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Somerset company used by royal family rescued from administration

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Business Live

The fruit harvesting machinery business had been in operation for more than four decades

Graham and Emma Bramley, directors of Bramley Aerospace

Graham and Emma Bramley, directors of Bramley Aerospace have rescued the Somerset firm(Image: Bramley Aerospace)

A Somerset fruit machinery business that once supplied the royal household has been rescued from administration, saving 15 jobs. SFM Technology had collapsed owing to cashflow difficulties, but has now been acquired by Bramley Precision Aerospace, which has bought its assets, goodwill and intellectual property.

The well-established engineering company had been operating for four decades and will continue trading from its current Martock premises.

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Its roots date back to 1985 when it was established as Somerset Fruit Machinery, designing and manufacturing bespoke fruit harvesting equipment for apple and blackcurrant producers.

Its new owner say its foundation in practical, high-quality agricultural engineering enabled the firm to build a respected reputation in the fruit harvesting industry, with machinery and specialist support delivered to clients in the UK and internationally.

In 2012, SFM Technology was granted a Royal Warrant for the supply of fruit harvesting machinery to the royal family, “reflecting the quality and standing the business had achieved”.

The firm later diversified into aerospace and advanced manufacturing, applying its design and fabrication knowledge to specialist precision engineering sectors.

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Over the years, SFM developed sophisticated capabilities across CAD design and prototyping, CNC machining, laser and waterjet cutting, welding, fabrication, 3D printing and complex assembly work, reports Somerset Live.

The business has served national and international aerospace and defence firms, as well as clients in advanced manufacturing and specialist engineering. Its expertise and highly skilled workforce made it an appealing prospect for Graham and Emma Bramley, who operate a thriving manufacturing firm, Bramley Engineering.

Bramley Harvesting apple collecting machine

Bramley Harvesting apple collecting machine(Image: Bramley Precision Aerospace Ltd)

The family-run enterprise designs and manufactures bespoke cranes and lifting equipment for utilities, transport and civil engineering companies, and will now operate under two distinct brands: Bramley Aerospace for advanced aerospace engineering, and Bramley Harvesting for its specialist fruit harvesting machinery division.

Graham Bramley, managing director of Bramley Aerospace, said: “Businesses like SFM are built on people, skill and years of experience. When we looked at SFM, we saw a proud Somerset engineering business with a remarkable history, a talented team and real potential for the future.

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“Our priority is to keep work moving for customers and give the team in Martock the confidence to look forward again.”

Director Emma Bramley added: “We understand what it takes to run a specialist engineering business, and we also understand the responsibility that comes with protecting skilled jobs and long-standing customer relationships.

“SFM has a remarkable story, from its origins in fruit harvesting machinery through to advanced aerospace and manufacturing work. We are proud to be able to carry that story forward as Bramley Aerospace, while keeping the business rooted in Martock. Local customers and supply chains matter to us and we will be seeking to establish strong relationships in Somerset whilst also supporting the local economy.”

Bramley says it will now concentrate on stabilising the business, supporting existing clients, forging relationships with suppliers, and pursuing new opportunities across aerospace and broader specialist engineering. The firm is also exploring recruitment prospects as part of its development plans for the Martock site.

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Mr Bramley added: “We want customers to know that the capability they relied on is still here. We want staff to know that their skills are valued. And we want Somerset to know that an important piece of its engineering history has been saved.

“Our focus now is on giving the Martock operation the support it needs, building on SFM’s strengths and creating a positive future for everyone connected to the business.”

As part of its ambitions to grow the Martock site, Bramley Aerospace is currently seeking to fill positions including an office manager, CNC operative and a design manufacturing manager, while also welcoming enquiries from skilled individuals with specialist manufacturing expertise regarding potential future roles.

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Aker BP ASA (AKRBY) Q2 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Karl Hersvik
Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Aker BP’s second quarter presentation. It was a quarter of strong operational execution and robust financial results. Production averaged 384,000 barrels of oil equivalents per day and operating cash flow was $3.1 billion. And we have raised the lower end and narrowed our production guidance for the year.

Our major projects remain on track with important milestones across Yggdrasil, Valhall PWP–Fenris, Skarv Satellites and Johan Sverdrup Phase 3. At the same time, we continue to strengthen the portfolio for future growth, including through a new strategic collaboration with Equinor. We also maintain a robust financial position with $6 billion in available liquidity and an unchanged quarterly dividend.

Operationally, this was a quarter shaped by seasonally high level of activity with continued high efficiency across the portfolio. Production was lower than in the previous quarter, mainly due to planned maintenance at Edvard Grieg and Ivar Aasen combined with normal quarter-to-quarter variations. Despite these planned impacts, production efficiency was 94%, a very strong performance by industry standards. Production costs increased to $8.8 per barrel, mainly reflecting planned seasonal activity across the portfolio, including maintenance at Edvard Grieg and Ivar Aasen, diving operations at Alvheim and well intervention activity

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TotalEnergies: A Long-Term Play For The Patient (NYSE:TTE)

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TotalEnergies: A Long-Term Play For The Patient (NYSE:TTE)

This article was written by

Vladimir Dimitrov, CFA is a former strategy consultant within the field of brand and intangible assets valuation. During his career in the City of London he has been working with some of the largest global brands within the technology, telecom and banking sectors. He graduated from the London School of Economics and is interested in finding reasonably priced businesses with sustainable long-term competitive advantages.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of CVX either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Please do your own due diligence and consult with your financial advisor, if you have one, before making any investment decisions. The author is not acting in an investment adviser capacity. The author’s opinions expressed herein address only select aspects of potential investment in securities of the companies mentioned and cannot be a substitute for comprehensive investment analysis. The author recommends that potential and existing investors conduct thorough investment research of their own, including a detailed review of the companies’ SEC filings. Any opinions or estimates constitute the author’s best judgment as of the date of publication and are subject to change without notice.

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Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Vital Farms: This Egg Could Crack – Strong Sell (NASDAQ:VITL)

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Vital Farms: This Egg Could Crack - Strong Sell (NASDAQ:VITL)

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Always on the hunt for undervalued, promising stocks with a focus on risk and reward. Limited risks and decent to high upside by knowing what one’s owning. I strongly believe that the best investment ideas are often the simplest. If contrarian, the better.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Scandic Hotels Group AB (publ) (SCAHF) Q2 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Operator

Welcome to the Scandic Hotels Group Q2 2026 Report Presentation. [Operator Instructions] Now I will hand the conference over to the speakers, CEO, Jens Mathiesen; and CFO, Par Christiansen. Please go ahead.

Jens Mathiesen
President & CEO

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Thank you very much, and good morning, everyone, and thank you all for joining us for this Q2 presentation. My name is Jens Mathiesen. I’m the CEO of Scandic. And together with me, I have our CFO, Par Christiansen, as always. Let’s dive into the highlights. So please turn to Page 2.

We delivered a good quarter with solid growth. We improved our earnings and also higher profitability. The business is performing well across most of our markets, with Finland remaining the exception. Market conditions were favorable, supported by a busy event calendar, strong leisure travel and stable demand for business travel and meetings. Demand was particularly strong in the capital cities of Sweden, Denmark and Ireland. Finland remained challenging throughout the quarter, while the Norwegian hotel market was affected by a hotel strike lasting more than 6 weeks. The recovery in Finland is taking longer than we had expected, but we remain focused on turning the performance around. We now expect a gradual improvement with a stable second half of the year with a financial performance on same levels as last year.

During the quarter, we expanded the hotel portfolio, continued to grow

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Gorilla Technology prices $125 million convertible notes offering

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Gorilla Technology prices $125 million convertible notes offering

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Welch’s joins frozen sandwich fight

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Welch’s joins frozen sandwich fight

Company enters category with a bigger sandwich.

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UiPath: Cheap, But Without A Catalyst, I'm Stepping Back To Hold (Downgrade)

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UiPath: Cheap, But Without A Catalyst, I'm Stepping Back To Hold (Downgrade)

UiPath: Cheap, But Without A Catalyst, I'm Stepping Back To Hold (Downgrade)

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Ashish Kacholia cuts stake in two chemical stocks after 114% rally. What’s driving the move?

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Ashish Kacholia cuts stake in two chemical stocks after 114% rally. What's driving the move?
Ace investor Ashish Kacholia, widely known for spotting emerging small-cap winners, has pared his holdings in two chemical stocks during the first quarter of FY27, locking in gains after the stocks delivered returns of up to 114% so far this year.

The latest shareholding data available on the BSE shows that Kacholia reduced his stake in Yasho Industries to 2.08% from 2.37% at the end of the March 2026 quarter. He also trimmed his holding in Finotex Chemicals to 2.06% from 2.60%, indicating a reduction of 0.54 percentage points during the quarter.

Yasho Industries’ stock price has delivered a staggering 114% return in 2026 while Fineotex Chemicals has risen 58% in the last six months.

Kacholia is among India’s most closely watched small-cap investors, with his portfolio moves often drawing significant attention from the market. Kacholia’s investment decisions are widely tracked by retail and institutional investors alike, as they are often seen as indicators of emerging opportunities and evolving market sentiment.

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Also read: Ashish Kacholia’s picks: 12 stocks rally up to 130% in CY26, 3 turned multibaggers; 2 new Q4 bets


Kacholia, fondly called the ‘Big Whale’ by media, Kacholia started out with Prime Securities and later joined Edelweiss before incorporating his own broking firm, Lucky Securities in 1995. He co-founded Hungama Digital with Rakesh Jhunjhunwala in 1999 and started building his own portfolio from 2003.
As per the Trendlyne data, Ashish Kacholia publicly holds 50 stocks with a net worth of nearly Rs 3,000 crore crore.

Why is Kacholia selling chemical stocks?

Iran war supply constraints – In the fourth quarter last financial year, companies continued to face raw material shortages due to disruptions caused by the West Asia conflict.
India’s chemicals industry, primarily through higher crude oil prices and supply chain disruptions. As many chemical manufacturers rely on crude-derived feedstocks such as naphtha, benzene and methanol, elevated oil prices increase raw material costs and put pressure on profit margins. Disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz also raised freight and insurance costs while delaying shipments of key inputs. Although a weaker rupee may support export realisations, persistent geopolitical tensions and higher input costs are likely to outweigh the benefits, particularly for commodity and petrochemical-linked chemical companies.

Although raw material prices have eased since end-May and availability is gradually improving, JM Financial expects supply chain constraints to persist in the near term, with normalisation likely over the next one to two quarters.

Softening demand –
JM also observed that discretionary demand has weakened due to higher prices, although non-discretionary demand remains stable. While pent-up demand could emerge once supply chains normalise, the brokerage believes chemical prices are unlikely to return to pre-conflict levels, supporting a healthier spreads environment for the industry.

Also read:Ashish Kacholia exits, Madhusudan Kela trims stake in smallcap NBFC stock that’s up over 50% in 2026

China’s muscle power –
InCred Equities said China’s persistent capacity expansion continues to exert significant pressure on the global chemicals industry. It noted that Chinese producers, particularly in petrochemicals, intermediates and commodity chemicals, have added capacity well ahead of demand and are exporting surplus output at lower prices, forcing global competitors to either cut prices or lose market share.

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The brokerage believes Indian chemical companies should leverage China’s cost advantage rather than compete directly in commoditised products. It noted that Indian specialty chemical manufacturers have traditionally imported key intermediates and raw materials from China, where production costs remain substantially lower. InCred said the opportunity lies in moving downstream into higher-value products such as specialty chemicals, formulations, pharma intermediates, agrochemical formulations, food additives, electronic chemicals and customised CDMO products. It added that companies focused on differentiated, value-added offerings can benefit from lower Chinese input costs, while those remaining in commodity chemicals are likely to continue facing pricing and margin pressure.

Chemical stocks Q1 outlook – Axis Direct expects a mixed earnings performance for the chemicals and agrochemicals sector in Q1FY27. The brokerage said the delayed onset of the southwest monsoon pushed Kharif-related agrochemical demand into the second quarter, resulting in a relatively subdued quarter for domestic formulation companies.

At the same time, it expects companies with exposure to CDMO, fluorochemicals and refrigerants to outperform on the back of healthy order execution and a favourable product mix.

The brokerage believes pricing pressure from Chinese competition will continue to weigh on commoditised chemical manufacturers, limiting margin expansion. However, within the mid-cap universe, Axis expects companies supported by strong domestic infrastructure-linked order books to deliver healthy growth through robust execution, even as uncertainty persists in export markets.

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Ashish Kacholia trims stake in NBFC

Shareholding data available on the BSE shows that Ashish Kacholia’s stake in NBFC SG Finserve fell below the 1% disclosure threshold from 2.37% at the end of the March 2026 quarter, indicating a likely exit.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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Monumental raises $32m to scale robot bricklayers in UK

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Monumental raises $32m to scale robot bricklayers in UK

A fleet of more than 150 robots is already laying bricks on real construction sites across the UK and Europe, and the company behind them has just raised $32 million to put more of them to work, in a deal that says as much about Britain’s vanishing trades as it does about the rise of physical AI.

Monumental, the Amsterdam-based construction robotics company, announced the Series B led by Khosla Ventures, with participation from Plural and existing investors including Hummingbird. The money will grow its engineering team, scale the fleet across Europe, deepen its UK presence and fund a US launch this year.

For UK housebuilders and the small firms that supply them, the timing is pointed. The Home Builders Federation estimates the country needs at least 20,000 more bricklayers to hit the government’s target of 1.5 million new homes, yet only around 1,990 completed apprenticeships in 2024. It is a gap Business Matters has tracked closely, with a skills crisis already threatening the 1.5 million homes target and 76 per cent of construction firms struggling to hire.

Monumental’s answer is not to sell machines but to work as an autonomous subcontractor. General contractors hire the company and pay for finished wall, an outcome-priced model that spares builders, many of them SMEs, the financial and technical risk of owning and operating the equipment themselves.

The robots are electric and autonomous, using advanced sensors, computer vision and cranes to lay brick and mortar with millimetre precision, all orchestrated by the company’s AI platform, Atrium. The fleet has built the walls of more than 100 homes across the Netherlands and the UK, along with a school, a community centre, a hotel and canal walls. The pace is accelerating: nearly half of those homes went up in the past three months alone, up from just eight the quarter before.

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“The world simply does not have enough people to build what it needs, and that shortage will not be solved by another app or another robot doing backflips on stage,” said Salar al Khafaji, co-founder and CEO of Monumental. “It takes machines that turn up on site and lay real brick all day, to spec, which is what our fleet already does today. Every robot we deploy expands the industry’s capacity to build, bringing a future of beautiful, affordable, bespoke buildings and infrastructure closer to reality. Khosla’s investment lets us put many more of them to work in more countries while expanding beyond bricklaying.”

The backdrop is an industry that technology has barely touched. Since 1945, manufacturing productivity has risen more than eightfold while construction productivity has gained roughly 10 per cent, and has fallen since the 1960s. The result is a housing shortage the Centre for Policy Studies puts at 6.5 million homes, with just 446 homes per 1,000 people, the second-worst rate in Europe. In the capital, where London built just 7 per cent of the homes it needed last year, the delivery gap is starker still.

“Construction costs have exploded while the industry itself has barely changed in decades,” said Vinod Khosla, founder of Khosla Ventures. “That combination has produced the housing crisis: we know how to build, we’ve just made it too expensive and too slow. Monumental is solving this by bringing robotics into the physical world, and the proof is already standing: canal walls, houses, a school, 100 structures already built by robots. Beautiful buildings, built at scale, don’t have to cost what they cost today.”

Founded in 2021 by al Khafaji and CTO Sebastiaan Visser, whose previous company Silk was acquired by Palantir in 2016, Monumental was the first to bring Palantir’s forward-deployed engineering model to robotics. It has recently appointed a dedicated UK country manager and is growing its on-the-ground team here.

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Nor is it an isolated bet. From bricklaying to fruit picking, where Dogtooth raised £14 million this month to help growers beat labour shortages, investors are backing robots to do the physical work Britain cannot find the people for. Monumental says its crews move up into safer, higher-skilled roles operating the machines. The bricks, it seems, will get laid either way.

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England and Argentina Renew Historic World Cup Rivalry as Messi Faces Kane, Bellingham in Semifinal

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England captain Harry Kane (left) has previously worked with Thomas Tuchel (right)

ATLANTA — England and Argentina meet Wednesday in a World Cup semifinal that revives one of soccer’s oldest and most storied rivalries, bringing together Lionel Messi and England’s dynamic scoring duo of Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham with a place in Sunday’s final on the line.

The match kicks off at 3 p.m. ET at Atlanta Stadium, also known as Mercedes-Benz Stadium, marking the sixth World Cup meeting between the two nations and the first in 24 years. The winner will advance to Sunday’s final in New Jersey to face either France or Spain for the championship.

A Rivalry Steeped in Controversy

Few fixtures in World Cup history carry the historical weight of England versus Argentina. The rivalry is forever tied to Diego Maradona’s “Hand of God” goal during the 1986 quarterfinal, along with David Beckham’s red card for kicking Diego Simeone during their dramatic 1998 round-of-16 clash. England holds a narrow edge in their World Cup head-to-head history, with three wins to Argentina’s two across their five previous meetings on the tournament’s biggest stage.

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Wednesday’s match also marks uncharted territory for one of the sport’s greatest players. At 39 years old and playing in his sixth World Cup, Messi has never faced England in more than 200 international appearances, adding a fresh layer of intrigue to the historic rivalry.

Golden Boot Race Adds Extra Stakes

Beyond the semifinal berth on the line, Wednesday’s match doubles as a direct battle for the tournament’s Golden Boot. Messi leads the race with eight goals, tied with France’s Kylian Mbappé for the tournament’s high mark, while Kane and Bellingham each sit one goal behind with six apiece.

Remarkably, it marks the first time in men’s World Cup history that two players from the same country have each scored six or more goals in the same tournament. Kane and Bellingham have combined for 12 of England’s 13 total goals this tournament, an extraordinary level of reliance on two players that mirrors Argentina’s own dependence on Messi, who has personally scored eight of his team’s tournament-leading 17 goals.

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Contrasting Paths to the Semifinal

The two teams have arrived at this stage through very different routes. Argentina, the defending champions seeking to become the first team to repeat as World Cup winners since Brazil in 1962, has needed extra time in two of its knockout matches, requiring additional time to get past Cape Verde in the round of 32 before rallying from a two-goal deficit against Egypt in the round of 16. In the quarterfinals, Argentina needed extra time again to beat 10-man Switzerland 3-1, with Julián Álvarez scoring the decisive goal in the 112th minute.

Messi reflected on the significance of reaching another semifinal at this stage of his career.

“Getting to another semifinal is not a normal, mundane thing, so this is something we should really enjoy because we don’t know if it will happen again,” Messi said.

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England’s own path has also tested the squad’s resilience. The team needed extra time to beat Norway 2-1 in the quarterfinals, with Bellingham scoring both goals to continue his rise as one of the tournament’s standout performers. That victory followed a difficult stretch that included criticism from manager Thomas Tuchel, who had earlier described aspects of England’s play as “sloppy” following an uneven display.

Key Storylines to Watch

Bellingham enters Wednesday’s match on the back of consecutive braces, having scored twice in each of his last two World Cup appearances. According to tournament statistics, only Kane, with four such matches, and Gary Lineker, with three, have more multi-goal games for England at the World Cup than Bellingham now has. Across World Cup history overall, only Peru’s Téofilo Cubillas has more two-plus-goal games among midfielders than Bellingham.

Kane, England’s all-time leading World Cup goalscorer, struggled in the heat during England’s win over Norway but returns to Atlanta, where he scored a brace against Democratic Republic of Congo earlier in the tournament. Should he remain healthy throughout the match, Kane will earn his 121st England cap, which would stand as the most of any outfield player in the program’s history.

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England does enter the match with some injury concerns. Midfielder Declan Rice, who has been battling illness, remains a doubt for the match, while veteran Jordan Henderson is unavailable due to a wrist injury. Argentina, by contrast, reported no injury concerns heading into the semifinal.

Confidence Despite the Pressure

England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford addressed the mounting pressure surrounding the squad’s pursuit of what would be the country’s first World Cup title since 1966 and first ever won on foreign soil.

“You’ve seen throughout the tournament our desire to win tackles. We’ve not got into any scuffles or anything,” Pickford said. “We’ve been very well respected within the game. Decisions go our way [or] they don’t go our way, we just reset, we go again, and we let the football do the talking.”

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A Statistical Coin Flip

Predictive models have struggled to separate the two sides. Opta’s supercomputer gave England a roughly 39% probability of winning in regulation time as of Tuesday, compared with Argentina’s 32% chance, with the model estimating a nearly 30% probability that the match extends into extra time. Updated projections including extra time and penalties put the overall win probability closer to an even split between the two nations.

Argentina’s attacking output has been historic in its own right. The team’s six wins so far this tournament mark its longest outright winning run in World Cup history, and Argentina has scored exactly three goals in each of its last four matches, putting it within reach of matching the all-time Argentine World Cup scoring record of 18 goals, set at the inaugural 1930 tournament.

What’s at Stake

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Whichever team advances will carry significant historical weight into Sunday’s final. Argentina is chasing back-to-back titles for the first time since Brazil’s consecutive championships in 1958 and 1962, while England is seeking to end a 60-year wait for a second World Cup trophy and its first on foreign soil, powered by a Kane-Bellingham partnership that has already rewritten the record books for England at a single tournament.

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