EURO 2020 FINAL

England dare to dream ahead of Euro 2020 final against impressive Italy

Sunday's match will be the culmination of a remarkable turnaround in Italian fortunes since Roberto Mancini took over as coach.

Italy captain Giorgio Chiellini and England captain Harry Kane. Foto: AFP

England fans are looking forward to a first major tournament final in 55 years as their team prepare to face Italy in the Euro 2020 final at Wembley on Sunday.

Three years on from their defeat by Croatia in the World Cup semi-final, Gareth Southgate's men overcame Denmark 2-1 in extra time at a rocking Wembley on Wednesday to reach their first European Championship final.

Italy were also pushed beyond 90 minutes by Spain in their semi-final on Tuesday, but won on penalties to keep their bid for a first Euro title since 1968 alive.

England stand just one game away from ending their long and painful trophy drought, which dates all the way back to the 1966 World Cup. 

But Italy are on a 33-match unbeaten run, reviving their reputation on the global stage after an embarrassing failure to even reach the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

A Wembley crowd of almost 65,000 whipped themselves into a frenzy against Denmark with rousing renditions of "Sweet Caroline" and "Three Lions (Football's Coming Home)."

The decisive moment came late in the first period of extra time when Dutch referee Danny Makkelie awarded a spot-kick for Joakim Maehle's challenge on Raheem Sterling which survived a VAR check, and England held out to seal the win after Harry Kane scored on the rebound after his penalty was saved by Kasper Schmeichel.

The final whistle sparked scenes of pandemonium inside Wembley – hosting the biggest crowd in the UK since the start of the coronavirus pandemic – and across the country.

Flag-waving fans in London's Trafalgar Square abandoned their seating to merge into a huge, swaying crowd after the final whistle. One group of supporters climbed on top of a double-decker bus.

For Denmark, defeat spelt the end of a fairytale run to the last four after the trauma of witnessing star Christian Eriksen collapse in their opening group game against Finland following a cardiac arrest.

 

Vibrant young team

England have suffered semi-final heartbreak at major tournaments four times since 1966 and those agonising defeats have been etched in the psyche of English football.

But Southgate has overseen the emergence of a vibrant young team unconcerned by the failings of their predecessors.

"They've responded to what was always going to be a really challenging night," Southgate said of his players, who had not conceded a goal until the Denmark game. "We were so smooth through the quarter-final and relatively unscathed through the second round. We knew that at some point we were going to concede and we would have to respond."

The semi-final was attended by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Prince William, who is president of the English Football Association.

Johnson, who initially refused to condemn fans for booing the England team while they took the knee earlier in the tournament, has not ruled out the prospect of an 'emergency' bank holiday should England triumph on Sunday.

But captain Kane was determined to stress that nothing was won yet.

"It's the first time in our history as a nation, getting through to the European final at Wembley, and it's one of the proudest moments in my life, for sure," said the Tottenham Hotspur star. "But we haven't won it yet, we've got one more to go."

 

Impressive Italy

Italy reached their 10th major tournament final with a tense victory over Spain.

Sunday's match will be the culmination of a remarkable turnaround in the team's fortunes since Roberto Mancini took over as coach following the doomed qualifying campaign for the World Cup.

"Beyond the players, I'd say that everything comes from Mancini who knows how to make the right choices," Italy legend Dino Zoff told AFP.

"For me, it's not a surprise to see Italy in the final. I was convinced they'd do well."

Midfielder Marco Verratti said the Azzurri were "climbing back to where they belong" ahead of Sunday's final, also at England's home ground after the pan-European tournament.

"It's the dream you have as a kid as a footballer," he said. "I think it will be an epic final, history-making either way."

Defender Leonardo Bonucci warned that Italy were not scared of taking on England on home soil.

"Playing at their home does not scare us," the 34-year-old Juventus centre-back told a press conference Friday.

"We're only thinking about playing football and having fun. The rest is just chatter. On the pitch there will be the best show for European and world football from Italy, England and the referees.

"We are looking forward to taking to the field even though most of the fans present will be English. We want to do something historic, have a great performance and then we'll see how it ends."

Veteran Italy duo Bonucci and captain Giorgio Chiellini, 36, will be tasked with stopping Kane and, England's star performer at this tournament.

"Young against old men..." smiled Bonucci. "Kane? We're not discovering him now, it's been years that he's being doing good things with Tottenham, England.

"In the last three matches we've been lucky to come up against the three best strikers in the world. It's just an added motivation not to concede anything.

"They have very strong forward, we will need to be very careful of them, the defence and the whole team.

Bonucci and Chiellini are the only remaining players from the Italy team that lost the Euro 2012 final to Spain.

"Mancini pushed us right from the first day," continued Bonucci. "There we felt everyone's desire to start again. He worked on the mind, giving us back our confidence, enthusiasm, self-esteem."

The postponement of the tournament also helped Italy rebuild, he believes.

"It helped us one more year. Experience for everyone, young and even us older players.

 

– TIMES/AFP