Jude Bellingham is ready to be England’s dog of war when they face France in the World Cup quarter-final on Saturday night.

The Borussia Dortmund man has been the shining light in an England team that boasted the best group-stage record in Qatar and saw off Senegal 3-0 in the last 16 to set up a clash with reigning champions France at Al Bayt Stadium.

At just 19, Bellingham has drawn plaudits from all quarters, with England team-mates Jack Grealish and Phil Foden tipping him to become the world’s best midfielder in the coming years.

While he may be quiet and unassuming off the pitch, Bellingham has been running games on it – revealing he has a bit of “dog” in him when he crosses the white line.

“I think when you’ve got the dog, you’re just born with it, really,” he said.

“The way I was raised in football, you had to have that dog in you a little bit and I go into the games knowing every game’s a war and you’ve got to be up for it. I think that’s something I have.

“There was a foul (in the Senegal game) that I didn’t think was a foul, I kind of held onto the ball and moved up, me and the lad were both just staring at each other for a minute straight and I just think, ‘don’t be the one that loses’.

“I feel like off the pitch, I’m a nice guy but when I get onto the pitch, something kind of takes over me, to be honest, I feel like you’ve got no friends out there except the ones wearing the same kit.

“Anyone who is not wearing that, it’s, it’s kind of, no beef… but there is something that’s a little bit personal.”

Bellingham has been partnered in midfield by both Declan Rice and Jordan Henderson in the past two games, with England scoring a combined six goals and keeping two clean sheets.

Henderson, 32, is 12 years Bellingham’s senior and the former Birmingham youngster has been full of praise for the Liverpool skipper.

“He’s always kind of the loudest player on the pitch – which I love,” Bellingham told ‘The Diary Room’ on England’s YouTube channel.

“You always know you’re in a game. He doesn’t let you switch off for one second and the best thing about him is he will give you a bit of detail to help you, maybe after you’ve done something negative.

“But he’s also the first person to let you know if you’ve done something positive. His performance against Senegal was incredible. Ran the game, scored a key goal. It was a pleasure to play with him again.”

Bellingham crossed for Henderson to open the scoring against Senegal before the pair locked eyes and went head-to-head in an intense celebration.

Jordan Henderson, right, celebrates his goal against Senegal with Jude Bellingham
Jordan Henderson, right, celebrates his goal against Senegal with Jude Bellingham (Nick Potts/PA)

“That was completely off the cuff,” revealed Bellingham.

“We’ve never even spoke about it. Obviously, we’re spending a lot of time with each other at the minute, but I think it’s turned into something that’s a bit iconic.

“To be honest he got so, like, close and I was thinking ‘right, if this is what we’re gonna do we have to commit, don’t we?’

“So I went really hard, like proper hard to his head. And that’s why my back’s arched like that, because I’m thinking like he’s proper hard here and he’s proper close.

“So I had to just turn on the core a bit and lean forward to get in a more comfortable position. But it was a good moment, those celebrations, something that lives forever and hopefully people will be talking about it for a long time.”

England assistant manager Steve Holland said Bellingham was “unique” talent, saying he had an exciting blend of the technical, mental and physical attributes.

Jude Bellingham, centre, takes the plaudits as England celebrate Jordan Henderson's goal against Senegal
Jude Bellingham, centre, takes the plaudits as England celebrate Jordan Henderson’s goal against Senegal (Mike Egerton/PA)

“His impact in this tournament, for a player of his age, is already hugely unusual,” he said of the 19-year-old.

“I’m always balanced, as Gareth (Southgate) is, with the amount of praise because we have seen so many where so much goes wrong because they believe in their publicity when they are young.

“I don’t think that will happen with Jude. But I don’t think that there is any value in me putting him on a particular pedestal yet, only to say that he deserves everything he has achieved.

“His potential is through the roof and, providing he keeps working as he is – and there’s no reason to think that he won’t – for sure he has an incredible career for many years at the absolute highest level.

“There’s only three things that you can do in football: stop goals, make goals, score goals. That’s how you contribute. Jude can do all of those things.

“And recently, he has begun to score goals which is the bit that makes the biggest players big. It’s a match-winning ability that he is adding to his game.”