In reaching England's first ever final overseas in a major tournament, Gareth Southgate's side broke new ground. Along the way they displayed impressive resilience, in addition to their high levels of skill and tactical awareness.
Even in the early rounds when they were not at their best, they always found a way through.
Critics said that they were lucky, but, like all the best teams, they made their own fortune through their determination to keep going.
This was the fourth successive tournament where England reached at least the quarter-finals, a record that far surpasses anything previously achieved.
Central to the side's appeal was its success in blending the modern and the traditional. In its diversity, with the majority of its players of migrant heritage, it was strikingly representative of changing Britain.
That is a key reason why, in contrast to the past, ethnic minority communities have been unequivocal about supporting England.
One of the most moving images of this tournament has been the sight of the flag of St George flying proudly in multiracial urban neighbourhoods.
Esta historia es de la edición July 15, 2024 de Daily Express.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición July 15, 2024 de Daily Express.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Blues make Marc as Guiu hits the jackpot
HAT-TRICK HERO IS QUICK TO SHATTER IRISH HOPES
Lane needs more rain
KEMPTON GROUND FEARS FOR JP'S TEAM
Festive-flavoured vapes slammed by top NHS doctor
Spike in admissions among young users
Profs win battle over smokers' wall
TWO Oxford dons have won a six-figure row with a hotel next door over a collapsed garden wall and its staff \"smoking and chatting\" too close to their home.
PoW life's such a drag for officer in panto
THE war diaries of a British PoW who became an unlikely star attraction in camp as a panto dame have come to light 79 years on.
There's NUN so good at crime fighting!
Ahead of its Christmas special, JAMES RAMPTON visits the picturesque Cotswolds set of Sister Boniface Mysteries (at the height of summer) to discover just why the Sixties-set cosy crime drama has captivated audiences all over the world
Puffin pic secures prize for teenage twitcher Anwen
THIS picture of a plaintive puffin has been picked for the top prize in the RSPCA Young Photographer Awards.
'Blast' prank by soldier ‘reckless'
A SOLDIER left colleagues with hearing loss after \"recklessly\" setting off a battle noise simulator to celebrate the end of an exercise, a court martial heard.
Vegetarian piranha and DiCaprio snake among new species
AVEGETARIAN piranha from the Amazon and a flying dinosaur found on the Isle of Skye are among the species previously unknown to science that have been named this year.
Anger over takeover of Titanic shipbuilder
Critics fear final assembly will move from Belfast to Spain