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ENGLAND have discovered who they will face in order to qualify for the 2026 World Cup.

The Three Lions, who will be led into the tournament by new German boss Thomas Tuchel, were among the top seeds alongside France and Spain.

England and Thomas Tuchel have learned who they will face in World Cup qualifying
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England and Thomas Tuchel have learned who they will face in World Cup qualifyingCredit: AFP
Tuchel was in attendance in Zurich to discover England's fate
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Tuchel was in attendance in Zurich to discover England's fate
Former Arsenal star Robert Pires drew England into Group K
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Former Arsenal star Robert Pires drew England into Group K

With Tuchel watching on at the draw in Zurich, England discovered they were in Group K and their first opponent was Serbia from pot two.

Pot three saw them draw Albania, while the teams out of pot four and five were Latvia and Andorra respectively.

Serbia and Albania have controversial history behind them, with Uefa slapping Albanian forward Mirlind Daku with a two-game ban for anti-Serbian chants earlier this year.

Uefa also fined Serbia for trying to burn an Albanian flag.

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Serbia even threatened to QUIT Euro 2024 over chants directed at them by Albania and Croatia.

Having pitted them against each other in Group K, there will be fears of fireworks in England's group.

Elsewhere, Wales landed in Group J with Belgium, North Macedonia, Kazakhstan and Liechtenstein.

Scotland were put in Group C against the Uefa Nations League losing quarter-finalist between Portugal and Denmark, as well as Greece and Belarus.

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Northern Ireland were pit against the winner of Germany vs Italy, as well as Slovakia and Luxembourg in Group A.

England's first games during this campaign will come over the spring international break on March 21-25.

Among England's opponents, Serbia will serve as the toughest test for Tuchel.

Thomas Tuchel England Press Conference

The Three Lions last faced the team led by Alexander Mitrovic at the Euros during the summer.

England prevailed 1-0 in a dour match, with Jude Bellingham scoring the only goal after 13 minutes.

Albania and Andorra were in England's most recent World Cup qualification group and proved easy opponents.

Gareth Southgate's side beat Albania 5-0 at Wembley and 2-0 away, whil Andorra put up even less opposition, with England winning 4-0 at home and 5-0 away.

The Three Lions have never played Latvia.

World Cup qualifying draw in full

Group A: Winner GER/ITA, Slovakia, Northern Ireland, Luxembourg

Group B: Switzerland, Sweden, Slovenia, Kosovo

Group C: Loser POR/DEN, Greece, Scotland, Belarus

Group D: Winner FRA/CRO, Ukraine, Iceland, Azerbaijan

Group E: Winner SPA/NED, Turkey, Georgia, Bulgaria

Group F: Winner POR/DEN, Hungary, Ireland, Armenia

Group G: Loser SPA/NED, Poland, Finland, Lithuania, Malta

Group H: Austria, Romania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cyprus, San Marino

Group I: Loser GER/ITA, Norway, Israel, Estonia, Moldova

Group J: Belgium, Wales, North Macedonia, Kazakhstan, Liechenstein

Group K: England, Serbia, Albania, Latvia, Andorra

Group L: Loser FRA/CRO, Czechia, Montenegro, Faroe Islands, Gibraltar

Fans were over the moon at the draw, judging by reactions on X.

One wrote: "Tuchel could literally play himself and three lions and still win the group."

Another said: "Serbia is the only challenging opponent, the rest should be easy."

And another wrote: "With Tuchel's tactics and style of football we should smash all these."

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The actual World Cup will start on June 11 2026 with Mexico City hosting the opener, while New Jersey will host the final on July 19 following a record 39 day tournament.

The World Cup's new format will see 12 four-team groups and will also feature a last-32 knockout round for the first time to accommodate the expansion to 48 teams.

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How will the 2026 World Cup work?

By Martin Lipton

The 2026 World Cup will be something of a logistical nightmare.

Three countries, not one city. In 16 venues, split across four time zones and thousands of miles — rather than the distance between Selhurst Park and Kenilworth Road.

With 48 teams, as opposed to the 32 that has been the norm since 1998. More from Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Even, for the first time, a guaranteed slot for Oceania.

And, almost certainly, a record 104 MATCHES and 33 days as well.

It will be 12 groups of four but the real issues are over the next stage.

The easiest way would be the top two in each group, plus the eight best third-place teams, reaching the final 32 and eight games, instead of seven, required to win.

Read all about it here.

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