Voice of Freedom Повна версія

Tuchel's complaints lead to Fifa moving photographers

· Sport

England head coach Thomas Tuchel has won a battle with Fifa to get photographers moved away from the bench during the national anthems.

Tuchel said he "could not see my team" before Wednesday's 4-2 win over Croatia, with a wall of photographers blocking his view to the pitch.

Fifa has now changed its policy and agreeing to a compromise for all affected games.

Photographers will now be grouped in a huddle closer to the halfway line - allowing an unobstructed view for the coaching staff.

The Group L game in Dallas was Tuchel's first as a World Cup manager but he revealed the occasion, particularly the emotion of the national anthems, was spoiled.

"I have to tell you something. I'm begging Fifa to change the position of the photographers in the national anthem, because I could not see my team," Tuchel said.

"It was a very special moment, and I was standing in front of a wall of 50 photographers and I could not see one single player. It ruined a little bit my experience."

The AT&T Stadium usually serves as the home of the Dallas Cowboys, with the NFL field too small for World Cup matches.

The surface had to be raised 1.2m to be able to fit in a football pitch, which meant part of the sidelines were lost - resulting in limited space for the coaches and the photographers during the national anthems.

Fifa first deployed the new approach during Thursday's Group A fixture between Czech Republic and South Africa in Atlanta.

England score four against Croatia in World Cup opener

Who was the biggest attacking threat? England player ratings

Football Daily podcast: Kane and Bellingham put on a show

Related topics

More on this story

Play BBC Sport's new World Cup predictor game

World Cup fixtures and group standings

How to watch the World Cup on the BBC

Everything you need to know about the World Cup