Dan Burn Pushed Trolleys at Asda and Now Goes to the World Cup Over Harry Maguire

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When Newcastle United released Dan Burn from their academy, he was eleven years old and the club he supported had just decided he was not good enough. He did not vanish from football the way most rejected boys do. He went home to Blyth, a windswept Northumberland town better known for its lifeboat station than its footballers, and he kept playing. He turned out for non league Blyth Spartans as a gangly teenager. He pulled shifts at the local Asda, pushing trolleys across the car park between school and training. And twenty three years later, at the age of 34, he walked into Thomas Tuchel’s England squad for a home World Cup in the United States, chosen ahead of Harry Maguire.

There are fairy tales in football and then there is the story of a 6ft 7in defender who was told as a child he had no future at his boyhood club, only to return to it as an adult, win its first major domestic trophy in seventy years, and then earn a place at the biggest tournament on earth. Burn has lived all of it, and the most remarkable thing about him is how completely unbothered he seems by any of it.

From the Asda car park to the Football League

The detail that everyone seizes on is the trolleys, and it deserves the attention because it tells you who Burn is. While other future internationals were being bussed to elite academies and wrapped in scholarships, Burn was a working teenager who played football for his town and earned his pocket money in a supermarket car park. There was no safety net of academy contracts, no guarantee that any of it would lead anywhere. He played because he loved it and because Blyth Spartans gave him a pitch to play on.

His route into the professional game came late and from the bottom. He joined Darlington as an apprentice in 2009 and made his senior debut later that year, by which point most players who reach the top flight have already been full time professionals for years. From Darlington the climb was long and unglamorous, through Fulham, a string of loans, Wigan Athletic and Brighton and Hove Albion, where he finally established himself as a Premier League regular. Every step was earned the hard way, by a player who had no reputation to coast on and no academy pedigree to fall back on.

It is worth pausing on how unusual that path is at this level. The modern England squad is largely a product of category one academies, of boys identified at six or seven and developed inside the system for a decade. Burn is the rare exception, a player the system threw out and who built a career anyway, brick by brick, in places the cameras rarely visit. By the time he was a polished top flight centre back, he had already lived an entire football life that most of his teammates will never know.

The full circle moment

In January 2022, Newcastle United came back for the boy they had let go. Burn, a lifelong Magpies supporter, signed for the club he had grown up worshipping, in the middle of a relegation fight, for a fee that felt almost incidental against the emotional return it represented. He has spoken about how surreal it was to pull on the black and white shirt as a professional after a childhood spent on the terraces. For a local lad, there is no bigger move and no heavier shirt.

He repaid it in the most dramatic way imaginable. In the 2025 Carabao Cup final at Wembley, Burn rose above the Liverpool defence to head home and help Newcastle win their first domestic trophy in seventy years. A boy from Blyth, released at eleven, scoring at Wembley to end seven decades of hurt for the club he loved. If a screenwriter pitched it, you would tell them to tone it down. For Newcastle supporters, it is simply the truth, and it cemented Burn as a folk hero on Tyneside.

That trophy made a difference for his international hopes too. Burn only made his England debut in March 2025, astonishingly late for a player of his standing, but Tuchel clearly liked what he saw. A defender who could win his own duels, organise a back line and offer a genuine aerial threat at both ends was exactly the kind of practical option a tournament manager values. By the time the World Cup squad was named on 22 May 2026, Burn had gone from uncapped to indispensable in barely a year.

Chosen over Maguire

The selection that turned heads was not simply that Burn was in. It was who he was in ahead of. Harry Maguire, a fixture of England squads for years and a hero of the run to the Euro final, did not make the cut. Tuchel looked at his options and decided that if he wanted a tall, commanding, set piece threat from the bench, Burn could do that job, and he did not need two players of that profile.

Former England captain Sol Campbell, who knows a thing or two about playing centre back at a World Cup, expects Burn to make a real impact. “I could easily see Dan Burn scoring an important goal from a set play or corner,” Campbell told Chronicle Live, warning opponents that the Newcastle man could “cause havoc” this summer. Campbell laid out the thinking he believes shaped Tuchel’s decision. “I think Tuchel has looked at it and thought, Harry Maguire or Dan Burn, and probably thought I don’t need them both, I’ll choose Burn.”

Campbell sees Burn as a specific kind of tournament weapon, the player you send on for the last twenty minutes when a game is tight and a goal has to come from somewhere. “If you have someone like Burn who can come on for 15 or 20 minutes, and you get two or three dangerous free kicks and you get players like Burn who can attack things, people get frightened,” he said. At 6ft 7in, Burn is one of the tallest outfield players at the entire tournament, a problem defenders simply cannot match physically in the air.

A squad role he has made peace with

What stands out about Burn at this World Cup is his complete lack of ego about his place in it. He is not in the United States expecting to be an undroppable starter. He is there to do whatever the team needs, and he has said so plainly. “I just want to be here and help the team,” he explained, before adding a line that captures his entire outlook. “Whether I come on, whether I don’t play a minute, I’ll not feel I have contributed any less than anyone else.”

It is the attitude of a man who knows exactly how close he came to never having any of this. A player handed everything young can take a World Cup for granted. A player released at eleven, who stacked his career on top of Asda shifts and non league weekends, treats a place in the squad as the prize it actually is. That perspective is worth something inside a dressing room, a senior voice who measures success differently from those who have only ever known the fast track.

His presence also carries a wider meaning for the kind of supporter who has watched their own town’s club survive on scraps. Burn is proof that the academy production line is not the only road, that a late bloomer from the lower divisions can still end up at a World Cup if the talent is real and the persistence holds. For every kid let go at eleven and told to find something else to do, his name is a useful piece of evidence to the contrary.

It is easy to romanticise a rags to riches tale, but Burn’s value to England is not sentimental. He offers a set of qualities a tournament squad truly needs in its deeper rounds, height, calm, leadership and a real threat at both ends from dead balls. Tuchel did not pick him as a feel good story. He picked him because, in the specific situations that decide knockout football, a 6ft 7in defender who attacks the ball without fear is a problem the opposition has to plan for. The fairytale and the football logic happen to point in the same direction.

The header that could define a summer

England’s tournament will be decided by fine margins, the way these things always are, and tight knockout games turn on set pieces more often than open play. That is precisely the situation Burn was picked for. A corner in the last ten minutes, a free kick into a crowded box, a moment when England need a giant to attack a ball and unsettle a defence. It is not hard to imagine Burn’s name attached to a goal that sends a nation into the next round.

If that moment comes, it will be the latest chapter in a story that has already given Newcastle a Wembley winner and given English football one of its most unlikely World Cup tales in years. The boy from Blyth who pushed trolleys at Asda, released by the club he loved before he was old enough to understand what it meant, is in the United States this summer with three lions on his chest. Whatever happens next, he has already won the part that cannot be taken away.

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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