
Reece James, Marc Guehi and Declan Rice missed England training in Kansas City ahead of Saturday’s World Cup quarter-final with Norway, increasing pressure on Gareth Southgate over defensive availability. With Jarell Quansah suspended and Jordan Henderson recovering from arm surgery, England face a selection puzzle at right-back and midfield continuity ahead of a crucial knockout tie.
England hit by injury doubts as James, Guehi and Rice skip training
Reece James, Marc Guehi and Declan Rice were absent from England's group session on Wednesday, all completing individual programs as the squad prepared for Saturday's World Cup quarter-final with Norway.

The timing compounds a fragile defensive picture for Gareth Southgate ahead of one of England's most important matches of the tournament.
Immediate implications for Saturday’s quarter-final
With Jarell Quansah suspended, James’ continued unavailability would leave England short of their preferred right-back options. Southgate has already been forced into makeshift solutions during the tournament, and another enforced reshuffle would affect selection and tactical balance against Norway’s forward line.
Injury update: what we know
Reece James reported hamstring soreness after the 0-0 draw with Ghana and has been managed carefully since. Marc Guehi and Declan Rice are also on tailored programmes despite starting the round-of-16 win over Mexico in full. Jordan Henderson remains at camp following arm surgery and will not be available for selection while he recovers.
Right-back continuity has been a recurring issue
England entered the tournament thinner than ideal at right-back after Tino Livramento’s pre-tournament injury. Quansah has been used as cover but picked up a suspension that ruled him out of the Panama match, while Djed Spence and Ezri Konsa have been called upon in different fixtures. That patchwork approach has created instability on the flank at moments when defensive cohesion matters most.
What this means tactically
Southgate must weigh short-term fitness against formation stability. If James is ruled out, England can either deploy a natural but less-experienced full-back, revert to a wing-back system that masks individual weaknesses, or alter midfield roles to provide extra cover for whoever starts on the right. Each choice carries trade-offs: protecting an inexperienced right-back can blunt England’s attacking width, while reshaping midfield risks disrupting the team’s control in the center.
Team management and recovery focus
England’s medical staff appear to be exercising caution, prioritising recovery and match-readiness over rushed returns. The fact that Rice and Guehi trained individually after playing the full last game suggests routine load management rather than long-term issues, but James’ hamstring history elevates concern.
Broader context and stakes
This quarter-final presents a pivotal moment: England have not reached a World Cup semi-final since 2018 and face Norway with a high-performance requirement. Defensive availability will be decisive against a side capable of rapid transitions and clinical finishing. Southgate's selection in the coming days will reveal how much faith he places in his squad depth and how willing he is to adapt tactics to personnel constraints.
What to watch next
Monitor training reports through the week for signs of James’ reintegration into group work. Southgate’s final team sheet will indicate whether England are confident in a first-choice backline or forced into another short-term solution.
England's Azteca triumph at stake as Haaland-led Norway presents a dangerous tactical trap
Either outcome will shape England’s approach to Norway and their prospects of progressing to the semi-finals.
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