40 years after it knocked the Three Lions out of the 1986 World Cup – with some seeing the head-to-head as time for revenge.

Mr Holliday said: “I don’t think anything will truly be redemption for that after what happened.

“But the amount of pride we will take in knocking somebody out like this is immense.”

At home, supporters are flocking to bars and fan zones to watch the match – with pubs expecting to sell six million extra pints on Wednesday.

Police forces across England are also preparing for towns and cities to be busier, with Greater Manchester Police deploying extra officers across the area.

Chief Inspector Chris Clarke, GMP’s lead for the World Cup operation, said: “As stated from the outset, as England progress through the World Cup, we will increase our policing operation to ensure people can enjoy the tournament safely.”

More from Perspective

Get a free copy of our print edition

News

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.
You need to agree with the terms to proceed

Your email address will not be published. The views expressed in the comments below are not those of Perspective. We encourage healthy debate, but racist, misogynistic, homophobic and other types of hateful comments will not be published.