Megan Pickford turned england goalie prep into a TikTok shopping trip, showing a luxury run to Celine before England’s first World Cup match. She opened the video in the back of a taxi with a friend, then walked viewers through clothes, a bag check, and a final verdict: she was ready.
Celine and the £6150 top
The clearest price tag in the video was a cream top listed at £6150, which she put back on the shelf. Pickford also showed clothing in white, red and blue, picked up a red clutch, and tried on a navy dress, a red skirt, and white shorts. The shopping choice was less about one outfit than about building a full match-week wardrobe around a trip to the tournament.
She also paired white shorts with a blue Pickford jersey and wrote, “Brought husband's top with me.” The jersey was then tried with white trousers and a red belt, the kind of styling pivot that turns a simple pre-tournament shop into a piece of social-video content built around outfit changes rather than one purchase.
Bag policy at the stadiums
Pickford and her friend checked the FIFA website’s bag policy for their stadiums before making a final choice, then used a tape measure to size up the red clutch. The clear-bag rule allows a small wallet clutch measuring 4.5 inches by 6.5 inches, and she spelled out the problem in her overlay text: “Measuring handbags because I can't use a sandwich bag.”
That detail is the friction in the story. A luxury shopping trip sounds open-ended until stadium rules narrow the options, and the bag check turns fashion into logistics. Even the shop’s ice cream for Pickford and her friend fits that rhythm: indulgent on camera, tightly bounded by what they can actually carry in.
17 June in Dallas
England’s first game is against Croation on 17 June in Dallas, and Pickford’s video is part of the wider attention around what England partners wear around major tournaments. She married Jordan Pickford in 2020, and the two had been together since secondary school, so the personal timeline here runs alongside the public one.
11 June opens the tournament in Mexico City, and England then faces Ghana on 23 June in Boston before Panama on 27 June in New York. For readers watching the off-pitch side of the campaign, the practical takeaway is simple: the outfit is still fluid, the clutch has to pass the size test, and the public image work is already underway before the first kick in Dallas.





