‘He won’t let me hear the end of it’: How England v France is dividing families
Families divided by football allegiances are preparing for England’s heavyweight World Cup quarter-final against France tonight.
Whoever wins out of the Three Lions or the current cup holders will go into the semi finals in Qatar and edge that little bit closer to lifting the 18-carat solid gold trophy.
The contest at the Al Bayt Stadium will not be the only clash, with some families preparing for the “light-hearted rivalry” that only comes with divided national loyalties.
Alexia Leachman, 48, grew up in Cardiff but is also French and now lives in Uzes in the south of France.
However, her two daughters, Lila, 12, and Sofia, eight, are both English, and big football fans also.
“I’m Welsh but I’m also French, I’m dual national, so I feel very French and I feel very Welsh, but I do not feel English at all,” said Ms Leachman, author of Clear Your Head Trash.
“The match is going to be interesting because they’re all going to be supporting England.”
Ms Leachman said her daughters are “both really into football” and said that while she expects some “very good-hearted” banter, she will not be doing any “mollycoddling” no matter the result.
“I’ll be kind of supporting England but (for Saturday) I really haven’t decided which one I’m going to do, I’m torn, totally torn,” she said.
“I just don’t know, because I don’t really care for England winning.
“I have a kind of ranking. I’ll always support Wales first and foremost. And then if Wales aren’t playing, then it’ll be France, so strictly speaking if I follow my own code I should be supporting France on Saturday. It’s not going to be easy.
“I think they’re just going to lay into me, a bit of banter, very good-hearted. I’ll just annoy them and I’ll go with whoever wins … we’ll see what happens.
“I don’t do any mollycoddling or wrapping in cotton wool, they’ve got to learn football banter really, haven’t they?”
Meanwhile, Tom Thewlis, 30, from Oxford, has been enjoying some email-based stick from his French uncle, who thinks the daunting prospect of France’s Kylian Mbappe – the tournament’s top scorer – will prove too much for England right-back Kyle Walker.
“My uncle is a bit of a joker. He’s always kind of put the boot in, particularly when we were knocked out in the semis in Russia (2018),” said Mr Thewlis, a cycling journalist.
“He’s already been emailing me this week talking to me about how Kylian Mbappe’s going to have the last laugh over Kyle Walker, all that kind of thing, and just sort of a general exchange of banter.
“I’m a big cyclist myself. So, I’ve kind of always had the bragging rights that we’ve won the Tour de France more times than they have in however many years – I mean, that’s kind of like a running joke in our family that I’ve got over him.
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“Now there’s obviously the rugby, France have had the upper hand with us on a few occasions, and then all of a sudden this.”
Mr Thewlis – who goes to see his French family every year – described the banter as a “light-hearted rivalry” and said it adds a bit of extra meaning to a game which he is “quietly confident” about.
“It makes what to some people could just be a game against France a bit more than that,” he said.
“I think on this occasion he’ll wait until afterwards and then when I see him next year, if France were to win on Saturday, next summer when I get over there he won’t let me hear the end of it, put it that way.
“I’m quietly confident, I’ve got a funny feeling about it – there’s just something about this group, a young group of players that seem to not take themselves too seriously. There’s a lot of belief there.”Tune into ITV1 or ITVX to watch England v France at 6pm on Saturday