The New Zealand Herald

Hey Jude headline act has England on song

Real Madrid’s star forward has everyone singing his praises

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Jude Bellingham is the star of Kim Kardashian’s male underwear range, England icon David Beckham mimics his trademark goal celebratio­n and a Beatles classic has become his anthem as adoring fans serenade him with “Hey Jude” when he’s on the field.

Bellingham, it seems, can do no wrong. No surprise then that he was the player to get England off to a winning start at the European Championsh­ips with a first-half goal to beat Serbia 1-0 in Gelsenkirc­hen yesterday.

“Every game, I feel like I can make an impact, I feel like I can decide games,” the Real Madrid star said. “I really enjoy playing football, so when I go out there, I play with a fearlessne­ss because I love doing it so much. It’s a release for me.”

Wearing the No 10 jersey once adorned by Wayne Rooney, the midfielder stooped to head in Bukayo Saka’s cross in the 13th minute. Bellingham raced away, arms outstretch­ed in a pose Madrid fans have grown to love and Beckham has replicated on social media in tribute to a player who doesn’t turn 21 until later this month.

Bellingham has already done his talking on the field after a spectacula­r debut season at Madrid, where he scored 23 goals and won the Spanish title and Champions League.

He is also making a splash off it. Like Beckham, his appeal goes far beyond football. Presumably that was what Kardashian knew after Bellingham was chosen to front the menswear range of her SKIMS underwear. He’s also the star of an advertisin­g campaign for sportswear giant Adidas, which features Beckham, just another of Bellingham’s many fans.

So much, so soon for someone so young could be seen as cause for concern. But Bellingham is not your average player.

“He writes his own script,” England manager Gareth Southgate said.

Having already played at the last Euros and 2022 World Cup, Bellingham is the first European player to appear at three major internatio­nal tournament­s before the age of 21, according to statistici­an Opta.

His goal was certainly the story of this game — sending England top of Group C after Denmark drew 1-1 with Slovenia. Christian Eriksen scored for the Danes — three years after suffering a cardiac arrest on the field at the last Euros.

England play Denmark in Frankfurt on Friday.

Southgate’s team might have gone into that match on the back of a bigger margin of victory, with Harry Kane coming close to scoring in the second half when Serbia keeper Predrag Rajkovic pushed his far post header onto the underside of the bar.

England were beaten finalists at the last Euros, losing on penalties to Italy three years ago. They are among the favourites to go one better this time.

But off-field issues overshadow­ed the build-up to the game against Serbia, which had been deemed high risk due to concerns about violence between rival supporters. Some of those fears were realised when police rushed to separate brawling fans in Gelsenkirc­hen earlier in the day.

Social media footage showed men throwing chairs at each other outside a restaurant festooned with Serbian flags in the city. Inside the stadium, there were boos during the anthems.

England fans were soon celebratin­g once the game got under way after Bellingham’s decisive moment. And he’s got no problem with the song supporters have attached to him.

“I listen to the Beatles a lot. My style of music is a bit old, so that is right up my street,” he said.

Over in Hamburg, Dutch fans were also partying and turned the city into a sea of orange. The Netherland­s secured a comefrom-behind 2-1 win against Poland in Group D thanks to Wout Weghorst’s late goal.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Jude Bellingham celebrates after heading England into the lead.
Photo / AP Jude Bellingham celebrates after heading England into the lead.

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