In the article, it was said that: "Jude Bellingham is deluded if he thinks he was England's Euros scapegoat - he is showing a childlike absence of responsibility. The truth of the matter is that Bellingham didn’t have a great summer with England. He was not alone. He scored that magnificent goal but his general play was far below his usual standards."
Indeed, fans on social media have expressed similar concerns about Bellingham's "scapegoat" comments.
User Duncan Wright wronte on 'X': "Bellingham felt mistreated? The bloke went into the Euros happy to front an entire commercial campaign portraying him as the saviour of English football, banking the money as he self assumed that role on the pedestal. Then threw a tantrum when he received scrutiny? Nah, grow up."
Neo added: Jude Bellingham making out he was a scapegoat for the Euro final defeat? The coverage of him before and after was gushing. What is he genuinely on about the c***."
Gareth Kaye, meanwhile, referred to David Beckham's treatment in the past, adding: "Jesus, these current lot should see what Beckham had to go through in 1998, then they would know 'scapegoat' actually looks like!"
Dr Dolittle wrote: "God, he genuinely loves the attention. The man needs to properly chill out, the world doesn’t revolve around him."