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My cross to bear: what it means to support England in these divided times | Jonathan Liew

I feel utterly disconnected from England as a nation, but supporting their football team has brought me happinessIt’s the morning after my wedding. I’m sitting down to brunch with some friends of the family. While we’re waiting for the food to arrive, I pull out my phone and browse the latest sport headlines. “Oh look,” I announce to nobody in particular. “We won the Under-20 World Cup last night.” At this, my sister-in-law’s boyfriend narrows his eyes accusingly. “Who’s we?” “England,” I respond. He looks at me like I’ve just sprinkled salt on my cornflakes. “Huh,” he says eventually. “‘We’. That’s interesting.”I support England. England is by many objective measures a terrible country ruled by terrible people with a terrible...

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After delays and dashed hopes, wait is over and Euro 2020 party is here | Jonathan Liew

Italy, the first country in Europe to be hit by Covid, host Turkey in the tournament’s opening match, with both hoping to go farThe first thing you notice about Rome on the eve of Europe’s biggest carnival is that it does not exactly feel like a place on the verge of a carnival. Instead, like every other major city in these straitened, saddened times, it’s simply trying to survive: to get by, to salvage what’s left of what we used to call normality. The piazzas and cobbled alleys that would normally be thronged with tourists at the height of summer are populated mostly by smoking teenagers and waiters touting for business that isn’t there. If the start of Euro 2020...

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At the Euros, winning teams can start badly. It’s how they respond that matters | Pernille Harder

France are favourites, but I like the look of Portugal. And the question for England is can they handle the pressure?In an ideal world you would start a tournament perfectly and go through it winning everything. That’s what every team at the Euros wants to do. It is the pressure and expectation around that desire for perfection that derails so many teams and campaigns, because a loss early on becomes a big deal. But you can lose and progress. I was part of the Denmark team that showed that at the Euros in 2017: we lost to the Netherlands (who finished as champions) in our group but still got out of the group and reached the final.How you cope with...

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Benfica’s Luis Araújo: ‘With only one ball we have to put on a good session’

Portugal’s victory at Euro 2016 and formidable current team are thanks to long-term investment in coaches and youthIt is one of the iconic images of European Championship history. With Portugal closing out the final in Saint-Denis, Cristiano Ronaldo buzzes down the touchline, gesticulating wildly to his teammates with neither a limp nor the troublesome left leg that he continually clutches fettering his energy.Both in the breathless tension of the Stade de France that night and re-watching now, it feels as if Ronaldo is the coach. It was not the contribution to the Euro 2016 final that their captain and most talismanic player had imagined but despite his truncated involvement on the field, after Dimitri Payet ploughed through him early in...

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England must choose between pace and technique in their forward planning | Barney Ronay

The speed of Sterling and Rashford had seemed the default option in support of Kane, but can Southgate afford to leave the skills of Foden and Grealish on the substitutes’ bench?Welcome to the month of living dangerously. At the end of the strangest, most fractured build-up to any modern tournament England’s footballers have at least avoided one familiar pitfall.Too often this has been a tale of boredom and stale systems, of hotel-emptiness and simply waiting for things to start. Related: Harry Kane feels England in ‘better place’ than at 2018 World Cup Related: How we made Three Lions: David Baddiel and Ian Broudie on England’s Euro 96 anthem Continue reading...

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