UK TimesUK Times
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
What's Hot
Earnings or valuations what’s really driving markets

Earnings or valuations what’s really driving markets

10 July 2026
Why the Goodyear blimp is being seen across London’s skies – and when to see it – UK Times

Why the Goodyear blimp is being seen across London’s skies – and when to see it – UK Times

10 July 2026
FIFA have stained this World Cup at every turn with inconsistency and self-interest… but honest and talented England are just three steps from glory, writes IAN LADYMAN

FIFA have stained this World Cup at every turn with inconsistency and self-interest… but honest and talented England are just three steps from glory, writes IAN LADYMAN

10 July 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
UK TimesUK Times
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
UK TimesUK Times
Home » The inside story of the viral Harry Kane interview, told by presenter Kelly Somers – UK Times
News

The inside story of the viral Harry Kane interview, told by presenter Kelly Somers – UK Times

By uk-times.com10 July 2026No Comments9 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
The inside story of the viral Harry Kane interview, told by presenter Kelly Somers – UK Times
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email

Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter

Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter

IndependentCulture

The Independent is celebrating the greatest TV moments of the year so far, from the ones that got the nation talking to the scenes that moved us or made us laugh. In a series of articles running this summer, insiders share the part they played in making them happen.

Sunday night in the UK. A nation goes to bed with baited breath (unless, that it is, you decided to stay up). England would play Mexico in the third round of the World Cup at 2am UK time.

Let’s be honest, we’d not been playing brilliantly. The match against DR Congo was a major scare. Then there was the formidable atmosphere at Mexico’s Azteca Stadium, which some feared might just blow us all away. And what about the altitude? Everyone was saying it would turn the players’ legs into lead.

But the nation woke up in delirium. We’d actually done it! The England men’s team had delivered an absolute all-timer, and we hadn’t even had to go to extra time or penalties. Could it get better? It could. As we were brewing our morning coffees, we watched BBC presenter Kelly Somers have a word with the captain.

Quickly it became apparent that belting out Wonderwall with the fans had left Harry Kane almost completely hoarse. “We had to fight!” he squeaked as he explained England’s gameplan to Somers. The pair dissolved into giggles as they delivered TV gold. Kane, our national saviour, our sweet angel, seemed to have no idea what sound – if any – was going to come out of his mouth next, understanding his fate as a meme in real time.

Kane being interviewed by Somers after England's victory
Kane being interviewed by Somers after England’s victory (BBC)

Cut to the studio, where the BBC’s pundits were in stitches. “That’s the best interview I’ve ever seen,” said Wayne Rooney. “It’s hard work that singing Harry Kane cmon ENGLAND cmon WONDERWALL,” teased Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher on X. At the time of writing, the interview has had 81 million views on social media, and counting.

As one of the most dependable figures in football broadcasting, Somers has interviewed hundreds of players many times over. But, as she explains, she’s never done an interview quite like this one.

The atmosphere in the Azteca

“It was unlike anything I’ve ever been a part of, and I think it took me a few days to realise how special it was. I’ve been to Mexico before but not the city, and it’s wild. The passion was actually crazy. I’ve reflected a bit on what some of the England players have talked about because they said it was an incredible atmosphere, but almost not hostile. Sometimes England go to stadiums where the goal is to intimidate England. Mexico were trying to do that, but it was also an incredibly positive atmosphere as well. It was so loud, I’ve not heard anything that loud.

“Even during the rain delay, we were pitchside when we got moved into the bowels of the stadium – it was all quite depressing for us, but you could hear outside the DJ was playing English songs, then Mexican songs, trying to get them competing, and it was just an amazing party atmosphere. It just felt like two really strong footballing nations that were desperate to win.”

Pundit Kelly Somers: ‘They’re the kind of moments you live for’
Pundit Kelly Somers: ‘They’re the kind of moments you live for’ (BBC/Boom Cymru TV Limited)
Apple TV+ logo

Watch Apple TV+ free for 7 day

New subscribers only. £9.99/mo. after free trial. Plan auto-renews until cancelled.

Try for free

ADVERTISEMENT. If you sign up to this service we will earn commission. This revenue helps to fund journalism across The Independent.

Apple TV+ logo

Watch Apple TV+ free for 7 day

New subscribers only. £9.99/mo. after free trial. Plan auto-renews until cancelled.

Try for free

ADVERTISEMENT. If you sign up to this service we will earn commission. This revenue helps to fund journalism across The Independent.

Somers prepares for the post-match interviews, amid a concerning scene

“I think you just go into a bit of a zone as a reporter. I had a seat in the dugout, with Thomas Tuchel literally 20 metres to the left of me. I sit pitchside, and then someone from Fifa comes around and gets me on the 75th minute, so then you’re walking around the perimeter of the pitch, trying to watch the game at ground level, which is tough throughout anyway, but also walking and being instructed where you’re meant to go. So it’s a lot going through your brain at that moment. And then you have to go into the tunnel and watch from underneath just on a monitor for the last 10 minutes, which is also really strange. And then they pull you out as soon as the final whistle goes, you come straight back onto the pitch and wait.

“So I was standing there watching England singing Wonderwall. I saw Jordan Henderson fall and I saw Dan Burn help him. And then I was just waiting. And then it became quite apparent it was quite a serious injury. So it was a juxtaposition of two emotions because you saw England go from euphoria to then worrying about their teammate, and then eventually Harry Kane comes over.”

What it was like to do ‘the best interview ever’

“I’ve interviewed Harry quite a few times, and because of his teammate being injured, I didn’t want to catch him off guard with that, so I told him I’d have to ask about Jordan. He said, ‘Yeah, that’s fine, I don’t know much,’ and I didn’t notice his voice was gone. Obviously there’s a difference between talking to me closely and projecting your voice for a TV interview. So I think it surprised him as much as me that he couldn’t speak when he started talking. He didn’t know his voice had gone, which is what made it funnier.

“A few people said to me, ‘Why didn’t you stop? The poor guy couldn’t speak.’ But I’d spoken to him a few minutes before and he could speak, I’d seen him talking to the press officer. You know sometimes when you lose your voice, you haven’t lost it completely, you can cough your way back? Every time I asked a question I thought, I hope it’ll come back now. And it obviously never really did.

“It got more frantic after that, because I go down the tunnel and England are bringing their players out quite quickly for the rest of the post-match interviews. As I was going down, Jordan Henderson was being stretchered off in front of me, and there was actually a lot of concern around him. I waited in my position, which is kind of outside the England dressing room, and Harry came out pretty quickly, within five or ten minutes, with a throat sweet in his mouth and said he’d just switched his phone on and had so many messages not just about the game but about the interview as well, and that his voice had come back.

“That was probably one of the highest I’ve ever seen him. He’s very good at staying level-headed, but he was clearly loving the moment. I don’t know if he was embarrassed; I think he was, but took it in the best possible way. Then he went off and did loads of other interviews and word got back to us that he wanted to come back to us, so we did a second interview.”

Jude Bellingham and Karry Kane celebrate during the Mexico game
Jude Bellingham and Karry Kane celebrate during the Mexico game (The FA via Getty Images)

The voice returns!

“This is my fourth major tournament with England and I’ve been interviewing players for a while. Sometimes players ask to do interviews if they’ve got something specific to say, but that’s pretty rare. But I don’t think I’ve ever had a player ask to do an interview twice. Everything Harry does, he does to the highest standards and wants to do things properly, so he wanted to show his voice was back and give his proper post-match message to the nation. He didn’t want to let us down.

“He’s such an elite sportsman and so professional, sometimes we don’t see the humourous side. So it was really lovely to see that in the second interview as well, that he saw the light side and can take the mickey out of himself.”

What it’s like to interview players after the final whistle

“Those post match interviews are the best ones, where you get the best adrenaline buzz, where the questions ask themselves. That was one of England’s best ever World Cup performances, and to be there, the one asking the questions, is an incredible privilege. They’re the kind of moments you live for. And we’ve seen so many of the opposite of those. Congo was brilliant in terms of the way we won that, then everything about the Mexico win was just incredible, and I knew how high the players would be.”

The reaction to the interview

“It’s been quite crazy, everyone messaging, sending memes, loads of WhatsApps and Instagram DMs. Obviously I knew it was funny he didn’t have a voice, but I didn’t quite realise how it had been received and how crazy it would have gone. Afterwards my producer told me the pundits were really laughing and I was like, ‘Oh, really?’ and then you’re on to the next one. Within a few minutes I’m interviewing Jude Bellingham, and at the end I said, ‘Thanks Jude, it’s good to hear you’ve got a voice,’ and he said, ‘Yeah I heard Harry had a bit of trouble.’

Why it captured the mood so perfectly

“In the UK it was four o’clock in the morning and everyone’s knackered and feeling a bit rough. I think there were probably a lot of people without voices at home as well.

“It almost felt like there was a collective, ‘Oh my gosh, it’s over, thank God we’ve done it.’ And then we needed a laugh, and he gave us a bit of a laugh. It was the perfect tonic to a stressful game. I think there was 11 minutes of added time, so we’re talking over one hundred minutes of pure stress! And then we all just got a big laugh. And people weren’t laughing at him, but with him and feeling his pain and just enjoying another moment that no one expected. It was an evening of the unexpected and that just capped it off really.

“We couldn’t have written it. But it shows how football and live TV and the unpredictability of it still provides these moments. Not only the whole night which was incredible, but these individual moments that we all love and need as a nation.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related News

Why the Goodyear blimp is being seen across London’s skies – and when to see it – UK Times

Why the Goodyear blimp is being seen across London’s skies – and when to see it – UK Times

10 July 2026
British-Australian pianist Jayson Gillham loses fight against Melbourne orchestra over Gaza comments – UK Times

British-Australian pianist Jayson Gillham loses fight against Melbourne orchestra over Gaza comments – UK Times

10 July 2026
EasyJet finally agrees to rival £5.7bn takeover bid from US giant – UK Times

EasyJet finally agrees to rival £5.7bn takeover bid from US giant – UK Times

10 July 2026
Fish and chip shop staff say working in heatwave is ‘horrendous’ | Manchester News

Fish and chip shop staff say working in heatwave is ‘horrendous’ | Manchester News

10 July 2026
Amazon Prime Video cancels series with 100% Rotten Tomatoes score – and its lead star is disappointed – UK Times

Amazon Prime Video cancels series with 100% Rotten Tomatoes score – and its lead star is disappointed – UK Times

10 July 2026
6 tips to build a comfortable financial safety net – UK Times

6 tips to build a comfortable financial safety net – UK Times

10 July 2026
Top News
Earnings or valuations what’s really driving markets

Earnings or valuations what’s really driving markets

10 July 2026
Why the Goodyear blimp is being seen across London’s skies – and when to see it – UK Times

Why the Goodyear blimp is being seen across London’s skies – and when to see it – UK Times

10 July 2026
FIFA have stained this World Cup at every turn with inconsistency and self-interest… but honest and talented England are just three steps from glory, writes IAN LADYMAN

FIFA have stained this World Cup at every turn with inconsistency and self-interest… but honest and talented England are just three steps from glory, writes IAN LADYMAN

10 July 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest UK news and updates directly to your inbox.

Recent Posts

  • Earnings or valuations what’s really driving markets
  • Why the Goodyear blimp is being seen across London’s skies – and when to see it – UK Times
  • FIFA have stained this World Cup at every turn with inconsistency and self-interest… but honest and talented England are just three steps from glory, writes IAN LADYMAN
  • British-Australian pianist Jayson Gillham loses fight against Melbourne orchestra over Gaza comments – UK Times
  • EasyJet finally agrees to rival £5.7bn takeover bid from US giant – UK Times

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
© 2026 UK Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version