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    Bilic questions England’s mentality ahead of Euro 2020 opener after Croatia’s World Cup semi-final equaliser

    SLAVEN BILIC has questioned England’s mentality ahead of their Euro 2020 opener against Croatia.The Three Lions led Sunday’s opponents in the World Cup semi-final three years ago.
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    Slaven Bilic reckons England could be mentally scarred from the 2018 World Cup exit to CroatiaCredit: Getty – Contributor
    But despite taking an early lead, goals from Ivan Perisic and Mario Mandzukic turned the game on its head.
    And Bilic reckons the scarring from that result could come back to haunt Gareth Southgate’s men at Wembley this weekend.
    The former Croatia manager, who took charge between 2006 and 2012, was asked where the game will be won and lost.
    He told The Telegraph: “Mentality. Remember the World Cup semi-final?
    “In the first-half England dominated, were 1-0 up and it should have been 2-0. But as soon as we scored an equaliser it was game over for you.
    “There was nobody on the pitch who said, ‘Wait, wait, we have time’. It was gone.”
    Bilic added: “In 2018 only two Croatia players who started the semi-final did not play under me and I left in 2012.
    “So the core of the team has cried, laughed, celebrated, gone through all of the emotions together and of course that is going to help them.

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    “Let’s say after half an hour it’s 1-0 to England, we can go ‘Come on guys, we have been here before.’ So it helps.
    “Is it crucial? Not necessarily. It’s good to be young and have that freedom but it’s also good to have that know-how and experience.
    “Of course, England are favourites and we also see it that way.
    “We have not been playing great but I know that when the big games come – and it doesn’t get much bigger than this one – we have know-how, quality, brains and courage.”
    Like SunSport columnist Jose Mourinho, Bilic was quick to highlight the strength of Croatia’s midfield.
    Marcelo Brozovic, Luka Modric and Mateo Kovacic are set to try and dictate the game from the middle of the park.
    But he also admitted England’s attacking threat can cause Zlatko Dalic’s side plenty of headaches, especially with influential defender and leader Dejan Lovren out injured.
    Mario Mandzukic scored the winner in extra time to put his country into the final in RussiaCredit: EPA
    Bilic reckons Croatia’s underdog status could work in their favour againCredit: Getty
    Mateo Kovacic and Luka Modric will be looking to pull the strings in midfield on SundayCredit: AFP or licensors

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    Ronaldo and Modric among veterans for which Euro 2020 could be last shot at glory with some retirements confirmed

    THE EXTRA wait for Euro 2020 may have helped young stars such as Jude Bellingham to reach the finals – but it has also intensified the hunger of several veterans targeting one last shot at glory.Cristiano Ronaldo and Luka Modric have been stalwarts of these showpieces for well over a decade – but a curtain call is not far away.
    A SunSport line-up of the top veterans at Euro 2020
    These Euros also provides a unique opportunity for long-serving heroes of some of the less-fancied nations to go out on an unexpected high.
    At the upper end of the age spectrum, Holland goalkeeper Maarten Stekelenburg stands as the oldest player called up at 38 years, eight months and 22 days old when he takes his place on the bench for his side’s opener versus Ukraine.
    Likely to be ten feet down the touchline will be Andriy Pyatov, the Ukraine goalkeeper who has committed to retiring from international football after the tournament.
    The 36-year-old and his 97 caps would probably have been first choice 12 months ago yet the emergence of Heorhiy Bushchan puts that under threat.
    One veteran who will not have to worry about his role will be Goran Pandev.
    The Genoa forward, 37, has 119 caps in the bag for North Macedonia and leads something of a swan song frontline featuring Ivan Trickovski (34) and Krste Velkoski (33).
    Pandev has seen it all in Italian football but Trickovski and Velkoski have spent their careers, albeit successfully, with the sort of teams Tottenham fans get perennially dragged to on cold November Thursday nights.
    After years of graft in the outer reaches of European football, this is their time to shine with North Macedonia playing in their first ever major tournament.

    Pepe and Cristiano Ronaldo lead Portugal’s defence of their Euros crownCredit: AFP
    Goran Pandev is another veteran on the charge this summerCredit: EPA
    So to is it for Tim Sparv, the 34-year-old captain of Finland.
    The debutants knocked out Greece to qualify for their first-ever major finals and will invoke the 2004 winners’ sense of wonder in attempting to emulate the shock success of Iceland and Wales in past years.
    Russia and 37-year-old Yuri Zhirkov hope to mimic their own 2018 World Cup run and a return to the latter stages for Sweden captain Andreas Granqvist and Sebastian Larsson, both 36, will cap fine careers.
    And if anyone is out to re-enact a surprise triumph before strolling off towards the sun, it is Portugal.
    A raft of young talent has brought new energy into Fernando Santos’ squad but they also boast the oldest outfield player at the tournament in Pepe, 38, plus Jose Fonte, 37, Ronaldo, 36 and Joao Moutinho, 34 – all of whom played in the 2016 final win over France.
    Good luck telling Ronaldo that this is his last tournament but the generation that promised so much and delivered little in the late 2000s has the ability to deliver an unprecedented defence of its title.

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    Yet many other top nations also boast wily performers that are bred for the often cynical nature of tournament football.
    Few players embody that more than Giorgio Chiellini who, at 36, offers a hugely impactful bench option for Roberto Mancini’s Italy if not also a reliable back-up starter.
    Chiellini’s sardonic style is so well defined that he probably learned to cheerfully win a stoppage-time free-kick before he could walk. His more agile, technical centre-back partner, Leonardo Bonucci is also getting on at 34.
    The aforementioned Modric, 35, can lead Croatia out of a relatively favourable group into a potentially kind knockouts route.

    Luka Modric may not get another chance at a major final with CroatiaCredit: Getty
    Italy’s Giorgio Chiellini has come to define the essence of the wily veteranCredit: Getty

    Thomas Vermaelen, 35, Jan Vertonghen and Dries Mertens, both 34, will be desperate to make the most of what may be their final involvement in Belgium’s golden generation.
    At 35 also, Manuel Neuer will be out to prove that past glory is a very weak disinfectant against the German appetite for success.
    Much will be made of the exuberance of youth in the coming weeks, to deal with the gruelling season, sore limbs and hasty travel arrangements of Euro 2020.
    But don’t count out the experienced heads who will be every bit as prepared to deal with the stresses of a major tournament, and as desperate as ever to make their last dance on the big stage count.
    ⚽ Read our Football live blog for the very latest news from around the grounds
    England vs Croatia live stream, TV channel and kick-off time and team news for Euro 2020 match More

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    Euro 2020 predictions: Players, pundits, managers and YOU all pick your winner with tournament set to kick-off

    EURO 2020 kicks-off TODAY!And players, pundits, managers and our very own Sun readers have had their say on who they think is going to win Uefa’s flagship international competition this summer.
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    Players, managers, pundits and Sun readers have had their say on who they think will win Euro 2020Credit: Getty
    England fans are desperate to end 55 years of hurt while French supporters are hoping Les Bleus can add to their 2018 World Cup glory with back to back major honours.
    And SunSport has collated the thoughts of the great and good of British football including YOU our readers.
    So here is who Jose Mourinho, Alex Scott, Gary Neville & Co think is going to win this summer.
    JOSE MOURINHO – FRANCE
    The SunSport columnist said: “The only weakness is, they have so many good players, that probably the noise around the team from the media, from the public, is a big one.
    “They have to win it. If not, it’s an unsuccessful Euros.”
    GARY NEVILLE – ENGLAND
    “I’m going to go with England because of the home tournament [aspect]. I think we will go a step further than the last World Cup where we got the semi-finals, I just think the momentum is with us.”
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    ALEX SCOTT – BELGIUM
    “Belgium are very strong and their players are all shining at the moment. They will have a special environment in their squad, as well as some hugely talented players.”
    ROY KEANE – ITALY
    “There is no doubt that France are the team to beat but the team I’m going with, and I just have a sneaky feeling for them, is Italy.
    “I look at their form for the last year or two, and we obviously know they’re capable of turning up for the big tournaments.”
    ALAN SHEARER – FRANCE
    “France to win it. They have got talent all over the pitch.”
    HARRY REDKNAPP – ENGLAND
    The former West Ham and Tottenham manager exclusively told SunSport: “We have been here before — but I have never been so certain as I am right now, this time England really CAN go all the way.
    “In fact never mind can, I honestly believe we WILL. So much so that I’ll genuinely be very disappointed if we don’t win the Euros.”
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    GARY LINEKER – FRANCE
    “They were losing finalists five years ago, they won the World Cup three years ago and now they have Karim Benzema too.
    “They’ll be improved and they have brilliant young players too.”
    MICAH RICHARDS – BELGIUM
    “Belgium are going to win the Euros because Kevin De Bruyne – the best midfielder in the world – is going to light it up.
    “The team has got that experience now that they need too.”
    RIO FERDINAND – FRANCE
    “France have got the most depth and the most talent, that’s why they are my favourites.”

    ASHLEY WILLIAMS – TURKEY
    “My hot take for the tournament is Turkey. Not a lot of people will be expecting them to do well but they have a good squad and will be right at it.”
    DANNY MURPHY – FRANCE
    “France have got a wonderful squad and Benzema gives them more quality and competition for places at the top end of the pitch. In midfield, N’Golo Kante is just on a different level at the moment.”
    LEE DIXON – ENGLAND
    “Why not England? We do realistically have a good chance so let’s champion that. With our attacking prowess we will hurt teams.”

    CHRIS SUTTON – FRANCE
    “I fancy France to edge it. They probably have more match-winners than any other team.”
    CHRIS WADDLE – ITALY
    “I’ve watched them a few times and I really like the way Roberto Mancini has set them up to play on the front foot – they are not like a typical Italy side who shut up shop and try to nick a goal on the counter-attack.”
    ROBERT GREEN – FRANCE
    “I don’t see anyone as particularly standing out. I will pick France but Denmark are my dark horses – they look very tidy, although they might be lacking a centre-forward.”

    ENI ALUKO – ENGLAND
    “If you look at some of the top players for England, they’re the top players in Europe right now.”
    WILLIAM GALLAS – FRANCE
    The ex-Arsenal and Chelsea centre-back exclusively told SunSport: “We have a big chance to lift the trophy. We have the strongest squad in the tournament.
    “Winning the World Cup will definitely help them win the Euros.”

    EMILE HESKEY – BELGIUM
    “This team has been together and playing for a long time. Now they have that cohesion and have been threatening for a while to be that team in a tournament.”
    MARK POUGATCH – FRANCE
    “They’ve got the experience because they are the world champions, they’ve got a system that they all understand, they all play really well in.”
    ALAN MCINALLY – BELGIUM
    “There’s Dries Mertens, Thorgan Hazard, De Bruyne.
    “I’ll go Belgium to win the competition outright and I’ll throw this in there, Lukaku has to be there or there abouts to be top-goal scorer in the competition too.”

    IAN RUSH – ITALY
    “I think it’s wide open but I think the dark horses are Italy because they can produce when needed.”
    SUN READERS – FRANCE
    In a recent poll undertaken by SunSport, 43 per cent of you reckon Didier Deschamps’ men will do it while just 23 per cent backed the Three Lions.
    ⚽ Follow ALL of the latest news and updates from Euro 2020 with our live blog

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    Aaron Ramsey brings in personal medical team in late bid to be fit for Wales Euro 2020 opener against Switzerland

    AARON RAMSEY drafted in his own medical team to ensure he can play a full part in another Wales Euro fairytale.The Juventus midfielder arrived at the Dragons camp last month  suffering from muscle fatigue — a problem he had encountered five times in the Italian season.
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    Aaron Ramsey in action in a friendly versus AlbaniaCredit: PA
    So during a warm weather training trip to Portugal, and in Cardiff, he brought in his trusted people to nurse him back to fitness.
    Former Arsenal favourite Ramsey gave fans a scare when he sat out training yesterday  but he is confident the extra lengths he has gone to will pay off.
    Wales take on Switzerland in their opening game in Baku tomorrow and he is hoping to play some part.
    Ramsey said: “It has been a quite challenging time over the past couple of seasons. There have been many factors and changes that I haven’t been used to.
    “In the end I have got my own team around me who are focused on just me, to get myself into the best possible shape.
    “Obviously football is a team sport and a lot of the time it is about the team and everybody doing the same things, when maybe some players need a bit more attention. So I take it into my own hands really.
    “I have the right people around me to try to come up with the best  possible plan  to get myself back into a place where I am feeling good and confident again.
    “I had a good few weeks with them, settled in really well.
    “Again the Welsh staff and medical team have been  brilliant, they have been open for discussions and it’s important to all be on the same page.
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    Aaron Ramsey is a key figure for Wales at Euro 2020Credit: Getty
    “I have known a lot of the Welsh staff for a long time, from my Arsenal days as well, there are a few of them.
    “They understand me, they know my body and they know what I need.
    “Hopefully we can all play a  part to try and get myself in the  best place.”
    Team-mate Gareth Bale had a similar arrangement with his own people at Euro 2016 in France and it paid off.
    But when Ramsey was absent from training on Thursday, just 48 hours before their opener, it set alarm bells ringing.

    Aaron Ramsey has suffered injury problems at Juventus this seasonCredit: Alamy
    However the 30-year-old said: “It’s all good. It was a very light session for the boys on Thursday.
    “It was planned that I stayed off my feet. It’s all good and I’m looking forward to Saturday.”
    Caretaker boss Rob Page has opted to bring Ramsey off the bench in the two recent friendlies — and could do the same against the Swiss.
    And the former Cardiff man is hoping to make a big impact — just like he did five years ago when he was named in the Euro 2016  team of the tournament.
    He said: “These opportunities don’t come often.
    “You have to be prepared and make the most of them. I have to perform to my best and help the team.

    “For Wales it’s so important to get back to the Euros, we had to keep the momentum going. Doing it back- to-back is a massive achievement.
    “We look forward and try to keep progressing on and off the pitch.
    “To experience this will be great for youngsters — to inspire another generation of young players.”
    For much of the last decade, Wales have looked to Ramsey and Bale, 31, for inspiration.
    Now though, he believes there are others coming through who can be the match-winner for the Dragons.
    He said: “I think we’ve got many who have different qualities who can step up. Dan James, David Brooks, Harry Wilson, Tyler Roberts, all can produce moments of magic.

    “It’s an exciting time to be a Welsh fan or play for Wales.
    “We’re still growing as a team and this tournament will be an experience for lot of these players.
    “There’s great balance in the team. Hopefully we’ll all be  on the same page.” More

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    Harry Kane on England, Goals and His Future at Spurs

    LONDON — There are a lot of things that everybody knows about Harry Kane. First and foremost, there is the fact that he is the captain of England’s national soccer team, a status that bestows upon its bearer the sort of profile unavailable to most athletes, particularly in tournament years. It is part-of-the-furniture fame, royal family fame. Everyone has heard of Harry Kane.Then there are the goals. Harry Kane scores goals with startling efficiency. He scores goals with both feet and with his head. He scores goals from close range and from long distance, for good teams and bad. He does not really seem to be subject to things like form or confidence. He simply started scoring goals seven years ago and never stopped.He has scored so many that he is seventh on the list of the Premier League’s career top scorers; with a fair wind, he will be third next year at this time and within touching distance of the record-holder, Alan Shearer, not long after he turns 30. By that stage, in all likelihood, he will have usurped Wayne Rooney as England’s leading scorer, too.What colors he will be wearing as he does so is anyone’s guess. Everyone has known for some time, of course, that Harry Kane is one of Tottenham’s own, the star of the team he supported as a child.Over the last few weeks, though, a drip feed of interviews has made it clear that, in Harry Kane’s mind, that might have to change this summer, if he is to fulfill his ambition of winning collective awards, rather than individual ones. The expectation is that at some point, one of Manchester City, Manchester United and Chelsea will make him the most expensive English player in history.Kane scored 23 goals for Tottenham this season, winning the Premier League scoring title for the third time.Clive Brunskill/Getty ImagesBut that is where the knowledge stops. Harry Kane is captain of England, he scores a lot of goals and he is about to star in his very own transfer saga. Beyond that, Harry Kane is something of an enigma. It is a neat trick: for a player of his status, and an athlete of his generation, to be as well known as he is and yet not well known at all.Occasionally, some trivial jetsam floats to shore. He went to the same school as David Beckham. He married his childhood sweetheart. He likes “Dexter,” the television show. He is an ardent fan of the N.F.L. in general and Tom Brady in particular, and harbors hopes of playing that other kind of football — as a kicker — someday.They are mere details, glimpses of what lies beneath, rather than a whole picture of a personality. His name, perhaps, illustrates it best. Most players are referred to exclusively by their surname, a tradition that reminds them they are just cogs in a machine. Only a select handful are afforded the privilege of being known simply by their first name.For Harry Kane, it is neither. Calling him “Kane” would seem disrespectful: He is more than just another player. But he is not a “Harry,” either: Somehow that would be too intimate, too familiar.Instead, he will lead England into this summer’s European Championship — hoping to win an international tournament in a final on home soil — as Harry Kane, forename and surname, like a reverse Pelé. It is an honor, in a way, but it is also a sign of some subconscious distance, as though he is a brand, or a corporation, or a place.There are a lot of things everyone knows about Harry Kane. But knowing who he is, or what he is like, is not one of them.BalanceAt the end of his first campaign with Tottenham, Kane and his teammates traveled to Australia for a brief tour. It had been Kane’s breakout year: He had scored 21 goals in 34 Premier League games. Almost overnight, he had gone from a fringe player, forever being shipped out on loan, to a blossoming idol.Kane, though, had not noticed the transformation. While he was in Sydney, he decided that he fancied a stroll. He took himself to the nearest mall, expecting to be able to quietly wander around in peace. Instead, within a few minutes, he found himself swarmed by hundreds of fans. Unable to escape, he had to call the club to get him out.The memory has stayed with him. “I think, at the start, I was a bit naïve about what being famous would be like in terms of what you can and can’t do,” he said. “I appreciate it, obviously, and I enjoy parts of it, and I suppose when I retire and it’s gone, I’ll be able to tell you if I miss it or not. But there are restrictions that come with it.”Kane in the stands after England’s victory in the 2018 World Cup Russia quarterfinals.Ryan Pierse/Getty ImagesKane traces that naïveté to the fact that he had never really considered the “famous” part of “famous footballer.” He grew up, in Chingford, Essex, on London’s northeast fringe, dreaming of playing for Tottenham and for England. His idol was Beckham. Kane cites him as his “role model,” but that admiration went only so far.“I had a mohawk when he had one,” Kane said. “But he wasn’t a role model for me in terms of what he was wearing. It was how he conducted himself. I wanted to be a footballer, that was it. I was not really worried about being in the public eye.”Kane never lost that single-mindedness. Long before he established himself at Tottenham, as he made his way around the country with the smaller clubs where he had been sent, countless coaches were impressed by his doggedness, his determination.At Norwich, Chris Hughton recalled Kane practicing finishing for so long that all of his teammates, as well as the goalkeepers, left him to his own devices. At Millwall, he asked his manager, Kenny Jackett, if he could help him get better in the air. Even now — when most of Kane’s week is spent recovering from one game and preparing for another — he admits to being a little “addicted” to improving his performance data.“I compete with myself,” he said. “When I broke into the Premier League, I was not quite as physically developed as the other players. With Mauricio Pochettino, we did a lot in the gym, trying to improve my strength and speed and power. I got a bit addicted to improving the statistics. I put pressure on myself to get better.”He takes the same approach to the other aspects of being one of the most famous athletes in the country. Kane is not, by his own admission, the sort to “get into situations where I am photographed on a night out.” That side of celebrity, so available to him, is rejected not through necessity but inclination.He keeps his commercial commitments restricted, too. He will not commit to any sponsor engagements 48 hours before a game: Even if they might largely involve, in his words, “standing around,” a photo shoot lasting a few hours can be draining. “And the games are the most important thing,” he said.He works only with a handful of carefully selected sponsors, ones deemed by the player and his brother, Charlie, who is also his agent, to be a natural fit. “If it’s just for the money, it can be hard work,” he said. Like most players, he has a portfolio of charitable causes that he supports, too, some public and some private.Last year, Kane struck an innovative deal to become the main jersey sponsor of Leyton Orient, the east London club where he first played senior soccer, as a way of supporting it during the pandemic. (Kane gave the advertising real estate over to three of his chosen charities.)A 17-year-old Kane at Leyton Orient, during one of several loan stints early in his career.Paul Childs/Action ImagesHis business interests are growing, too. He is one of several England players to have invested in STATSports, a technology company that provides GPS tracking vests to teams across a range of sports. He made the decision not just for profit, but because he felt it “fitted my personality well.”But Kane’s extracurricular activities are notably limited compared with some of his peers’. He could probably have an arrangement with Egyptian Steel, but doesn’t. He might prove a powerful advocate for a facial fitness product in Japan, but he is not tempted to find out. Kane is a familiar face, a familiar name, but not because he is relentlessly marketed. He does not seek to trade too much on his fame, because to him his fame is secondary.There is a reason the things that everyone knows about Kane extend no further, really, than the field itself: because that is all that he has focused on. “I don’t want that attention,” he said. “It is a conscious effort to avoid it. Football is my job. I dedicated a lot of time and work to be where I am now, and I think some players lose sight of that. You start to think the other things are more important, more exciting, but what I am paid for is to work hard and be professional.”What we know about Harry Kane, in other words, are the things that he wants us to know.A Star’s HavenBy his own estimate, Kane has watched “The Brady 6,” a documentary about the six quarterbacks chosen ahead of Tom Brady in the 2000 N.F.L. draft, a dozen or so times. Last spring, like millions of others, he found himself captivated by “The Last Dance,” the documentary series highlighting Michael Jordan’s final year with the Chicago Bulls.Given the scarcity of information about Kane, those two fairly unsurprising viewing choices — professional athlete is intrigued by stories of great athletes — are often co-opted as false insight into who the 27-year-old Kane is away from the field. Barring evidence to the contrary, they prove, after all, that he likes the N.F.L. and basketball.But neither one seems particularly extracurricular. Kane has spoken previously of the echoes he hears of his own story in Brady’s rise — a player written off by most before his career had begun, who managed to go on and conquer the world — and “The Last Dance” is, in the eyes of more than one soccer player, a case study in the nature of greatness. These are not outside interests for Kane. It is background reading.The one place that Kane does seek solace from soccer — the one place he goes deliberately to escape — is the golf course. It is his haven, his chance to take his mind off his relentless drive to self-improve by persistently trying to get better at something else. “It is my way of meditating,” he said. “When you’re playing, it is all you are thinking about for four or five hours. It gets me away from football.”Kane hinted at his potential departure from Spurs during a golf-course interview this year.Andrew Redington/Getty ImagesPerhaps, then, it was only on the golf course that Kane felt comfortable enough, detached enough, to confront the issue of his future. He had been dropping hints for months — if not longer — that his ambitions and Tottenham’s might be starting to diverge, though as a rule he had stopped short of anything that might be considered undiplomatic.Last month, though, while playing golf with Gary Neville, the former Manchester United captain turned television pundit, he was blunt. A difficult conversation with Tottenham was coming, he told Neville; he felt he could go on and win trophies for years to come, and if the club could not provide a team to do that, he would have to consider his options.He is at the stage of his career when he is starting to think about legacy, weighing those individual awards, the scoring titles and the player of the year accolades, against the ones that define a player: the titles won and the cups lifted and the trophies claimed.In an interview with The New York Times in late April he said he “didn’t panic” about it, that he did not believe he had one last shot at winning something, but he will know, too, that time is not limitless. He will turn 28 in July, and is starting to think of what people will know about him when, years down the line, he is no longer the England captain, no longer scoring goals.And he knows that one thing stands out above all others. “England is No. 1 for me,” he said. “It is the biggest thing you can achieve. I dreamed of playing for England, but I also dreamed of winning something for England. That is on top of my list. You play Premier Leagues and Champions Leagues every year, but a major tournament only comes around once every two years. The window is a lot smaller. To win something with England: That would be No. 1.”It would outstrip whatever he achieves, for himself and for his club, whichever club that is: to be England captain, winning a major trophy for the first time in almost 60 years, and doing so on home soil. Make that happen, and that will be the only thing that people will know about Harry Kane. It is the only thing they will need to know. It will be the only thing that matters.“I dreamed of playing for England, but I also dreamed of winning something for England. That is on top of my list.”Ozan Kose/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images More

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    Team news, injury updates and latest odds for Turkey vs Italy as Euro 2020 gets underway in Rome

    AFTER more than a year of waiting Euro 2020 finally gets going as Turkey take on Italy in a mouthwatering opener tonight. The Azzurri will have the all-important home advantage in the crucial Group A clash, with 16,000 fans allowed in to watch at the Stadio Olimpico.
    Italy will have the benefit of home advantage for the first game of the tournamentCredit: Getty
    Getting underway at 8pm, fans here in the UK can settle down to watch the game – and the Opening Ceremony – live on BBC ONE.
    What’s the form?
    Italy enter the tournament in sparkling form and will be delighted that they’re going slightly under the radar.
    Coached by former Manchester City boss Roberto Mancini, his side have won EIGHT on the bounce – and kept a clean-sheet in every one of those victories.
    A tough task then for the Turks, who will be looking to breach an Italian defence which hasn’t conceded in 795 minutes of play.
    Turkey – managed by the formidable Şenol Güneş – have themselves lost just once in their last 13 internationals, memorably putting four past Holland back in March.
    I know Turkish football well and the spirit they have.
    They might not be the top level teams like France, Belgium, Germany or Holland, but they can still cause us a lot of problems.Roberto Mancini, Italy coach

    Who’s in and who’s out?
    Back in the big time after missing out on World Cup 2018, Italy have a settled side and Mancini is unlikely to dish out any major shocks.
    Ageless defender Giorgio Chiellini will be a rock at the back, with Jorginho set to pull the strings in midfield and Ciro Immobile tasked with banging them in.
    Turkey were superb in qualifying and will be out to replicate their excellent tournament efforts of 2002 and 2008.
    Lille magicians Burak Yilmaz and Yusuf Yazici will reunite after storming Ligue 1 this season, while Caglar Soyuncu, Merih Demiral and Ozan Kabak form a stubborn defensive trio.

    Watch out for…
    AC Milan’s Hakan Calhanoglu, who has been linked with a big-money move to Arsenal this summer.
    Available on a freebie with his contract running out this July at the San Siro, expect Calhanoglu to impress in the shop window.
    He registered nine goals and 12 assists for the Rossoneri this campaign – if he brings his A-game from the start, that Italian run of clean-sheets might be in danger.
    Calhanoglu is set to be in high demand this summer as he becomes a free agentCredit: Getty
    Italy are one of the favourites of the European Championship.
    We want to show our own football against these types of teams. We will play without fear.Şenol Güneş, Turkey coach

    If the game’s rubbish…
    See if you can spot Immobile’s devoted wife Jessica Melena and their three kids in the crowd.
    Known as Italy’s power couple, Melena has over 950k followers on Instagram and originally dreamt of being a CSI investigator before meeting Ciro in 2012.
    The pair moved in after a WEEK and Jessica is set to be in Rome to cheer on her man in the tournament opener.
    Jessica is set to be in Rome to support her husband from the standsCredit: Instagram / @jessicamelena
    She has a huge social media following, with almost 1 million fans on her InstagramCredit: Instagram / @jessicamelena
    The pair were married in 2014 just two years after they metCredit: Instagram / @jessicamelena
    Betting odds
    Get all your Euro 2020 ante-post tips with our tournament betting guide HERE.
    Match odds

    Turkey to win 7/1
    The Draw 11/4
    Italy to win 1/2

    Power prices

    Ciro Immobile to score 2 or more – was 9/1 now 11/1
    Ciro Immobile & Burak Yilmaz to have 2 or more shots on target each – was 12/1 now 16/1

    Euro 2020 outright odds

    Turkey 66/1
    Italy 15/2

    Turkey vs Italy FREE – Live stream, TV channel and kick-off time for Euro 2020 opening match – the sun More

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    Is there a Euro 2020 fantasy football game? Is it FREE to play with friends? Who are the best players?

    EURO 2020 is here, with fantasy football fanatics and casual fans alike looking to test their knowledge of the international game.Creating and managing a fantasy football team will enhance your enjoyment of the upcoming tournament and also give you a chance to get one over on your mates as you can compete in private mini-leagues.
    The best fantasy football game to play this summer is DREAM TEAM EUROS – it’s completely free to play and has a £50,000 jackpot!

    WIN £50,000! Play Dream Team Euros – our FREE fantasy football game this summer

    Cristiano Ronaldo will be popular with fantasy football managers as Euro 2020 gets underway
    How do you play Dream Team Euros?
    The premise will be familiar to many: pick the best possible XI from the players participating in Euro 2020 without exceeding a set budget – £50million to be exact.
    Once we’re underway, you’ll have 20 transfers to use throughout the tournament to react to the unfolding drama.
    Has Timo Werner suddenly remembered how to shoot? Get him in! Did North Macedonia really just beat Netherlands 7-0? Quick, swap Matthijs de Ligt for some bloke you’ve never heard of in your life!
    Your players will score points based on their performances with goalkeepers and defenders mainly benefiting from clean sheets while the best midfielders and forwards will be the ones banging in the goals.
    There’s also points for assists, hat-tricks, match ratings of 7+ – supplied by WhoScored – and the player with the highest match rating once the dust has settled will also be named Star Man – an accolade that earns them an additional five points.
    WIN £50,000 with Dream Team EurosDream Team Euros is HERE!

    The best fantasy football game to accompany Euro 2020 has arrived.
    And you can play absolutely FREE for your chance to win the £50,000 jackpot.
    CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR FREE!
    Dream Team Euros

    £50,000 jackpot
    The best fantasy football game this summer
    Play in mini-leagues against your mates, colleagues, family members – and some hand-picked celebrities
    FREE to play

    World Cup holders France are among the favourites to triumph at Euro 2020
    When does it start?
    You can sign-up for Dream Team Euros right now – it should be available via the Dream Team app (you may have to refresh your app) but users can also access the game through Dream Team’s site.
    You’ll be able to pick a prototype XI before team entry opens on May 21st – all player prices are subject to change until then.If your prototype team is revealed to be over budget you’ll have to shuffle the pack until it’s valid but don’t worry, you can make as many changes as you want before the tournament gets underway.
    Scoring starts once the first game kicks off, which is Turkey v Italy at 8pm on June 11th, and finishes after the final on July 11th.
    You can still enter a team after the first match has kicked off but you won’t get any points for the games that have already taken place or started – it’s best to settle on starting XI before the first kick-off.
    Harry Kane already has one Golden Boot at a major international tournament – could he fire England to glory this summer?
    Which players should you pick?
    Goals are worth their weight in gold so you’ll want to include some Golden Boot favourites – Robert Lewandowksi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Harry Kane, Romelu Lukaku and Kylian Mbappe all catch the eye but these big names will drain your budget so think carefully.
    It’s a similar story in midfield, N’Golo Kante may be world-class at what he does but he doesn’t score many goals – the likes of Bruno Fernandes and Kevin De Bruyne are more likely to etch their names on the scoresheet.
    At the back, you want a keeper and defenders capable of registering consistent clean sheets.
    Belgium conceded just three goals in their qualifying campaign so perhaps Thibaut Courtois is a prime candidate?

    What are the groups at Euro 2020?
    Your strategy will likely depend on the fixtures. Players facing tough opponents are less likely to score points than those with a relatively easy ride – at least in theory.
    With that in mind, here’s a reminder of the groups…
    GROUP A: Italy, Turkey, Wales, Switzerland
    GROUP B: Belgium, Denmark, Russia, Finland
    GROUP C: Netherlands, Austria, Ukraine, North Macedonia
    GROUP D: England, Croatia, Scotland, Czech Republic
    GROUP E: Spain, Sweden, Poland, Slovakia
    GROUP F: France, Portugal, Germany, Hungary
    Good luck in that one, Hungary!
    Belgium have serious firepower in the form of Romelu Lukaku and Kevin De Bruyne
    How much does it cost to enter? Can you win money?
    Dream Team Euros is completely free to play so there’s no reason not to get involved.
    Not only that, the overall winner at the end of the tournament will win £50,000!
    That’s right, your football knowledge could earn you a life-changing amount of money.

    WIN £50,000! Play Dream Team Euros – our FREE fantasy football game this summer More

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    Jose Mourinho on the top Euro 2020 strikers he’s bossed… Cristiano Ronaldo, Harry Kane, Romelu Lukaku & Karim Benzema

    JOSE MOURINHO has worked with four of the top contenders for the Golden Boot at these Euros.Mourinho led fellow Portuguese Cristiano Ronaldo and France striker Karim Benzema to the LaLiga title at Real Madrid.

    WIN £50,000! Play Dream Team Euros – our FREE fantasy football game

    Jose Mourinho knows four of the Euro 2020 Golden Boot contenders extremely wellCredit: The SunWIN £50,000 with Dream Team EurosDream Team Euros is HERE!

    The best fantasy football game to accompany Euro 2020 has arrived.
    And you can play absolutely FREE for your chance to win the £50,000 jackpot.
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    Dream Team Euros

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    FREE to play

    He also worked with Belgian Romelu Lukaku at Chelsea and Manchester United as well as England’s Harry Kane at Tottenham.
    Ronaldo won the Euros with Portugal in 2016, while Kane took the Golden Boot at the last World Cup.
    Lukaku’s goals have fired Belgium to No 1 in the world rankings, while Benzema is back after a six-year absence from Les Bleus and is capable of lifting the world champions to even greater heights.
    Here, the Special One gives his unique personal insight into four of the most lethal goalscorers in world football.
    He also discusses the challenges of managing elite strikers — from massaging the egos of football’s alpha males to potential jealousy from team-mates and how to get them to  click on the pitch.
    As Mourinho explained: “These guys live on goals. Their reputation is a lot about goals.”
    Romelu Lukaku will be hoping to fire Belgium to Euro 2020 gloryCredit: Getty
    ROMELU LUKAKU
    ROMELU LUKAKU was just a kid when I knew him at Chelsea and at Manchester United he was still developing.
    But at Inter he’s become the top man. He’s become loved — a big love from the supporters, love from team-mates and he had great relations with former coach Antonio Conte.
    That’s what a guy with Lukaku’s personality needed. He’s a big guy, physically so strong, but is still a kid. A kid who needs that love, needs that support, needs to feel important.
    Inter gave him everything, with them winning the Serie A title after so many years. He raised his game based on this emotional side of things.
    During his time in English football, he developed from the young kid who arrived at Chelsea to the mature guy who left United. But these two years at Inter gave him the stature and self-confidence he didn’t have before.
    In the national team his record is amazing — 60 goals in 93 appearances — though I always say these amazing international records depend on many easy matches against smaller teams.
    It’s easy for Lukaku to make the transition to Belgium because they play the same system as Inter. It’s deja vu. So there is no doubt he will score goals and fight for the Golden Boot.

    EURO 2020 BETTING SPECIAL

    With me at United he was playing normally as a No 9 with one winger that always came inside and another   always trying to attack space.
    This was the kind of movement, the kind of football, we tried to develop with him.
    Then he goes to Inter and they always play three at the back, with two wing-backs and with him as the striker.
    A second striker, Lautaro Martinez, is always the player to drop, so Lukaku attacks spaces and I think he grew up tactically. With the national team it is very similar.
    He is also taking penalties for Belgium and that’s important.
    Any team that plays five, six times will always get a couple of penalties.
    So in terms of the Golden Boot, that could be crucial.
    BETTING SPECIAL – GET ENGLAND TO WIN EURO 2020 AND HARRY KANE TO BE TOP SCORER AT 18/1

    HARRY KANE
    WHEN Gareth Southgate has been planning his starting XI for Sunday’s game with Croatia, he’ll have been safe in the knowledge Harry Kane can do it all.
    Players like Harry are also very smart. They understand football and understand where they can affect the game more.
    If Harry plays with wingers that like to attack the space, he clearly feels the way he can affect the game more is to drop and let other guys attack spaces, then he arrives in the box at a later stage of that move.
    If he plays with wingers that are not fast guys to attack spaces — wingers that like to drop and get in between the lines and get the ball into feet — he knows that if he is not the targetman, if he is not going to lead the line, then who does? Nobody.
    Jose Mourinho worked most-recently with Harry Kane at TottenhamCredit: Rex
    If not, you become a team that has a lot of the ball but are never a threat because everybody drops back to get the ball on their feet.
    I am pretty sure that Harry, Gareth and his assistant Steve Holland enjoy a relationship that is very good, that they communicate well.
    England can play with a back four, they can play with a five, they can play with wingers like Raheem Sterling and Marcus Rashford — fast guys — but can also play with completely different players like Mason Mount, Phil Foden and Jack Grealish.
    And Harry has the tactical knowledge to adapt to it, I have no doubt about it.

    Harry won the Golden Boot at the last World Cup and all of these top strikers have egos. They have individual ambitions.
    At the same time, especially in national teams with a short competition of one month and a clear target for the country, then, more than ever, they’re ready to do anything for their country.
    If you ask them, ‘Would you change the Golden Boot for the Euros trophy?’ they will all say ‘Yes! 200 per cent’. 
    Cristiano Ronaldo provided a ‘different’ but ‘great challenge’ for the Special OneCredit: Rex
    CRISTIANO RONALDO
    MANAGING an all-time great player like Cristiano Ronaldo is a different challenge — but a great challenge.
    It can be difficult because these players are so good, if they don’t perform according to expectations, it’s very hard for the public  to point the finger at the player.
    It’s easier to point the finger at the coach.
    People will say, ‘This superstar is not playing amazingly because the coach doesn’t make the best of him, because the tactical system isn’t adapted right for him’.
    In that sense it’s added pressure to the coaches — ‘I have gold in my hands and I have to make sure it’s going to shine’.
    But it’s also a fantastic pressure as these players can resolve a game for you — one chance and they put the ball in the net.

    You win a tight game, an extra-time game. Any coach would pay to have these guys on their side.
    They are always going to be the protagonists, the focus of attention. The other players know it. The question is how they feel about it — in a good way or a negative way?
    Do they feel jealousy? ‘This is not fair, we are a team, we are working hard and all the attention goes to one star?’
    Or can they interpret it positively, that the pressure is on the other player and they feel more free to play their game. Stars like Cristiano are an escape for the others.
    In the Portuguese team, the problem is not when Cristiano is there — but when he leaves.
    At this moment, the leader is there, the main man, the guy that attracts all the attention.
    There is such a difference in status, that I really feel there is not one Portugal player who thinks it should be any other way.
    Ronaldo and Benzema won countless honours during their time together at Real MadridCredit: Reuters
    They all feel protected by this aura that goes around Cristiano and it’s a very good thing for a team.
    Maybe when he leaves, we will have a period when egos fight — but not now.
    Cristiano can still resolve matches. His efficiency in finishing is incredible. But now, aged 36, he’s a different player.
    You don’t see him getting the ball out wide and doing diagonals and attacking people with those dribbles.
    Especially in the national team, Cristiano is a No 9 with some freedom to move around.
    Let’s compare him with Harry Kane playing in my time at Tottenham, dropping, coming between the lines, but more a No 9.
    Portugal have other players — Diogo Jota, Bernardo Silva, Bruno Fernandes — to be creative. 
    KARIM BENZEMA
    THE best compliment you can give to Karim Benzema is that Cristiano Ronaldo was in love with him at Real Madrid.
    And for Cristiano to be in love with another attacking player means he does a lot for Cristiano — and he does a lot for every attacking player that plays around him.
    Karim is probably the only No 9 I know that is not selfish in his game.
    His vision is amazing, the way he enjoys his football is to play with lots of freedom.
    I can compare him with Harry Kane also in this sense.
    I would say Harry scores more goals, probably has more of that killer instinct than Karim but Karim, as a player, is absolutely amazing and when you look to the French team and you imagine Antoine Griezmann and Kylian Mbappe playing with him, I think it can be something great.
    Mbappe is very, very fast. Griezmann has incredible shooting and he comes behind the striker and in between the lines and Karim, the way he interacts with people, is fantastic.
    Karim Benzema returned to the France squad this month after a six-year exileCredit: AFP

    He is very much a team man and a fantastic professional.
    Karim is getting older but, at 33, his body looks younger.
    He rarely gets injuries, although he went off with a knee problem in the midweek friendly against Bulgaria and could be a doubt for France’s opening game against Germany on Tuesday.
    France did amazingly well without him — they were World Cup winners without him and reached Euro 2016 without him.
    Now for him to come back, after an absence of six years, must mean he is 100 per cent sure it is going to work.
    Karim will bring the best out of Mbappe, just as he did in Madrid with Cristiano. Like Harry with Son Heung-min, the way the technical one interacts with the one that attacks space and makes diagonal runs.
    These interactions are very important and I believe Karim, in that France team, can do very, very well.
    ⚽ Follow ALL of the latest news and updates from Euro 2020 with our live blog
    Jose Mourinho chats to James Corden about managing Man United and Spurs, where is best for Harry Kane, how he doesn’t understand Cricket and why England can win the European Championships More