Jordan Henderson Faces Croatia on His 36th Birthday Chasing a Record Bobby Charlton Never Set

England National Football Team - Maguire and Mainoo Recalled as Tuchel Names 35-Man England Squad
England National Football Team - Maguire and Mainoo Recalled as Tuchel Names 35-Man England Squad
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When England walk out at the AT&T Stadium in Arlington on 17 June to face Croatia, Jordan Henderson will mark his 36th birthday in the most fitting way imaginable: standing in an England shirt at a World Cup almost nobody believed he would reach. The Brentford midfielder is one of only two England men’s players ever named in four World Cup squads. The other is Sir Bobby Charlton. And here is the detail that gives this story its edge: Charlton, for all his greatness, only ever played in three. He was a 20-year-old squad member in Sweden in 1958 who never got on the pitch. If Henderson plays a single minute in North America this summer, he will have done something no England men’s player has ever done.

Two years ago this conversation would have seemed absurd. Henderson was an exile in all but name, left out of the Euro 2024 squad and written off as a cautionary tale about how quickly a glittering international career can unravel. The road back has been long, awkward and at times painful. It is also one of the more compelling redemption stories in Thomas Tuchel’s squad.

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From Liverpool Captain to International Exile

To understand the scale of the comeback, you have to remember how far Henderson fell. This was the man who captained Liverpool to the Champions League in 2019 and the club’s first league title in 30 years in 2020, the midfielder Jurgen Klopp trusted above all others, a player with more than 80 England caps and a place in three consecutive World Cup squads in 2014, 2018 and 2022.

Then came the summer of 2023. Henderson left Liverpool for Al-Ettifaq in the Saudi Pro League, a move that drew fierce criticism, not least because of his years of vocal support for LGBTQ+ supporters’ groups. The football was a poor fit too. Within six months he had engineered an exit and signed for Ajax, a club then going through one of the most chaotic spells in their modern history. The move stabilised his career but not his England prospects. When Gareth Southgate named his squad for Euro 2024, Henderson’s name was missing for the first time at a major tournament in a decade.

For most players in their mid-thirties, that is how the story ends. A quiet fade, a respectful montage, a punditry contract. Henderson chose differently.

The Brentford Season That Changed Everything

Henderson returned to the Premier League with Brentford in 2025, and what followed was the kind of season that forces a reassessment. The Bees finished ninth in 2025-26, missing out on the European places on goal difference, and Henderson was central to it, organising the midfield, managing games and doing the unglamorous work that rarely shows up in highlight reels but always shows up in league tables.

Tuchel, who took charge of England in 2025 and has shown little sentimentality in his selections, was watching. The German dropped Cole Palmer, Phil Foden, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Harry Maguire from his 26-man World Cup squad, a set of omissions that dominated the back pages for days, as Sky Sports reported when the squad was revealed at Wembley in May. Yet he found room for a 35-year-old playing for a mid-table club. That tells you exactly what Henderson is there to do.

Henderson knows it too. “The last few years has been a bit of a roller coaster, to say the least, but I’ve worked very hard to be in this position and made a lot of sacrifices, and I’m just very grateful and honoured to be here,” he said in comments carried by beIN SPORTS earlier this month.

The midfielder has never been under any illusions about his role. “It’s about giving absolutely everything to make the nation back home very proud of us and to do that, we need to just be ourselves,” he added.

Equalling Sir Bobby, Then Going Past Him

The Charlton parallel deserves a closer look, because it is more layered than the headline suggests. Charlton was named in England squads for 1958, 1962, 1966 and 1970. But in Sweden in 1958, months after surviving the Munich air disaster, the young Manchester United forward watched every match from the stands. He played in the following three tournaments, lifting the trophy in 1966, and retired as England’s most decorated World Cup figure.

Henderson’s record is quietly remarkable in its own right. He has featured at the 2014, 2018 and 2022 World Cups, starting 10 of his 11 World Cup appearances. He was a substitute in Brazil as a young squad player, a starter through the runs to the semi-final in Russia and the quarter-final in Qatar. No England midfielder of his generation has more tournament experience. So while the record books will show Henderson equalling Charlton’s four squad selections, the first time he crosses the white line this summer he will stand alone: the only England men’s player to have played at four World Cups.

Stat-watchers will note Jordan Pickford, John Stones and Marcus Rashford are at their third World Cups this summer, according to the FA’s own squad breakdown. None of them was born when Henderson made his Sunderland debut feel close; the gap between Henderson and England’s youngest squad members is roughly the same as the gap between Henderson and the 1990 World Cup. Football careers are not supposed to stretch this far.

What Tuchel Actually Wants From Him

Henderson is not in Texas to start every match, and everyone involved understands that. Harry Kane captains the side, and Declan Rice wears the vice-captain’s armband, the engine room belongs to a younger generation. What Tuchel wants is the thing that cannot be coached: a player who has lived every kind of tournament, who knows what a quarter-final feels like in the 85th minute, who can read a dressing room in the dead days between group games.

England’s preparation has been thorough. Tuchel’s side beat Costa Rica 3-0 in their delayed warm-up in the United States on Wednesday, with Anthony Gordon staking his claim for a starting role, and the camp has been carefully managed, with Bukayo Saka’s workload handled cautiously as the opener approaches. Kane has dismissed concerns about the heat. The squad looks settled, and senior professionals like Henderson are a large part of why.

There is a tactical case too. Tournament football rewards game management, and England have lost knockout matches in the past decade through naivety more often than through lack of talent. A midfielder who can come on with 20 minutes left, slow a match down, organise a press and take the sting out of an opponent’s momentum is not a luxury. Against Croatia, whose own veteran core has tormented England before, that experience could be worth more than pace.

The Bigger Picture

This World Cup is unusually rich in stories of longevity. Lionel Messi is in North America preparing for a record sixth World Cup with Argentina, and South Korea’s Son Heung-min is at his fourth. Henderson belongs in that conversation not because of comparable stardom but because of what his selection says about how managers value experience in a tournament that will be played across three countries, multiple climates and six potential time zones. Squads of 26 are built for attrition, and the sides that go deepest tend to carry at least one player whose value is measured in calm rather than goals.

For England, six decades on from their only triumph, the hope is that the blend finally works: Kane’s goals, Rice’s running, Saka’s invention and, somewhere in the background, a 36-year-old from Sunderland making sure nobody loses their head.

Henderson said everybody knows what England means to him, and his whole career backs that up. Four World Cups, three managers, one near-terminal career detour, and a birthday in Arlington that doubles as a small piece of history. Whether he plays five minutes or five matches this summer, the boy who grew up idolising the North East’s football culture will have outlasted every prediction made about him. Sir Bobby Charlton would surely have approved of the company.

WRITTEN BY

Jarrod

Jarrod Partridge is the Founder of Futbol Chronicle and an accredited journalist with over 30 years of experience following international football. A member of the AIPS International Sports Press Association, Jarrod has covered matches at stadiums around the world, bringing first-hand insight to every match report, player profile, and tactical analysis he writes.

More articles by Jarrod →
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