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Thomas Tuchel: Declan Rice and Bukayo Saka were desperate to face Japan

The German coach picked an expanded 35-man squad for the final camp before he makes his World Cup selection.

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Bukayo Saka (left) and Declan Rice left the England camp before the Japan game (Bradley Collyer/PA)open image in gallery

Bukayo Saka (left) and Declan Rice left the England camp before the Japan game (Bradley Collyer/PA) (PA Wire)

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Thomas Tuchel knows Declan Rice and Bukayo Saka’s England withdrawals amid a spate of Arsenal pullouts may look suspicious to some but stressed the injured duo were desperate to feature against Japan.

The German coach picked an expanded 35-man squad for the final camp before he makes his World Cup selection, with the first wave of players joined by 11 established names on Friday.

Rice and Saka were among those arrivals and surprisingly left the following day, as did Arsenal team-mate Noni Madueke after he sustained an injury in the 1-1 friendly draw against Uruguay.

The fact 10 of the Premier League leaders’ players have left their respective national teams has raised suspicions of club matters taking precedence over country, but Tuchel dismissed such talk.

“They joined, had a medical assessment, wanted desperately to play, to just get the narrative straight,” he said ahead of Tuesday’s friendly against Japan. “Wanted desperately to be involved.

“But it made just no sense to take this risk. If it would have been maybe a last game of the season, we would have kept them and tried everything. But in this moment of the season, it did not make sense.

“The risk for making it worse was just way too big.”

Tuchel, who says England were aware of the pair’s “issues” after Arsenal’s Carabao Cup final, added: “I understand the look of it.

“I still have 100 per cent trust in the honesty of Bukayo and Declan. We did medical tests. I saw them.

“I have no reason to believe that Declan is not honest with me. I have no reason to believe Bukayo is not honest. But given the amount of Arsenal players, I understand the look.”

Rice, who Tuchel says feels 70 per cent fit, had a session with Jude Bellingham on the pitch but complained of discomfort, while Saka did two sessions in the gym in a bid to prove his fitness.

“They both came,” he said. “Declan was even out on the pitch. He did not come and say ‘guys, I’m going home’.

“I heard there were camps (in the past) where players did not even show up with boots and stuff. Then it becomes, OK…but they both came.”

While Rice, Saka and Madueke have had to leave a camp that Eberechi Eze was unable to link up with in the first place, Arsenal will still have a player involved against Japan.

Ben White made an eventful first England appearance in four years on Friday, scoring his first international goal and giving away a penalty in a the draw against Uruguay that saw the defender booed by his own fans.

Tuchel was disappointed with the Wembley reception for White – who made himself unavailable under Sir Gareth Southgate having left the 2022 World Cup for unspecified personal reasons – and hoped there would not be a repeat if he featured on Tuesday.

“He has our support and I think he feels our support and the support from the group,” said the England boss, who saw John Stones and Adam Wharton leave the camp through injury, on top of the three Arsenal exits.

“I understand that (the reaction) happened to some other players already and hopefully we got it out of our system and if he plays tomorrow, which there’s a chance – because it would make sense to play a lot of players who have fresh legs and didn’t start the first match and he is one of them – and if he has a good training session, he’s in the mix.”

Asked if White had cleared the air with team-mates, Tuchel added: “I guess so. I’m not involved in all the meetings and talks that go on without the coach and I was in a lot of meetings looking at Japan and stuff.

“So, I am not fully aware but I think so – that’s my guess. He was good, again good in training and good in the group.”

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