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Football's coming home! It's coming home it's coming! 3 Lions on the shirt!

HALF-TIME
England 0-0 Germany

We're 45 minutes in and still none the wiser who is going to be lifting this Euros trophy.
 
EXTRA TIME
England 1-1 Germany

As tense as it gets!
 
FULL-TIME
England 2-1 Germany

ENGLAND ARE EUROPEAN CHAMPIONS!!!!!!
 
England created history by winning their first major women's tournament in a dramatic Euro 2022 final against old rivals and eight-time champions Germany at Wembley.

Chloe Kelly, on as a substitute, poked home a loose ball from a corner to send a raucous record crowd of 87,192 into a frenzy with ten minutes of extra time remaining.

She waited for confirmation of the goal before taking off her shirt and waving it around her head, while being lifted by her team-mates in a moment of pure elation.

On a monumental day in the history of English football, Sarina Wiegman's side showed they were equal to anything a strong and physical German team could throw at them.

Ella Toone had earlier come off the bench to score the opener in normal time before Germany's Lina Magull set up a nervous ending when she equalised in the 79th minute.

There were scenes of jubilation in the stands and an outpouring of emotion by players on the pitch at full-time as the magnitude of their achievement began to sink in.

The final was advertised as a battle between the competition's two best-performing sides, and for large parts they cancelled each other out - but the biggest crowd in the history of a men's or women's Euros was given their money's worth.

Striker Ellen White had missed a few chances in the first half, Lucy Bronze had been denied with a header, Germany's Magull struck wide and England defender Leah Williamson had to scramble a corner off the line before Toone was introduced to break the deadlock.

She had given England fans the winning taste before Magull stunned the home crowd, though it would only delay the celebrations that Kelly, who only returned to football in April after suffering an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury, gave them.

England did what no other nation had done before - beat serial winners Germany in a European Women's Championship final and the feeling was sweet.

It comes 56 years after England's men beat West Germany in the 1966 World Cup final, the only previous major trophy won by a men's or women's England senior team.

The players fell to the ground at full-time in tears of joy, in scenes which will be remembered and replayed for years to come on one of the greatest nights in English sport.

Perfect ending for hosts England

It was a final like no other in every sense - the build-up to it was on a scale above anything previously seen in women's football in Great Britain and it was the perfect ending.

Male fans were sporting England shirts with their female icons' names on the back on the London Underground on the way to the match, while fan parks around the country were filled with supporters watching the final on big screens.

Wembley Way was already packed on Sunday morning and there were boos when Germany were announced on the stadium tannoy before kick-off.

The feistiness off the pitch translated on to it too - referee Kateryna Monzul awarded two early yellow cards for relatively soft fouls by England, and the crowd were frustrated for much of the first half when decisions didn't go their way.

The physical battle between the sides continued and the game swung back and forth. Germany had momentum going into extra time after Magull had hit the post before equalising.

But as this England team have shown throughout the tournament - they would not be beaten easily.

They continued to threaten and Kelly ran over to the fans to galvanise them when taking a corner, moments before she delivered the winner England fans across the country have dreamed about for 56 years.

Kelly's moment after comeback fairytale

The familiar sound of England fans singing 'Sweet Caroline' while serenading the players at full-time was even sweeter this time around.

The Three Lions lyrics have finally come true as football came home at the national stadium in front of the largest crowd in England women's history.

Captain Williamson was sobbing at full-time while vice-captain Millie Bright wiped tears from her face in an embrace with best friend Rachel Daly.

Wiegman, who has now become the first manager in history to win back-to-back Euros with two different nations after also guiding the Netherlands to glory in 2017, also let down her mask of calmness as she ran on to the pitch with her arms in the air and a look of disbelief.

Midfielder Jill Scott, who had suffered defeat at the hands of the Germans in the final in 2009, came on in extra time to help England get over the line and was overcome with emotion.

Young Manchester United star Toone, who has come off the bench to contribute three goals in this tournament, took centre stage when she opened the scoring - but the biggest moment was Kelly's.

After being forced to sit out the Olympic Games and miss 11 months of football, she fought her way into selection for the Euros and has delivered the goal which will never be forgotten.

Victory in the final was capped by England forward Beth Mead picking up the Golden Boot as the tournament's top scorer with six goals and five assists.

England lifted the trophy to a standing ovation and defender Bronze then slid across the pitch, covered in confetti, before the players embarked on a victory lap draped in flags of Saint George.

BBC
 
Congratulations to English fans! Women's team going one step further after the men's heartbreak.
 
The Queen has led the tributes to England's Euro 2022 winners, sending a message of congratulations in which she called them "an inspiration".
 
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Congrats to the Lionesses on their wonderful performance. I thought they played a cleaner game than Germany, one of whose tackles deserved a straight red IMO.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is brilliant &#55357;&#56834;<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BBCFootball?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#BBCFootball</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BBCEuros?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#BBCEuros</a></p>— BBC Sport (@BBCSport) <a href="https://twitter.com/BBCSport/status/1553995191807184897?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 1, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
On a side note I am quite surprised liberals have not shored up to highlight the lack of racial diversity in the Women's team. :/
 
England had a good opportunity to win Euro 2021 but they blew it.

I think this type of slogan (coming home) puts pressure on the team.
 
Sky Sports pundit Graeme Souness says he does not regret describing football as "a man's game" after Chelsea's fiery 2-2 draw with Tottenham.

His comments drew criticism from Chelsea striker and Euro 2022 winner Beth England and ex-England international Eniola Aluko.

Souness was analysing the physical nature of the game and referee Anthony Taylor's approach.

"It's a man's game all of a sudden again," Souness said on Sunday.

"I think we've got our football back, as I would enjoy football - men at it, blow for blow, and the referee letting them get on with it."

Former Liverpool and Scotland midfielder Souness was sitting beside Karen Carney, who won 144 caps for England.

Presenter Dave Jones immediately added: "It's also a woman's game as well."

It followed a dramatic London derby at Stamford Bridge which ended in an angry confrontation between managers Thomas Tuchel and Antonio Conte. Both were shown red cards after the final whistle.

Aluko responded to Souness' remarks on social media, writing: "Awkward turtles, Graeme Souness talking about 'it's a man's game again' sat next to an England centurion Karen Carney, two weeks after the Lionesses end a 56-year wait and win European Championships. Come on. It's not OK."

England, who was in Sarina Wiegman's Euros-winning squad, said: "What a disgraceful thing to say after the summer this country has just seen."

Speaking to Talksport on Monday, 69-year-old Souness said he regretted "not a word" of what he said in Sunday's broadcast.

"Let me explain," he said. "I've been advocating for years that the referees have such a major part to play in the success of the Premier League.

"We've got to be careful what we say today and I've not been very good at that, but we were becoming like other leagues.

"The refs were blowing the whistle all the time, the game didn't flow and it just wasn't a very good watch. Our game has always been unique, always been more meaty, more in our face, more intense and we've got away from that.

"Yesterday in my comments I said we've got our game back. That's the kind of football I remember playing. Our league will be better for it - we are back."

Later in a statement released through Sky, Souness said: "To clarify my comments from yesterday, I was referring to the two Premier League matches I watched live on Sunday afternoon, rather than the sport of football.

"Football is a game for everyone to enjoy."

BBC
 
Here we go again!

One scrappy win vs Serbia and people already dreaming of a parade down streets of London with a Trophy in hand...
 
someone said southgate the kinda guy to put his phone on charger when its at 99%, wasting this england team.
 
Same pundits who were praising them for that 1-0 over Serbia have now turned against England....
 
England want to build on Lionesses' legacy – Rice

England midfielder Declan Rice says the men's team can take inspiration from the Lionesses to become a nation of winners in Sunday's Euro 2024 final against Spain.

England's women ended the country's 56-year wait for a major title - since the men's victory in the 1966 World Cup - with a dramatic final win over Germany at Euro 2022.

Having reached consecutive European Championship finals, Gareth Southgate's side will be hoping to emulate their female counterparts in the showpiece in Berlin - and banish painful memories of their Wembley defeat by Italy at Euro 2020.

"We saw when the women's team won it, what it meant to them and the nation," said Arsenal midfielder Rice, who has been a mainstay in England's side during the tournament.

"I see some of the girls at Arsenal and that's what we want. We want to win and make the nation proud.

"We are back in another final, which is history itself, but now we are aiming to do one more.

"We don't want to keep talking about it and getting to finals and be happy with that.

"We now want to be a country where we win. We want to continue to grow and, for the young players coming in, we want to be a really big force."

'We were too naive'

Rice was part of the England side which lost on penalties to Italy in their first Euros final three years ago.

The 25-year-old says the Three Lions were "naive" in front of their home crowd at Wembley, but are desperate to overcome 2008 and 2012 winners Spain.

"Seeing Italy walk up to lift the trophy at your home stadium lives with you as a football player," added Rice.

"We know that in the last final we probably just sat off and didn't attack as much as we should have. There are not many times you go back-to-back in finals but this group of players are so hungry.

"We know it's going to be tough and know you can't overlook Spain, who have been a top nation for so many years. But I've never seen a group so motivated, in training, and how we talk with each other around the place.

"Everyone is so driven to win this game."

Rice's sentiment was echoed by defender Kyle Walker, who says England will be better for their previous experience and under less pressure in a final played on foreign soil.

"The emotion of Wembley was completely different, with miles and miles of people chanting you and cheering you on as you leave St George's Park," Walker told BBC Radio 5 Live.

"We're on a different turf now and maybe that might work to our benefit, where there's not so much pressure on us.

"But as people and players, who have experienced these finals before, we have to deliver on the big occasions."

BBC
 
Man seeing how England swept through this Euro , they might go all the way.

Supprting Spain, Viva la Espana

England had it pretty easy. They just had to beat Switzerland and Netherlands. Much easier teams.

Spain had it rough. They had to go through Germany and France (two heavyweights).
 
England had it pretty easy. They just had to beat Switzerland and Netherlands. Much easier teams.

Spain had it rough. They had to go through Germany and France (two heavyweights).
Not to forget the controversial penalty
 
We’re not creative enough and we’re not positive enough……….
 
England 'could face Euros ban' over regulator plan

Uefa has warned ministers that England could be excluded from the European Championship it is co-hosting in 2028 over "concerns" that a planned independent football regulator could lead to "government interference" in the sport.

A bill to establish a body to oversee the top five tiers of the men's game in England was reintroduced in July.

The UK government has said the football watchdog will "protect clubs" by "ensuring their financial sustainability".

But in a letter sent to Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy and seen by BBC Sport, Uefa general secretary Theodore Theodoridis wrote: "We do have concerns remaining... as normally football regulation should be managed by the national federation.

"One particular area of concern stems from one of Uefa's fundamental requirements, which is that there should be no government interference in the running of football.

"We have specific rules that guard against this in order to guarantee the autonomy of sport and fairness of sporting competition; the ultimate sanction for which would be excluding the federation from Uefa and teams from competition."

The FA's exclusion from Uefa could also prevent English clubs from competing in European competitions. But a Uefa source suggested that officials did not expect it to reach that stage.

'Scope creep'

The previous government announced plans to appoint a regulator last year following a fan-led review, which said such a body was necessary for the long-term financial stability of the men's professional game after issues including mismanagement and plans for a breakaway European Super League.

The regulator will oversee a licensing system to ensure clubs are run sustainably, take over a strengthened owners and directors test, and give fans a greater say in key decisions.

But Theodoridis warned Nandy: "Uefa is concerned about the potential for scope creep within the IFR [independent football regulator].

"While the initial intent of the IFR is to oversee the long-term financial sustainability of clubs and heritage assets, there is always a risk that, once established, the IFR may expand its mandate beyond these areas."

That "could undermine the established structures and processes of the sport, and amount to government interference", he wrote.

He added that it was "imperative to protect and preserve the independence of the FA", and that legislation that "compromises the FA's autonomy as the primary regulator of football in England" would not comply with the Uefa and Fifa statutes.

"It follows that the criteria defining and evaluating the IFR's independence must be meticulously crafted to avoid potential conflicts with the FA's role. This is necessary to prevent sanctions under Uefa and Fifa statutes.

"The IFR's scope must remain focused on the long-term financial sustainability of clubs with a view to ensuring that it does not overstep into areas that might be perceived as external interference in football governance."

Theodoridis also warned Nandy that clauses in the legislation that oblige the regulator to consider the government's foreign and trade policy objectives when deciding on the suitability of future owners "raise specific concerns".

He added that Uefa "respectfully requires further clarification and understanding... in this context to ensure compliance with the Uefa Statutes and to prevent unwanted implications for football governance".

Backstop power

The reintroduced Football Governance Bill will also give the new regulator "backstop powers", which could be used to intervene between the Premier League and the English Football League (EFL) after their failure to agree a funding deal. Talks over a so-called 'New Deal' collapsed in March, with the two organisations unable to agree a funding plan.

In his letter, Theodoridis told Nandy that "the concept of a backstop power introduces significant concerns regarding the balance of power within football governance".

He wrote: "Mandating redistribution which effects the competitive balance in the game and wider European competition would be of concern to us. We also fear that having a third party intervene in redistribution would likely prevent amicable solutions being found.

"As we see it, the 'backstop' power, while intended as a safety net, should be carefully reconsidered to avoid undermining these fundamental principles."

In a statement, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) said: "The Football Governance Bill will establish a new Independent Football Regulator that will put fans back at the heart of the game, and tackle fundamental governance problems to ensure that English football is sustainable for the benefit of the clubs' communities going forward."

Privately, officials are said to believe there is no risk of England being banned by Uefa.

'Scare story'

In May, David Newton, the FA's head of football operations, told MPs: "Uefa and Fifa have statutes of their own, which basically prevent state interference in the running of football and football competitions.

"We have worked closely with Uefa and Fifa, and with the DCMS... They have been taken through where we have got to.

"Although we have not had a definitive view as such, it is reasonably clear that a tightness of the bill relating to football governance is not likely to present huge or significant problems, subject to any changes that may occur.

"However, anything wider would increase the risk of Fifa or Uefa intervention. That is obviously a place we do not want to be, because of the sanctions that may flow, in theory, from that."

Niall Couper, chief executive of football campaign group Fair Game, said: "This is nothing short of a scare story.

"With 58% of the top 92 technically insolvent and annual loses of £10m a year in the Championship viewed as 'a success', football is an industry in desperate need of financial reform. The government should not be derailed by such nonsense."

Last month, the Premier League said it "looked forward" to working with the new government, but that "it was critical that the regulation was proportionate and effective".

Uefa declined to comment.

BBC
 
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