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Wayne Rooney Warns England Are ‘In Big Trouble’ After Dismal Congo Win With Mexico Looming at the Azteca

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Wayne Rooney scored 53 goals for England

ATLANTA — Wayne Rooney delivered a blunt and damaging assessment of England’s World Cup prospects Wednesday night, warning that Thomas Tuchel’s side faces a serious crisis of structure and cohesion that could bring their tournament to an abrupt end unless the coaching staff makes urgent changes before Sunday’s round of 16 clash against Mexico in Mexico City.

England’s narrow 2-1 victory over the Democratic Republic of Congo at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, secured only through two Harry Kane goals in the final 15 minutes of a match they were widely expected to win comfortably, prompted Rooney to pull no punches in his post-match analysis for the BBC.

“For me there are big concerns,” Rooney said. “We are all delighted England have gone through but in particular when England lose the ball they are so open. Against a better team I think we are in big trouble if we don’t sort that out.”

The former England captain and all-time leading scorer continued with a pointed breakdown of where specifically he sees the problems manifesting across the pitch.

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“The connection isn’t great between the backline and midfield, the full-backs are struggling, Madueke struggled,” Rooney said. “There are just no connections and big gaps in the middle of the pitch and that is a big worry for me. He really needs to look at that otherwise we will go out.”

Those are not the words of a pundit looking for attention. Rooney earned 120 caps for England and has spent years analyzing the international game, and his concerns mirror those expressed by numerous technical observers who watched Wednesday’s performance with mounting anxiety. England were disorganized, unable to maintain defensive shape when out of possession and alarmingly open down the flanks for long stretches of a match against a side ranked considerably below them in the global standings.

Congo DR’s Brian Cipenga scored an early goal in the seventh minute that Rooney described as the product of poor decision-making at the heart of the England backline. He had been critical of center backs Marc Guehi and Ezri Konsa before his post-match comments, accusing both of “poor judgement” for allowing Cipenga to arrive completely unmarked at the back post and finish unopposed.

The right back position drew particular attention from Rooney, who singled out Djed Spence’s uncomfortable display as symptomatic of a structural vulnerability that could be exposed in a far more damaging way by Mexico, whose forward unit is in outstanding form. Spence was exposed multiple times by Congo’s attack and was eventually replaced by Eberechi Eze, with Declan Rice dropping into a makeshift right back role for a portion of the match, an arrangement that highlighted just how exposed England are at that position.

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Rooney went as far as to advocate for an emergency recall of retired right back Kyle Walker, making the case that the cost of ignoring the problem is greater than the awkwardness of making an unconventional late tournament phone call.

“We’ve seen it before where players have come out of retirement,” Rooney said. “I think the minute Tino Livramento got injured, they should have been straight on the phone to Kyle Walker. Kyle’s still more than good enough and more than capable of playing in this England team. I would have been on the phone to him and saying, ‘Listen, we need you here so can you come out and help us,’ because that could really cost us. I’m worried on that.”

Walker has not featured for England since retiring from international football, but Rooney’s point reflects a view that seems to be gaining some traction among pundits and supporters who watched Wednesday’s performance and are already dreading how a more clinical attack than Congo’s would have punished the same defensive vulnerabilities. Whether Tuchel would seriously consider an out-of-retirement recall in the middle of a World Cup is another matter entirely.

Rooney’s concerns are rooted in what happened Wednesday and in what lies directly ahead. Mexico, England’s opponents on Sunday at the Estadio Azteca, are arguably the most difficult possible round of 16 opponent in the bracket at this stage of the tournament. Co-hosts who have played every match at home, Mexico have yet to concede a single goal across their four games, won all four of those matches and most recently dismantled Ecuador 2-0 in a first half performance that was as close to perfect as any team has produced in this tournament. Raúl Jiménez and Julián Quiñones are in exceptional form, the crowd at the Azteca is among the loudest and most intimidating in international football, and Mexico’s home record in World Cup play spans more than a decade without a loss.

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The potential path beyond Mexico only intensifies the stakes. Should England navigate the Azteca, a quarterfinal meeting with Brazil, who beat Japan 2-1 in their round of 32 fixture, could await. And beyond that, a potential semifinal against defending champions Argentina, led by Lionel Messi in what may be the greatest individual scoring tournament of any player’s career, looms as the prize for getting that far.

None of those opponents would have allowed England the defensive lapses that Congo exploited repeatedly. Kane’s brilliance in the closing stages saved England on Wednesday, but relying on a single player’s individual class to rescue a structurally disorganized team in late minutes is not a sustainable model against opponents of the caliber England will face from the round of 16 onward.

Tuchel’s tactical adjustments Wednesday, including the substitutions that introduced Eze and Anthony Gordon in the 60th minute, changed the game’s momentum and ultimately produced the winning platform from which Kane finished. But the fundamental defensive connectivity problems Rooney identified were visible throughout, particularly in the first half when England struggled to organize themselves after going behind and passed the ball directly out of play on three separate occasions under minimal opposition pressure.

Whether Tuchel uses the days before Sunday’s match in Mexico City to address those structural concerns, and how England’s battered and injury-depleted defensive resources hold up against the pace and finishing quality of the Mexican attack, will go a long way toward determining whether Kane’s heroics on Wednesday extend further into the tournament or whether England’s World Cup ends against a side that simply doesn’t lose at home.

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Business

Britain Suffers Rich World’s Biggest Fall Since Covid

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Britain Suffers Rich World's Biggest Fall Since Covid

British households have taken the heaviest hit to their wealth of any advanced economy since the pandemic, a sobering benchmark for a country that once prided itself on rising prosperity.

The average Briton is now more than a fifth poorer than five years ago, according to UBS. Of the 37 countries the Swiss bank surveyed, none has seen a steeper decline.

Typical individual wealth has dropped by roughly £28,500 since 2020 once inflation is stripped out, leaving the median adult with assets of just over £95,500 last year. That makes the British marginally better off than the French, but poorer than the Dutch and the Italians, a ranking that would have seemed improbable a decade ago.

Wealth here is measured by the value of assets such as property and shares, and it has been eroded at pace after inflation surged in the wake of the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Britain absorbed a worse inflation shock than most of its peers as energy costs jumped, a squeeze that continues to shape the wider picture on living standards.

A cooling housing market has deepened the slump. Remarkably, British families have fared worse over the past five years than households in Turkey, Bulgaria, Mexico and Kazakhstan.

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The UBS findings underline the scale of the task facing Andy Burnham as he prepares to become the next prime minister. In his first major speech since returning to the Commons, the MP for Makerfield said this week: “We cannot go through another decade like the one we have just had. We need a new determination to raise the living standards of every person in this land.”

Separate figures from the Office for National Statistics, published on Tuesday, showed that Sir Keir Starmer had failed to deliver on his pledge to improve living standards, with families now worse off than they were before he entered Downing Street.

The UBS data show the wealth of a typical individual has tumbled by more than 23 per cent on both the mean and median measures since 2020, ground down by a spike in inflation that peaked at 11.1 per cent in October 2022.

Paul Donovan, chief economist at UBS Global Wealth Management, said: “The UK had a brief period of notably higher inflation than Europe did, and that has distorted the real numbers. You had a couple of years of quite high inflation, partly because of the various peculiarities of our energy pricing structure.”

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The housing market has added to the strain. UK house prices have risen by 26 per cent since the start of 2020, according to the ONS House Price Index, but consumer prices have climbed by 32 per cent over the same stretch, meaning the real value of the money tied up in the typical home has been quietly whittled away.

Donovan added: “There is a considerable weight to real estate as a form of wealth because it is the largest asset that most people own. A change in the relative performance of your local real estate market can have a notable bearing on, in particular, the median wealth level over time.”

The fall in wealth has landed alongside incomes that have struggled to keep up with prices, a double squeeze on households. At the same time, the tax burden is set to climb to its highest level since the Second World War, driven in part by the long freeze in income tax thresholds, an issue explored in Business Matters’ coverage of Britain’s record property tax burden.

The picture is not uniformly bleak across the globe. The biggest gains came in South Korea, where average wealth rose 55 per cent, along with Russia and Croatia. Among G7 economies, the largest rise was in Japan, where median wealth climbed 51 per cent.

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The data arrived as the Institute of Directors said business confidence fell again in June. Anna Leach, the group’s chief economist, said it pointed to an urgent need for ministers to back economic growth.

“Businesses need to see meaningful improvements in areas like regulatory cost, tax complexity and swiftness and consistency of government decisions to fundamentally unlock spending and get growth going,” she said.

A Treasury spokesman was more upbeat: “We have the right economic plan. Inflation is holding steady, the UK led G7 growth at the start of the year, and the IMF and OECD have both upgraded growth forecasts. Real wages have risen more in the last year than in the first ten years of the previous government.” That claim of steadier prices chimes with the latest ONS inflation reading, though for many households the damage to accumulated wealth has already been done.


Jamie Young

Jamie Young

Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting.
Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops.

When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders.

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European stocks rise following Lagarde comments; U.S payrolls on tap

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Form 144 RISKIFIED LTD. For: 2 July

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Dale Alcock, Garry Brown-Neaves pursue HLB Mann Judd over tax advice

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Dale Alcock, Garry Brown-Neaves pursue HLB Mann Judd over tax advice

Property heavyweights Dale Alcock and Garry Brown-Neaves have launched legal actions against their accountant and tax agent HLB Mann Judd over alleged contractual breaches.

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West Country becomes fastest-growing investment market in UK as megadeals drive growth

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The tech and energy sectors have helped propel investment in the region

A stock image of an oil rig

Salisbury-based oil exploration company Rockhopper raised £105m in equity investment in 2025(Image: Arvind Vallabh on Unsplash)

The West Country has become the fastest-growing investment market in Britain, new research has revealed. The region recorded the biggest percentage increase in equity investment of any area of the UK in 2025, driven by large tech and energy megadeals.

Investment into smaller businesses in the South West more than doubled to £687m last year – an increase of 104 per cent compared with 2024 – according to the British Business Bank’s Small Business Equity Tracker.

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It comes despite a 13 per cent fall in the number of deals to 121, as investors concentrated capital into fewer, larger deals.

These included £187m raised by Bristol tech business The Smarter Web Company through nine deals in 2025, and two growth-stage rounds of £105m for Salisbury-based energy company Rockhopper Exploration and £100m for clean energy company Low Carbon, which has a presence in Bristol and Exeter.

The megadeals also doubled the South West’s share of UK equity investment from three per cent the year before to six per cent in 2025.

Across the rest of the UK, deal values fell overall by four per cent and volumes by 17 per cent.

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Ed Tellwright, director for the South West at British Business Bank Local Growth Team, said: “Thanks to a handful of large deals the South West has bucked the national trend and seen the fastest equity growth in the UK. But the funding environment remains challenging, especially for seed stage and non-AI businesses.

“That’s why we remain committed to helping smaller businesses get the finance they need to start, scale and stay in the UK, and that includes activity concentrated at early stage where market declines have been most pronounced.”

Between 2023 and 2025, the British Business Bank supported 19 per cent of all equity deals in the South West and 11 per cent of total investment value.

Its £200m South West Investment Fund, launched in 2023 to boost the flow of capital to new and growing businesses, has helped fund more than 50 equity deals to date with some £37m of investment.

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The number of South West spin-out businesses supported by the bank has also grown from less than five per cent between 2016 and 2020, to more than 25 per cent in the last five years.

This includes University of Bristol spin-out QLM Technology in Torbay which received £1m from the South West Investment Fund as part of a £3.5m round last year to support the development and commercial scaling of its advanced methane monitoring technology.

AI firms capture record investment

Nationally, the Small Business Equity Tracker showed that AI continues to reshape the UK’s startup economy, attracting a record share of investment in 2025 and driving larger deals.

AI companies accounted for 44 per cent of total equity investment into smaller businesses in 2025, the highest share on record. AI also represented more than a quarter (26 per cent) of all deals, nearly doubling its share since 2022. Investment in AI-related deals rose by 48 per cent year-on-year, highlighting strong investor appetite despite a broader market slowdown.

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Investors also concentrated capital into fewer, larger transactions in 2025 with the UK’s top 10 fundraisings accounting for nearly a quarter (23 per cent) of all investment, the highest level since 2020. Equity investment into UK smaller businesses fell slightly, by four per cent to £12.3bn last year, however, investment remained above pre- pandemic levels.

While national growth-stage investment proved resilient, early-stage deals at seed and venture stages were lower. The digital and technologies sector remained the largest recipient of equity investment, while advanced manufacturing saw strong growth in investment value across the year. Meanwhile, investment in financial services and life sciences declined in 2025.

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Meta building cloud business to sell excess AI capacity, Bloomberg News reports

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Meta building cloud business to sell excess AI capacity, Bloomberg News reports

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Nvidia: The Drawdown Is An Opportunity To Pounce

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Best start-up firms in Wales revealed

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Overall winner DigiProp and the other Welsh winners will now compete in the UK StartUp Awards in September

Winners at the 2026 Wales StartUp Awards.

Cardiff-based property information tech firm DigiProp has been named the best start-up company in Wales.

It took the overall title at the 2026 Wales StartUp Awards. The company, set up by entrepreneur Matthew Lindsey, also took the digital start-up category at the awards.

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All Welsh winners will now compete in the UK StartUp Awards which will be held in September at entrepreneurship festival Ideas Fest. They will compete against regional award winners in England, as well as those from Scotland and Northern Ireland.

DigiProp is transforming how property inspections are conducted, replacing static photos and lengthy manual reports with immersive 360° digital records that combine visual data, structured property information, and AI-assisted defect detection into a single intelligent asset.

The judges were impressed by the scale of the problem DigiProp is solving, the technology behind the solution and the potential to build the digital infrastructure for property inspection right across the UK.

Founder of the StartUp Awards Professor Dylan Jones-Evans said of all the winners at the awards, held at Tramshed in Cardiff; “These amazing Welsh businesses are not just coming up with clever ideas, but are building businesses with real purpose, commercial credibility and the potential to scale.

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“What impressed the judges was the evidence behind their ambition from customers and partnerships to investment, innovation, impact and growth and across every region, we are seeing founders creating jobs, opening up new markets and challenging established industries.

“Many are also tackling some of the biggest issues facing society, from health and sustainability to clean energy, digital inclusion and productivity, and that combination of entrepreneurial energy and practical impact is what makes this year’s winners so impressive. Their success is not only worth celebrating, but it is also worth backing.”

All the winners

  • Overall Wales StartUp of the Year & Digital StartUp of the Year: DigiProp.co.uk.
  • Beauty, Health & Wellbeing StartUp of the Year: Hikitalo.
  • Business to Business StartUp of the Year: MPW Making Places Work.
  • Construction & Building Services StartUp of the Year: Ateb Groundworks.
  • Consumer Products StartUp of the Year: Joe’s Plant Place.
  • Consumer Services StartUp of the Year: IV Wetroom.
  • Creative StartUp of the Year: Hope Design Solutions.
  • Education & Training StartUp of the Year: Redpen AI.
  • Food & Drink StartUp of the Year: Tumptonics.
  • Global StartUp of the Year: Camlin.
  • Graduate StartUp of the Year: Young Potters.
  • Green StartUp of the Year: Ecodetect.
  • Hospitality, Tourism & Events StartUp of the Year: Booking Hub.
  • Innovative StartUp of the Year: LanoTech.
  • Marketing & Advertising StartUp of the Year: Copperhouse Films.
  • Professional Services StartUp of the Year: Littlechild & Haley.
  • ·Retail & E-Commerce StartUp of the Year: Spines.
  • Rising Star Award: Blackline Academy.
  • StartUp For Good Award: Emwill Care.
  • Technology StartUp of the Year: Vedri Studio.
  • Young Entrepreneur of the Year: Tiger Bay Cleaning.
  • Judges’ Choice: AilArian.
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Harbour Energy: Second Chance

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Opinion: Tax changes aimed at risk takers

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OPINION: The government may discover that using a sledgehammer to crack a nut can have undesirable consequences.

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