Sunday, September 8, 2024

England vs Spain Euro 2024 live updates: Team news, score, highlights from final in Berlin

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Spain and England face off in the Euro 2024 final Sunday at the Olympiastadion in Berlin, the winner being crowned the champion of Europe.

Spain has won the tournament three times and a fourth would break a tie with Germany to become the first country with four championships. Meanwhile, England has never won the tournament and is back in the final after finishing runner-up in Euro 2020.

Sunday’s showdown kicks off at 3 p.m. ET, airing on Fox TV.

Keep it here for live updates from the match on Sunday:

The Euro 2024 final will air on FOX and can be streamed on FoxSports.com or Fubo.

Odds via BetMGM

Regular time result

  • Spain: +145
  • England: +240
  • Draw: +180

Odds to lift the trophy

Spain lineup Euro 2024

Spain coach Luis de la Fuente made two changes to his starting side for Sunday’s Euro 2024 final. After missing Spain’s semifinal win over France, defenders Dani Carvajal and Robin Le Normand return from suspension in place of Nacho and Jesus Navas.

LINEUP: Unai Simon (GK); Dani Carvajal, Aymeric Laporte, Robin Le Normand, Marc Cucurella; Rodri, Fabian Ruiz; Lamine Yamal, Dani Olmo, Nico Williams; Alvaro Morata (c).

England lineup Euro 2024

Manager Gareth Southgate made one change from the semifinal win over the Netherlands, bringing Luke Shaw in for Kieran Trippier. Shaw scored a goal in the Euro 2020 final.

LINEUP: Jordan Pickford (GK); Kyle Walker, Marc Guehi, John Stones, Luke Shaw; Declan Rice, Kobbie Mainoo, Bukayo Saka; Jude Bellingham, Phil Foden, Harry Kane (c)

Sunday’s final between Spain and England kicks off at 3 p.m. ET, airing on Fox.

Captain Harry Kane and his England teammates are desperate to banish the disappointment of losing the last European championship final by overcoming Spain in Sunday’s decider in Berlin, and winning a first major trophy in almost 60 years.

Kane is one of eight of the squad in Germany who competed three years ago when England lost at home to Italy, beaten at Wembley on post-match penalties.

“A lot of us after that final were, obviously, heartbroken with the result. And, as always, it’s a long journey getting back to where we are now. So full credit to the boys for the resilience that they’ve shown,” Kane said at Saturday’s pre-final press conference.

“And yeah, it just speaks volumes for the mentality of this squad. So we’re really happy to be back in another European final and, of course, we’re really desperate to go that one step further than what we did last time.”

— Reuters

Why does England say ‘it’s coming home’?

The phrase comes from a song entitled “Three Lions,” released prior to Euro 1996 by David Baddiel and Frank Skinner with the rock band the Lightning Seeds.

Euro 1996 was held in England, and the song is about the national team’s “30 years of hurt” and disappointment since winning the 1966 World Cup.

Berlin showed its best side with warm temperatures and blue skies during the day as fans in respective team colorrs milled around the city. But there were isolated showers before the stadium gates opened three hours before kick off.

However, it was forecast to be clear and 68 degrees when the match kicks off.

Supporters in their team colors were good-naturedly drinking in a traditional beer garden situated near the stadium, or queuing up in long rows to gain entry to the venue.

– Reuters

Fabián Ruiz shines in Spain midfield

Spanish midfielder Fabian Ruiz was not on many people’s radar when Euro 2024 began after struggling to hold down a starting place at PSG and the national team.

But after a string of dazzling performances in Germany, he is finally making fans and pundits take note.

The 28-year-old, has been a motor for Spain during their six-win charge to Sunday’s final against England in Berlin’s Olympiastadion where his team are after a record fourth Euros title.

Fabian has been one of the uplifting stories of the tournament, becoming a cornerstone of coach Luis de la Fuente’s project after almost two years being overlooked by former boss Luis Enrique who left him out of the 2022 World Cup squad.

– Reuters

Jesus Navas: ‘Country is everything for me’

Spain’s Jesus Navas is retiring at the end of the year and has been nursing a hip injury for about five seasons, but nothing will stop the 38-year-old going into battle for one last big trophy in Sunday’s Euro 2024 final against England.

Navas, who has been with the team for 15 years, is the last remaining player of Spain’s golden generation that won the world and European titles more than a decade ago.

A World Cup winner in 2010 and a European champion two years later, Navas, who is retiring in December, wants to cap a sensational career with another title.

“I have been having a problem with my hip for four or five years but playing… for my country is everything for me,” Navas told a press conference on Saturday.

“Afterwards everything hurts but it is about giving it all you have on the day, to be the same person with the same kind of humility.”

– Reuters

Gareth Southgate is 90 minutes away from completing his eight-year mission to “win the respect of the football world,” when a win over Spain in Sunday’s Euro 2024 final would finally earn England a slot on the big screen highlights reel.

Southgate gave his penultimate news conference of the tournament in the bowels of Berlin’s Olympiastadion just over 24 hours before his team will run out seeking to finally win another major trophy to go alongside the 1966 World Cup.

The “58 years of hurt” that have followed that Wembley success usually featured a routine of overblown expectation followed by massive disappointment, and Southgate felt that that boom and bust was a self-perpetuating cycle.

“We tried to change the mindset from the start, we’ve tried to be more honest about where we were as a football nation,” he said.

— Reuters

Spain ‘will try to impose ourselves’ in final

 The best advice Spain’s manager Luis de la Fuente can give his players as they prepare to face England in the Euro 2024 final is to stay true to their identity of playing entertaining football, he said on Saturday.

Spain have taken the tournament by storm with six straight wins, including a comeback against France in their semi-final despite missing several key starters.

They did it without sacrificing their attacking style, a mentality and confidence that De la Fuente believes they must stay loyal to for Sunday’s clash.

“If we are not Spain, we have no chance,” De la Fuente told a press conference on Saturday.

– Reuters

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