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England assistant Barry to continue half-time interviews despiteEngland assistant coach Anthony Barry will continue conducting televised half-time interviews during the World Cup after giving a blunt assessment of the team's first-half display against Croatia./images/2026/06/england-assistant-barry-to-continue-half-time-interviews-despite-240e3490-800w.webpEngland assistant Barry to continue half-time interviews despite

England assistant Barry to continue half-time interviews despite

Updated 2 min read
England assistant coach Anthony Barry speaking during a half-time interview at a World Cup match. — latest news and analysis.

Short overview

England assistant coach Anthony Barry will continue conducting televised half-time interviews during the World Cup after giving a blunt assessment of the team's first-half display against Croatia.

England assistant coach Anthony Barry will continue conducting televised half-time interviews during the World Cup, despite delivering a critical assessment of the team's first-half performance against Croatia. The remarks, made during the match in Dallas where England trailed 2-2 at the break before winning 4-2, drew surprise from some quarters due to their candor.

Camp supports Barry's honesty

The England camp believes that having manager Thomas Tuchel or players handle half-time media duties would not be the best use of their limited time during the break. Tuchel is understood to welcome Barry's honesty, and his frankness has not caused any concern inside the camp.

The half-time interviews have become a new feature of World Cup broadcasts, though they are described as a "request rather than mandatory." Some teams have provided access to the manager or substitutes, with the seriousness of the interviews varying between nations.

Barry's half-time assessment

Asked for his half-time assessment in the Croatia game, Barry said: "Overall, a complicated and confusing first half from us really. I think a lot of nervous energy early on and maybe that should be accepted and maybe expected in the opening game of a World Cup.

"From there, we made some decisions where the energy was not free in our mind. We played long when we should play short and played short when we should play long really. Not playing through the gaps, so not allowing us to accelerate our game the way we wanted to.

"You'd think the penalty would free us up and allow us to play more like us and look more like ourselves, but again we fall back into some fearful patterns.

"Yeah, we've always been able to rely on set-pieces. We get the second goal and again we're hoping that's the moment to free us up and move forward in the game. But, OK, we concede the second goal late on and now we have to speak about that at half-time."

Rashford fitness concern ahead of Ghana match

Meanwhile, England medics are checking on the fitness of forward Marcus Rashford before Tuesday's match against Ghana after he complained of muscle discomfort following the win over Croatia. Rashford came off the bench to score England's fourth goal in Dallas but is said to have experienced some soreness. There is optimism that the issue should not preclude his involvement against Ghana.

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