Is it time to finally give England keeper Jordan Pickford the credit he deserves as he enters the World Cup history books, asks chief football writer Phil McNulty.

England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford celebrates after his superb display in the win against Mexico at The Azteca. England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford enters the history books when he faces Norway in the World Cup quarter-final in Miami. The 32-year-old Everton keeper will become England's most capped player in the tournament when he makes his 18th World Cup appearance, eclipsing the previous record held by Peter Shilton. Following his magnificent individual display in England's 3-2 victory in the last 16 against Mexico in the Azteca, it is another sign of how Pickford has maintained unrivalled status as first choice before his 90th international appearance in his fifth major tournament. Pickford's record is outstanding for both club and country so, after his performance in Mexico City, is it time the Wearsider finally received the recognition his record deserves? Pickford has been a model of consistency for Everton and England, as proved by his Premier League statistics. In the last two league seasons, Pickford's clean sheet record of 23 in the last two seasons is second only to David Raya, the keeper with Premier League champions Arsenal, who has 32. In his 89 England games, he has conceded 59 goals and kept 44 clean sheets while making, as measured by Opta statistics, only two errors that have led to goals.