England may have been one of the last teams to begin their World Cup campaign but it was worth the wait.The 4-2 victory over Croatia on Wednesday was one of the most entertaining games of the tournament and showcased the kind of intensity and positivity which England have only rarely shown in major tournaments in recent years, even if there were defensive deficiencies.Now, with qualification for the last 32 almost guaranteed, Thomas Tuchel is preparing to face Ghana in Foxboro tomorrow. So should he stick with a winning formula or change things up? Six Athletic experts name their XIs.Get free access to the most comprehensive World Cup coverage in The Athletic appJack Pitt-BrookeWhy change a winning team? England got off to the best possible start against Croatia in Dallas. There is no reason at this point to change any of that.If they beat Ghana on Tuesday then the only way they cannot win Group L is if Panama beat Croatia in Toronto on Tuesday (unlikely) and then beat England in New Jersey next Saturday. So it makes sense to go all-out this time and then rotate for the third game.I would stick with Noni Madueke, while Bukayo Saka has time to get fully fit (he was not even in full training with England on Saturday). Stick with Anthony Gordon, using Marcus Rashford as a ‘finisher’ from the bench. Even stick with Declan Rice, for now, although he did not look at 100 per cent in Dallas.You could make a case for Marc Guehi over Ezri Konsa, but if Konsa is the first choice then he might as well get game-time. Win this game, hopefully win Group L and then give chances to Guehi, Rashford, Saka, Morgan Rogers and whoever else in the third game against Panama.Amelie ClaydonEngland do not need a reshuffle, but they do need to protect themselves against Ghana’s clearest route into the game — winning the ball and breaking into the space behind Tuchel’s full-backs.Their late winner against Panama came on the break and England left enough space behind them against Croatia to make Guehi the sensible choice alongside John Stones. Guehi offers more recovery pace than Konsa, while Stones remains the defender best equipped to help England play through a low block.Rashford should be the other change despite Gordon’s solid performance against Croatia, given he altered the game from the bench. With Saka still being managed, starting Rashford on the left would preserve Madueke’s role on the right and give England another direct runner.