England began Euro 2024 as one of the pre-tournament favourites but now go into Sunday’s final as underdogs as Spain have been the standout team at the tournament.
La Roja have made Euros history by winning all six of their games en route to Berlin, knocking out hosts Germany and France along the way.
SuperSport looks at how England can raise their game to end a 58-year wait to win a major tournament.
STRIKE EARLY
England have relied on late goals to sneak past Slovakia, Switzerland and the Netherlands to reach a second consecutive Euros final.
BEAT THE PRESS
Spain’s pressing game has been one of the keys to their success in Germany.
No side has forced more turnovers within 40 metres of the opposition goal, two of which have led to goals.
One of England’s problems early in the tournament was failing to take risks in passing forward, even against perceived weaker opposition.
In Berlin, they have to be brave to get through the first wave of Spanish pressure and into the spaces where they can do damage going forward.
FEED FODEN AND BELLINGHAM
Southgate has stuck by starting both Jude Bellingham and Phil Foden all tournament despite both starring in the same role for their clubs last season as advanced midfielders.
The England boss finally got some reward in the semifinal with the Dutch, against a more offensive-minded side, Foden and Bellingham found the space to spark a laboured attack into life.
Foden’s Manchester City teammate Rodri has looked supreme all tournament in the Spanish midfield.
But with Fabian Ruiz and Dani Olmo pushing forward, Rodri is the sole holding midfielder which should leave gaps for Bellingham and Foden to exploit if given the service.
HARNESS EXPERIENCE
Despite Spain’s much greater pedigree in winning major tournaments, it is England who have the edge in big-game experience.
Eight of Southgate’s squad played in the defeat on penalties to Italy at the Euro 2020 final and England also boast seven Champions League winners to Spain’s six.
“Quarterfinals, semifinals, we’ve managed a lot of those games now,” said Southgate on learning from the final three years ago.
“You’re definitely much better prepared because every experience you go through, you learn from. You’re improving all the time.”
England must lean on that know-how to get over the line, even if it does mean resorting to the dark arts.
Germany took a roughhouse approach to stopping Spain’s two wing starlets Lamine Yamal and Nico Williams in the quarterfinal and it largely worked.
Few in England will care about how the job is done as long as they are parading the trophy around central London on Monday.
USE THE BENCH
Ollie Watkins’ stoppage-time strike to beat the Netherlands in the semifinal rewarded Southgate’s bold call to send on the Aston Villa striker for Harry Kane 10 minutes from time.
Too often during this tournament and his tenure in charge, Southgate has been too slow to turn to his bench to influence the game.
In both the 2018 World Cup semifinal against Croatia and Euro 2020 final, England squandered an early lead by slowly losing control of the game.
Cole Palmer, Ivan Toney and Kobbie Mainoo have also made big impacts as substitutes earlier in the tournament.
Blessed with arguably the deepest squad at the Euros, Southgate must use it earlier than he has done so far, even if it means sacrificing one of his star names.