Jude Bellingham scores in extra-time to send
England into the
World Cup semifinals for first-time since 2018.
England's
Jude Bellingham celebrates scoring his team's second goal [AFP]Published On 12 Jul 2026Jude Bellingham was
England’s hero once more by scoring twice as the Three Lions came from behind to end
Norway’s historic run and reach the
World Cup semifinals with a 2-1 win after extra-time.In their first-ever quarterfinal, Andreas Schjelderup fired
Norway into a shock lead in the searing
Miami heat on Saturday.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4Colombia’s Jaminton Campaz receives death threats after
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World Cup final stadium pitch, could earn millionsend of listBut Bellingham, who also netted a double in a memorable 3-2 over
Mexico in the last 16, produced a moment of magic to equalise just before half-time.
Norway had a second goal controversially disallowed after a VAR review in the second half for a foul by
Erling Haaland as both sets of players were pushed to their physical limits by going to extra-time.Bellingham came up with another big moment for the winner as he pounced on an error by
Orjan Nyland to sweep in his sixth goal of the tournament.
England will face
Argentina or
Switzerland on Wednesday for the chance to reach a first
World Cup final in 60 years.Haaland’s spectacular run of scoring in his last 14 competitive matches for
Norway came to an end against the land of his birth, with
Norway’s exhausted talisman replaced at half-time of extra-time.Having failed to win a
World Cup knockout game after conceding first since the final of 1966 before this tournament,
England have now done so twice in three matches.Energy-sapping heatHarry Kane’s heroics prevented an embarrassing early exit to the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the last 32.But it is Bellingham who has stood up in the past two matches to keep
England in the hunt to end their long wait for major tournament glory despite far from flawless performances.The 5pm local time (21:00 GMT) kickoff in
Florida meant that temperatures remained above 30 degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit) throughout, with intense humidity making for draining conditions for the players.The heat looked as if it would spoil the spectacle in the first half.Thomas Tuchel’s men were rattled as
England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford saved low from Martin Odegaard before Alexander Sorloth wasted a glorious chance when he failed to feed Haaland and instead went for goal himself.Almost immediately, Bellingham pulled his team out of the mire once more.Bellingham had been well marshalled until he collected Anthony Gordon’s pass, burst into the box at speed and then slotted home on his weaker left foot.Momentum was suddenly in
England’s favour and they nearly went into the break ahead.Bellingham was this time the creator for Kane, who dinked the ball coolly over Nyland, but had just drifted offside.Tuchel introduced Bukayo Saka and Eberechi Eze at the break for the ineffective Noni Madueke and Declan Rice – the Arsenal midfielder had been suffering with illness earlier in the week.But those changes left
England light in midfield, and they were left hanging on at spells in the second half.Torbjorn Heggem made the most of some sloppy defending to turn in at the back post, but Haaland was penalised for a push on new Manchester City teammate Elliott Anderson before the corner had been taken, and the goal was disallowed.
Norway were inches away from a winner again when Kristoffer Ajer hit the bar after
England failed to deal with another dangerous corner.Both sides visibly wilted in the energy-sapping conditions late on but were forced to endure an extra 30 minutes.Nyland had been
Norway’s supporting act in the last 16 win over Brazil with a series of saves before Haaland struck twice late on for a landmark victory.This time the Sevilla goalkeeper was the villain as he spilled substitute Morgan Rogers’ shot from distance and Bellingham pounced and scored.
England were awarded a penalty moments later, but this time VAR intervened in
Norway’s favour to deem Djed Spence had initiated contact inside the box.Yet,
Norway’s spirit was already crushed, epitomised by a slouched Haaland watching on from the bench with nothing more to give.Tuchel said his side was “lucky” to emerge with the win.“We made life very, very difficult for ourselves today. The result is fantastic. We are in the last four. It’s amazing but not happy with the performance,” he told ITV.“The commitment is there, but we made life difficult for ourselves in the way we played – sloppy, a lot of technical mistakes, not fast enough, not repetitive enough. We were lucky today.“It’s about the quality – we need to play better. We will get better [in the semifinal]. We need to.”