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    Euro 2021 – Under 21s: Fixtures, live stream, TV channel and schedule as Spain defend their crown

    AHEAD of the main tournament on June 12, it’s time for the young guns to shine at the Under-21s Euro 2021. Unfortunately England didn’t make it to the final stage of the tournament, which features eight teams in a knockout format.

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

    Spain are the bookies favourites to defend their Euro crownCredit: Getty
    Spain are the defending champions and restart the competition with a clash against Croatia.
    When is Under-21 Euros taking place?

    The tournament begins on Monday, May 31.
    Spain vs Croatia will kick-off at 5pm BST, with the other three matches also on that evening.
    After the quarter-final stages, the final four teams will battle it out for a place in the final on Sunday, June 6.

    Which TV channel and live stream can I watch it on?
    You can catch every game live on Sky Sports over the next week.
    Coverage will start shortly before KO of each game.
    If you don’t have Sky but want to watch a selected game, grab a NOW TV pass from just £9.99 to stream on numerous devices.

    Full fixtures
    Monday, May 31

    Spain vs Croatia – 5pm (Sky Sports Premier League)
    Holland vs France – 5pm (Sky Sports Red Button)
    Denmark vs Germany – 8pm (Sky Sports Red Button)
    Portugal vs Italy – 8pm (Sky Sports Main Event)

    Thursday, June 3

    QF3 vs QF4 – 5pm
    QF1 vs QF2 – 8pm

    Sunday, June 6

    Final – 8pm More

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    Euro 2020 squads: England 33-man list to be cut, Wales squad ANNOUNCED, Ramos AXED by Spain, France recall Benzema

    EURO 2020 is almost here and the squads are being announced.England are the latest country to announce their pool of players – but it is only a provisional squad for the tournament which starts on June 11.

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

    All competing Euro 2020 countries must name a squad of 26 players by June 1, though some are choosing to name larger preliminary squads beforehand.
    Euro 2020 squads
    Group A
    Gareth Bale will be key to Wales’ hopes in Euro 2020 Group ACredit: PA
    Italy
    Roberto Mancini has named a provisional squad, but is yet to finalise his pool of players:

    Gianluigi Donnarumma (GK)
    Alessio Cragno (GK)
    Alex Meret (GK)
    Salvatore Sirigu (GK)
    Francesco Acerbi
    Alessandro Bastoni
    Cristiano Biraghi
    Leonardo Bonucci
    Giorgio Chiellini
    Giovanni Di Lorenzo
    Alessandro Florenzi
    Gianluca Mancini
    Leonardo Spinazzola
    Rafael Toloi
    Nicolo Barella
    Gaetano Castrovilli
    Bryan Cristante
    Manuel Locatelli
    Lorenzo Pellegrini
    Matteo Pessina
    Stefano Sensi
    Marco Verratti
    Andrea Belotti
    Domenico Berardi
    Federico Bernardeschi
    Federico Chiesa
    Vincenzo Grifo
    Ciro Immobile
    Lorenzo Insigne
    Moise Kean
    Matteo Politano
    Giacomo Raspadori

    Switzerland
    Vladimir Petkovic has named a 29-man provisional squad and intends to cut it down before the June 1 deadline.
    Provisional squad:

    Yann Sommer (GK)
    Yvon Mvogo (GK)
    Jonas Omlin (GK)
    Gregor Kobel (GK)
    Manuel Akanji 
    Loris Benito 
    Nico Elvedi 
    Kevin Mbabu 
    Becir Omeragic 
    Ricardo Rodriguez  
    Silvan Widmer
    Fabian Schar 
    Jordan Lotomba 
    Eray Comert
    Granit Xhaka 
    Denis Zakaria 
    Remo Freuler 
    Djibril Sow 
    Admir Mehmedi 
    Xherdan Shaqiri 
    Ruben Vargas 
    Steven Zuber 
    Edimilson Fernandes 
    Christian Fassnacht 
    Dan Ndoye 
    Andi Zeqiri
    Breel Embolo 
    Mario Gavranovic  
    Haris Seferovic

    Turkey
    Senol Gunes has announced his provisional 30-man squad. The final squad will be announced on June 1.

    Mert Günok (GK)
    Uğurcan Çakır (GK)
    Altay Bayındır (GK)
    Gökhan Akkan (GK)
    Kaan Ayhan
    Çağlar Söyüncü
    Zeki Çelik
    Merih Demiral
    Umut Meraş
    Ozan Kabak
    Mert Müldür
    Rıdvan Yılmaz
    Ozan Tufan
    Hakan Çalhanoğlu
    Okay Yokuşlu
    Yusuf Yazıcı
    Cengiz Ünder
    Mahmut Tekdemir
    İrfan Kahveci
    Dorukhan Toköz
    Abdülkadir Ömür
    Efecan Karaca
    Taylan Antalyalı
    Orkun Kökçü
    Halil Akbunar
    Turkey Göztepe
    Kerem Aktürkoğlu
    Burak Yılmaz (c)
    Kenan Karaman
    Enes Ünal
    Halil Dervişoğlu

    Wales
    Interim boss Robert Page’s 26-man squad is as follows:

    Wayne Hennessey (GK)
    Danny Ward (GK)
    Adam Davies (GK)
    Aaron Ramsey
    Ben Davies
    Joe Rodon
    Chris Mepham
    Ethan Ampadu
    Connor Roberts
    Tom Lockyer
    Matt Smith
    Joe Morrell
    Joe Allen
    Jonny Williams
    Kieffer Moore
    David Brooks
    Harry Wilson
    Neco Williams
    Dan James
    Ben Cabango
    Rhys Norrington-Davies
    Dylan Levitt
    Rubin Colwill
    Tyler Roberts
    Chris Gunter
    Gareth Bale

    Group B
    Kevin de Bruyne and Belgium are among the favourites for Euro 2020Credit: Reuters
    Belgium
    Belgium manager Roberto Martinez’s full 26-man squad is as follows:

    Thibaut Courtois (GK)
    Simon Mignolet (GK)
    Mats Sels (GK)
    Toby Alderweireld
    Dedryck Boyata
    Jason Denayer
    Thomas Vermaelen
    Jan Vertonghen
    Yannick Carrasco
    Timothy Castagne
    Nacer Chadli
    Thorgan Hazard
    Thomas Meunier
    Kevin de Bruyne
    Leander Dendoncker
    Dennis Praet
    Youri Tielemans
    Hans Vanaken
    Axel Witsel
    Jeremy Doku
    Eden Hazard (c)
    Dries Mertens
    Leandro Trossard
    Michy Batshuayi
    Christian Benteke
    Romelu Lukaku

    Standby: Thomas Kaminski (GK), Alexis Saelemaekers, Albert Sambi Lokonga, Bryan Heynen, Thomas Foket, Adnan Januzaj, Brandon Mechele, Jordan Lukaku, Zinho Vanheusden, Yari Verschaeren, Charles de Ketelaere
    Denmark
    Denmark’s final 26-man squad is as follows:

    Kasper Schmeichel (GK)
    Frederik Ronnow (GK)
    Jonas Lossl (GK)
    Simon Kjaer (c)
    Andreas Christensen
    Mathias Jorgensen
    Jens Stryger Larsen
    Jannik Vestergaard
    Nicolai Boilesen
    Joakim Maehle
    Joachim Andersen
    Christian Eriksen
    Thomas Delaney
    Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg
    Daniel Wass
    Mathias Jensen
    Anders Christiansen
    Christian Norgaard
    Yussuf Poulsen
    Martin Braithwaite
    Andreas Cornelius
    Kasper Dolberg
    Robert Skov
    Jonas Wind
    Andreas Skov Olsen
    Mikkel Damsgaard

    Finland
    Finland have announced a 29-man preliminary squad. The final squad will be revealed on Tuesday, June 1.

    Lukas Hradecky (GK)
    Jesse Joronen (GK)
    Anssi Jaakkola (GK)
    Carljohan Eriksson (GK)
    Paulus Arajuuri
    Jere Uronen
    Juhani Ojala
    Thomas Lam
    Sauli Vaisanen
    Albin Granlund
    Nikolai Alho
    Daniel O’Shaughnessy
    Niko Hamalainen
    Leo Vaisanen
    Robert Ivanov
    Aapo Halme
    Tim Sparv (c)
    Rasmus Schuller
    Glen Kamara
    Pyry Soiri
    Joni Kauko
    Fredrik Jensen
    Onni Valakari
    Jasin-Amin Assehnoun
    Teemu Pukki
    Joel Pohjanpalo
    Lassi Lappalainen
    Roope Riski
    Marcus Forss

    Russia
    Russia manager Stanislav Cherchesov’s preliminary squad is as follows:

    Yury Dyupin (GK)
    Andrey Lunev (GK)
    Anton Shunin (GK)
    Matvei Safonov (GK)
    Georgi Dzhikiya
    Igor Diveev
    Mario Fernandes
    Roman Yevgenyev
    Yuri Zhirkov
    Vyacheslav Karavaev
    Fyodor Kudryashov
    Ilya Samoshnikov
    Andrei Semyonov
    Dimitri Barinov
    Rifat Zhemaletdinov
    Maksim Mukhin
    Aleksandr Golovin
    Arsen Zakharyan
    Roman Zobnin
    Daniil Fomin
    Aleksei Ionov
    Daler Kuzyaev
    Andrei Mostovoy
    Magomed Ozdoyev
    Denis Makarov
    Aleksei Miranchuk
    Denis Cheryshev
    Artem Dzyuba (c)
    Anton Zabolotny
    Aleksandr Sobolev

    Group C
    Holland are back in tournament football after a seven-year absenceCredit: AFP
    Austria
    Austria’s final Euro 2020 squad is as follows:

    Daniel Bachmann (GK)
    Pavao Pervan (GK)
    Alexander Schlager (GK)
    David Alaba  
    Aleksandar Dragovic
    Marco Friedl
    Martin Hinteregger  
    Stefan Lainer 
    Philipp Lienhart 
    Stefan Posch 
    Christopher Trimmel 
    Andreas Ulmer
    Julian Baumgartlinger
    Christoph Baumgartner 
    Florian Grillitsch
    Stefan Ilsanker 
    Konrad Laimer
    Valentino Lazaro
    Marcel Sabitzer
    Luis Schaub  
    Xaver Schlager 
    Alessandro Schopf
    Marko Arnautovic 
    Michael Gregoritsch 
    Sasa Kalajdzic
    Karim Onisiwo

    Holland
    Holland manager Frank de Boer’s 26-man Euro 2020 squad is as follows:

    Jesper Cillessen (GK)
    Tim Krul (GK)
    Martin Stekelenburg (GK)
    Patrick van Aanholt
    Nathan Ake
    Daley Blind
    Denzel Dumfries
    Matthijs de Ligt
    Jurrien Timber
    Joel Veltman
    Stefan de Vrij
    Owen Windal
    Donny van de Beek
    Ryan Gravenberch
    Frenkie de Jong
    Davy Klaassen
    Teun Koopmeiners
    Martin de Roon
    Georginio Wijnaldum (c)
    Steven Berghuis
    Cody Gakpo
    Luuk de Jong
    Donyell Malen
    Memphis Depay
    Quincy Promes
    Wout Weghorst

    North Macedonia
    North Macedonia manager Igor Angelovski announced his squad on May 20.

    Stole Dimitrievski (GK)
    Damjan Shishkovski (GK)
    Riste Jankov (GK)
    Stefan Ristovski
    Visar Musliu
    Egzon Bejtulai
    Kire Ristevski
    Gjoko Zajkov
    Darko Velkovski
    Ezgjan Alioski
    Arijan Ademi
    Enis Bardhi
    Stefan Spirovski
    Boban Nikolov
    Tihomir Kostadinov
    Ferhan Hasani
    Eljif Elmaz
    Daniel Avramovski
    Darko Churlinov
    Marjan Radeski
    Goran Pandev
    Aleksandar Trajkovski
    Ivan Trichkovski
    Vlatko Stojanovski
    Krste Velkovski
    Milan Ristovski

    Ukraine
    Ukraine manager Andriy Shevchenko’s preliminary squad is as follows:

    Andriy Pyatov (c) (GK)
    Andriy Lunin (GK)
    Heorhiy Bushchan (GK)
    Anatoliy Trubin (GK)
    Mykola Matviyenko
    Oleksandr Karavayev
    Serhiy Kryvtsov
    Eduard Sobol
    Vitaliy Mykolenko
    Bohdan Mykhaylichenko
    Illya Zabarnyi
    Oleksandr Tymchyk
    Viktor Korniyenko
    Denys Popov
    Oleksandr Syrota
    Andriy Yarmolenko
    Taras Stepanenko
    Oleksandr Zinchenko
    Ruslan Malinovskyi
    Serhiy Sydorchuk
    Viktor Tsyhankov
    Marlos
    Yevhenii Makarenko
    Mykola Shaparenko
    Oleksandr Zubkov
    Artem Bondarenko
    Bohdan Lyednyev
    Heorhiy Sudakov
    Roman Yaremchuk
    Artem Besyedin
    Artem Dovbyk

    Group D
    Harry Kane will hope to lead England to a first international trophy since 1966Credit: Andy Hooper-The Daily Mail
    Croatia
    Croatia manager Zlatko Dalic’s final 26-man Euro 2020 squad is as follows:

    Lovre Kalinic (GK)
    Dominik Livakovic (GK)
    Simon Sluga (GK)
    Domagoj Vida
    Dejan Lovren
    Sime Vrsaljko
    Borna Barisic
    Duje Caleta-Car
    Josip Juranovic
    Domagoj Bradaric
    Mile Skoric
    Josko Gvardiol
    Luka Modric (c)
    Mateo Kovacic
    Marcelo Brozovic
    Milan Badelj
    Mario Pasalic
    Nikola Vlasic
    Luka Ivanusec
    Ivan Perisic
    Andrej Kramaric
    Ante Rebic
    Josip Brekalo
    Bruno Petkovic
    Mislav Orsic
    Ante Budimir

    Czech Republic
    Czech Republic manager Jaroslav Silhavy’s 26-man Euro 2020 squad is as follows:

    Tomas Vaclik (GK)
    Jiri Pavlenka (GK)
    Ales Mandous (GK)
    Pavel Kaderabek
    Ondrej Celustka
    Tomas Kalas
    Jan Boril
    Jakub Brabec
    Vladimir Coufal
    Tomas Holes
    Ales Mateju
    David Zima
    Vladimir Darida (c)
    Jakub Jankto
    Tomas Soucek
    Lukas Masopust
    Antonin Barak
    Alex Kral
    Petr Sevcik
    Adam Hlozek
    Jakub Pesek
    Michal Sadilek
    Matej Vydra
    Michael Krmencik
    Patrik Schick
    Tomas Pekhart

    England
    England manager Gareth Southgate has named a 33-man provisional squad, which he intends to trim down before the June 1 deadline.
    Here is the provisional squad:

    Dean Henderson (GK)
    Sam Johnstone (GK)
    Jordan Pickford (GK)
    Aaron Ramsdale (GK)
    Trent Alexander-Arnold
    Ben Chilwell
    Conor Coady
    Ben Godfrey
    Reece James
    Harry Maguire
    Tyrone Mings
    Luke Shaw
    John Stones
    Kieran Trippier
    Kyle Walker
    Ben White
    Jude Bellingham
    Jordan Henderson
    Jesse Lingard
    Mason Mount
    Kalvin Phillips
    Declan Rice
    James Ward-Prowse
    Dominic Calvert-Lewin
    Phil Foden
    Jack Grealish
    Mason Greenwood
    Harry Kane
    Marcus Rashford
    Bukayo Saka
    Jadon Sancho
    Raheem Sterling
    Ollie Watkins

    Scotland
    Steve Clarke’s Scotland squad is as follows:

    Craig Gordon (GK)
    David Marshall (GK)
    Jon McLaughlin (GK)
    Liam Cooper
    Declan Gallagher
    Grant Hanley
    Jack Hendry
    Scott McKenna
    Stephen O’Donnell
    Nathan Patterson
    Andy Robertson (c)
    Greg Taylor
    Kieran Tierney
    Stuart Armstrong
    Ryan Christie
    John Fleck
    James Forrest
    Ryan Fraser
    Billy Gilmour
    John McGinn
    Callum McGregor
    Scott McTominay
    David Turnbull
    Che Adams
    Lyndon Dykes
    Kevin Nisbet

    Group E
    Zlatan Ibrahimovic (right) had come out of retirement but will not feature for Sweden after getting injuredCredit: EPA
    Poland
    Poland manager Paulo Sousa’s squad is as follows:

    Lukasz Fabianski
    Wojciech Szczesny
    Kukasz Skorupski
    Kamil Glik
    Maciej Rybus
    Bartosz Bereszynski
    Jan Bednarek
    Tomasz Kedziora
    Pawel Dawidowicz
    Michal Helik
    Kamil Piatkowski
    Tymoteusz Puchacz
    Grzegorz Krychowiak
    Piotr Zielinski
    Mateusz Klich
    Karol Linetty
    KamiL Jozwiak
    Przemyslaw Frankowski
    Jakub Moder
    Przemyslaw Placheta
    Kacper Kozlowski
    Robert Lewandowski (c)
    Arkadiusz Milik
    Dawid Kownacki
    Jakub Swierczok
    Karol Swiderski

    Slovakia
    Slovakia manager Stefan Tarkovic’s 24-man squad has been announced, with the full 26-man squad to follow on June 1.

    Martin Dubravka (GK)
    Dusan Kuciak (GK)
    Marek Rodak (GK)
    Petar Pekarik
    Tomas Hubocan
    Milan Skriniar
    Lubomir Satka
    Denis Vavro
    Jakub Holubek
    Marek Hamsik (c)
    Juraj Kucka
    Vladimir Weiss
    Robert Mak
    Ondrej Duda
    Patrik Hrosovsky
    Stanislav Lobotka
    Matus Bero
    Lukas Haraslin
    Laszlo Benes
    Tomas Suslov
    Erik Jirka
    Michal Duris
    Robert Bozenik
    David Strelec

    Spain
    Manager Luis Enrique decided to pick only 24 players instead of the 26 he was allowed to select.

    David de Gea (GK)
    Robert Sanchez (GK)
    Unai Simon (GK)
    Aymeric Laporte
    Jose Gaya
    Jordi Alba
    Pau Torres
    Eric Garcia
    Diego Llorente
    Cesar Azpilicueta
    Marcos Llorente
    Sergio Busquets (c)
    Rodri
    Pedri
    Thiago
    Koke
    Fabian
    Dani Olmo
    Mikel Oyarzabal
    Gerard Moreno
    Alvaro Morat
    Ferran Torres
    Adama Traore
    Pablo Sarabia

    Sweden
    Sweden manager Janne Andersson announced his final 26-man squad on Tuesday, May 18.

    Robin Olsen (GK)
    Karl-Johan Johnsson (GK)
    Kristoffer Nordfeldt (GK)
    Mikael Lustig
    Ludwig Augustinsson
    Victor Lindelof
    Marcus Danielson
    Martin Olsson
    Pontus Jansson
    Filip Helander
    Emil Krafth
    Andreas Granqvist (c)
    Sebastian Larsson
    Albin Ekdal
    Emil Forsberg 
    Ken Sema
    Viktor Claesson
    Jens Cajuste 
    Mattias Svanberg
    Kristoffer Olsson
    Dejan Kulusevski
    Gustav Svensson
    Jordan Larsson
    Alexander Isak
    Robin Quaison
    Marcus Berg

    Group F
    Dominik Szoboszlai will be key to Hungary’s hopes as they look to defy the odds and escape the Group of DeathCredit: Getty
    France
    France manager Didier Deschamps’ 26-man squad is as follows:

    Hugo Lloris (GK) (c)
    Steve Mandanda (GK)
    Mike Maignan (GK)
    Leo Dubois
    Benjamin Pavard
    Kurt Zouma
    Jules Kounde
    Raphael Varane
    Clement Lenglet
    Prinsel Kimpembe
    Lucas Digne
    Lucas Hernandez
    N’Golo Kante
    Paul Pogba
    Adrien Rabiot
    Corentin Tolisso
    Moussa Sissoko
    Karim Benzema
    Olivier Giroud
    Kylian Mbappe
    Marcus Thuram
    Kingsley Coman
    Wissam Ben Yedder
    Antoine Griezmann
    Thomas Lemar
    Ousmane Dembele

    Germany
    Germany manager Joachim Low – who is departing after Euro 2020 – announced his 26-man squad.

    Manuel Neuer (GK) (c)
    Bernd Leno (GK)
    Kevin Trapp (GK)
    Robin Koch
    Christian Gunter
    Mats Hummels
    Antonio Rüdiger
    Matthias Ginter
    Emre Can
    Niklas Sule
    Lukas Klostermann
    Marcel Halstenberg
    Robin Gosens
    Toni Kroos
    Joshua Kimmich
    Thomas Muller
    İlkay Gundogan
    Leon Goretzka
    Leroy Sané
    Kai Havertz
    Florian Neuhaus
    Jonas Hofmann
    Jamal Musiala
    Timo Werner
    Serge Gnabry
    Kevin Volland

    Hungary
    Hungary manager Marco Rossi’s 30-man preliminary squad is as follows:

    Peter Gulacsi (GK)
    Adam Bogdan (GK)
    Denes Dibusz (GK)
    Balasz Toth (GK)
    Gergo Lovrencsics
    Adam Lang
    Attila Fiola
    Willi Orban
    Attila Szalai
    Endre Botka
    Akos Kecskes
    Bendeguz Bolla
    Csaba Spandler
    Adam Nagy
    Laszlo Kleinheisler
    Filip Holender
    David Siger
    Dominik Szoboszlai
    Loic Nego
    Daniel Gazdag
    Andras Schafer
    Tamas Cseri
    Adam Szalai (c)
    Nemanja Nikolic
    Roland Sallai
    Roland Varga
    Jevin Varga
    Janos Hahn
    Szabolcs Schön

    Portugal
    Portugal manager Fernando Santos’ squad is as follows:

    Rui Silva (GK)
    Anthony Lopes (GK)
    Rui Patricio (GK)
    Raphael Guerrero
    Nuno Mendes
    Ruben Dias
    Jose Fonte
    Pepe
    Joao Cancelo
    Nelson Semedo
    Bruno Fernandes
    Renato Sanches
    Joao Palhinha
    Danilo Pereira
    Ruben Neves
    William Carvahlo
    Joao Moutinho
    Sergio Oliveira
    Bernardo Silva
    Rafa Silva
    Andre Silva
    Joao Felix
    Pedro Goncalves
    Diogo Jota
    Goncalo Guedes
    Cristiano Ronaldo (c) More

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    Turkey vs Guinea: Live stream, TV channel, kick-off time and team news for Euro 2020 warm-up

    THE Euro 2020 warm-up games continue with Wales’ Group A opponents Turkey in action against GuineaThe Turks were supposed to host Northern Ireland, but that game was cancelled due to Turkey’s placement on the UK red list.
    ⚽ Follow ALL of the latest news and updates from Euro 2020 with our live blog
    Burak Yilmaz (centre) fired Lille to a stunning Ligue 1 triumph and will be looking to make a similar impact at Euro 2020Credit: Getty
    However, Africa Cup of Nations side Guinea have stepped in at the last minute as Senol Gunes’ men step up their preparations.
    Last Thursday, Turkey picked up a 2-1 win over Azerbaijan in their first warm-up fixture.
    What time does Turkey vs Guinea kick off?

    Turkey vs Guinea takes place on Monday, May 31.
    The match kicks off at 6pm in the UK – 8pm in Turkey and 5pm in Guinea.
    It will take place at the Antalya Stadium.

    What TV channel is Turkey vs Guinea on and can I live stream it?

    Turkey vs Guinea is live on the Sky Sports Red Button in the UK.
    Coverage will commence at kick-off.
    To stream the game live, head to your Sky Go app.
    Non-Sky Sports subscribers can still watch all the action with a Now TV Day Pass from £9.99.
    TRT Spor will show the game live in Turkey.

    Team news
    Turkey’s provisional 30-man Euro 2020 squad, which Senol Gunes must cut to 26 men by Tuesday, is as follows:

    Mert Günok (GK)
    Uğurcan Çakır (GK)
    Altay Bayındır (GK)
    Gökhan Akkan (GK)
    Kaan Ayhan
    Çağlar Söyüncü
    Zeki Çelik
    Merih Demiral
    Umut Meraş
    Ozan Kabak
    Mert Müldür
    Rıdvan Yılmaz
    Ozan Tufan
    Hakan Çalhanoğlu
    Okay Yokuşlu
    Yusuf Yazıcı
    Cengiz Ünder
    Mahmut Tekdemir
    İrfan Kahveci
    Dorukhan Toköz
    Abdülkadir Ömür
    Efecan Karaca
    Taylan Antalyalı
    Orkun Kökçü
    Halil Akbunar
    Turkey Göztepe
    Kerem Aktürkoğlu
    Burak Yılmaz (c)
    Kenan Karaman
    Enes Ünal
    Halil Dervişoğlu More

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    Upcoming boxing fights 2021: Fixture schedule – Tyson Fury vs Deontay Wilder 3 DATE, Floyd Mayweather vs Logan Paul

    BOXING is set for a brilliant few months of ring action with some of the biggest names in the sport in action – including Canelo Alvarez, Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua lacing up their gloves.Check out SunSport’s extensive boxing schedule for 2021 below…
    Full boxing schedule 2021
    📺 BT Sport (UK) – ESPN (US) 📺
    🗓 June 5 – 🇬🇧 London, England

    Daniel Dubois vs Bogdan Dinu (12 rounds – heavyweights
    Tommy Fury vs. TBA (4 or 6 rounds – light heavyweight)
    Archie Sharp vs. Marcio Soza (10 rounds – super-featherweight)
    Caoimhin Agyarko vs TBA (10 rounds – middleweight)

    📺 Sky Sports Box Office (UK) – Showtime PPV (US) 📺
    🗓 June 6 – 🇺🇸 Miami, Florida

    Floyd Mayweather vs Logan Paul (8 rounds – exhibition fight)
    Badou Jack vs TBA (12 rounds – light-heavyweight)
    Jarrett Hurd vs Luis Arias (10 rounds – middleweight)
    Chad Johnson vs Brian Maxwell (4 rounds – exhibition fight)

    📺 Fite TV (UK) – ESPN (US) 📺
    🗓 June 12 – 🇺🇸 Las Vegas, Nevada

    Shakur Stevenson vs Jeremiah Nakathila (12 rounds – super-featherweight)

    📺 Triller PPV (US) – Fite TV PPV (UK) 📺
    🗓 June 19 – 🇺🇸 Miami, Florida

    Teofimo Lopez vs George Kambosos Jr (12 rounds – lightweight, WBC Franchise, WBA, WBO, IBF, Ring Magazine titles)
    Evander Holyfield vs Kevin McBride (6 rounds – heavyweight)

    📺 Showtime (US) 📺
    🗓 June 19 – 🇺🇸 Houston, Texas

    Jermall Charlo vs Juan Macias Montiel (12 rounds – middleweight, WBC title)
    Isaac Cruz vs Francisco Vargas (10 rounds – lightweight)

    📺 ESPN (US) 📺
    🗓 June 19 – 🇺🇸 Las Vegas, Nevada

    Naoya Inoue vs Michael Dasmarinas (12 rounds – bantamweight, IBF & WBA titles)

    📺 Showtime PPV (US) 📺
    🗓 June 26, 🇺🇸 Atlanta, Georgia

    Gervonta Davis vs Mario Barrios (12 rounds – super-lightweight)
    Erickson Lubin vs Jeison Rosario (12 rounds – super-welterweight)

    📺 ESPN (US) 📺
    🗓 June 26, 🇺🇸 Las Vegas, Nevada

    Vasyl Lomachenko vs Masayoshi Nakatani (12 rounds – lightweight)
    Robert Brant vs Janibek Alimkhanuly (10 rounds – middleweight)

    📺 Showtime (US) 📺
    🗓 July 3, Venue: TBC

    Chris Colbert vs Yuriorkis Gamboa (12 rounds – super-featherweight)

    📺 DAZN (UK & US) 📺
    🗓 July 9, 🇺🇸 Los Angeles, California

    Gilberto Ramirez vs Sullivan Barrera (12 rounds – light-heavyweight)
    Joseph Diaz Jr. vs Javier Fortuna (12 rounds – lightweight)

    📺 Showtime (US) 📺
    🗓 July 17, 🇺🇸 Brooklyn, New York

    Jermell Charlo vs Brian Castano (12 rounds, super-welterweight, WBA, WBC, WBO, IBF, Ring Magazine titles)

    📺 BT Sport Box Office (UK) – ESPN/Fox PPV (US) 📺
    🗓 July 24, 🇺🇸 Las Vegas, Nevada

    Tyson Fury vs Deontay Wilder III (12 rounds – heavyweight, WBC, The Ring titles)

    📺 Showtime (US) 📺
    🗓 August 14, Venue: TBC

    John Riel Casimero vs Guillermo Rigondeaux (12 rounds – bantamweight, WBO title)

    📺 Fox PPV (US) 📺

    Manny Pacquiao vs Errol Spence Jr (12 rounds – welterweight, WBC, IBF titles)

    📺 Showtime (US) 📺
    🗓 August 28, Venue: TBC

    David Benavidez vs Jose Uzcategui (12 rounds – super-middleweight)

    📺 Showtime (US) 📺
    🗓 September 11, Venue: TBC

    Stephen Fulton Jr. vs TBA (12 rounds – super-bantamweight, WBO title)

    Results
    🗓 May 29 – 🇺🇸 Carson, California

    Nonito Donaire def. Nordine Oubaali TKO4 (12 rounds – bantamweight, WBC title)

    🗓 May 29 – 🇺🇸 Las Vegas, Nevada

    Devin Haney def. Jorge Linares UD12 (12 rounds – lightweight, WBC title)
    Chantelle Cameron def. Melissa Hernandez TKO7 (10 rounds – super-lightweight, WBC title)
    Jason Quigley def. Shane Mosley Jr. MD10 (10 rounds – middleweight)
    Azinga Fuzile def. Martin Ward TKO7 (12 rounds – super-featherweight)

    🗓 May 22 – 🇺🇸 Las Vegas, Nevada

    Josh Taylor def. Jose Ramirez UD (12 rounds – super-lightweight, WBC, WBO, WBA, IBF, The Ring titles)
    Jose Zepeda def. Han Lundy UD (10 rounds – super-lightweight)
    Kenneth Sims Jr def. Elvis Rodriguez MD (8 rounds, – super-lightweight)

    🗓 May 8 – 🇺🇸 Arlington, Texas

    Canelo Alvarez def. Billy Joe Saunders TKO8 (12 rounds – super-middleweight, WBA, WBC, WBO, The Ring titles)
    Elwin Soto def. Katsunari Takayama TKO9 (12 rounds – light-flyweight, WBO title)
    Souleymane Cissokho def. Kieron Conway SD12 (10 rounds – super-welterweight)
    Frank Sanchez def. Nagy Aguilera TD6 (10 rounds -heavyweight)

    🗓 May 1 – 🇺🇸 Los Angeles, California

    Andy Ruiz Jr def. Chris Arreola UD12 (12 rounds – heavyweight)
    Sebastian Fundora def. Jorge Cota TKO4 (12 rounds – super-welterweight)

    🗓 May 1 – 🇬🇧 London, England

    Joseph Parker def. Derek Chisora SD12 (12 rounds – heavyweight)
    Katie Taylor def. Tasha Jonas UD12 (10 rounds – lightweight, undisputed world titles)
    Dimitry Bivol def. Craig Richards UD12 (12 rounds – light heavyweight, WBA title)
    Chris Eubank Jr def. Marcus Morrison UD10 (10 rounds – middleweight)
    Jovanni Straffon def. James Tennyson KO1 (12 rounds lightweight)

    🗓 April 30 – 🇬🇧 London, England

    Sunny Edwards def. Moruti Mthalane UD12 (12 rounds – flyweight, IBF title)
    Michael Conlan def. Ionut Baluta MD12 (12 rounds – super-bantamweight)

    🗓 April 24 – 🇬🇧 London, England

    Felix Cash def. Denzel Bentley TKO3 (12 rounds – middleweight)
    Callum Johnson def. Emil Markic KO2 (10 rounds – light heavyweight)
    David Adeleye def. Kamil Sokolowski UD6 (6 rounds – heavyweight)

    Credit: Reuters
    🗓 April 17 – 🇺🇸 Miami, Florida

    Demetrius Andrade def. Liam Williams (12 rounds – middleweight, WBO title) UD12
    Carlos Gongora def. Christopher Pearson (12 rounds – super-middleweight, IBO title) TKO8

    🗓 April 17 – 🇺🇸 Atlanta, Georgia

    Jake Paul def. Ben Askren KO1 (8 rounds – cruiserweight)
    Regis Prograis def. Ivan Redkach TD6 (10 rounds – super-lightweight)
    Joe Fournier def. Reykon RTD2 (6 rounds – light heavyweight)
    Steve Cunningham def. Frank Mir UD6 (6 rounds – heavyweight)

    🗓 April 10 – 🇺🇸 Uncasville, Connecticut

    Jaron Ennis def. Sergey Lipinets KO6 (12 rounds – welterweight)
    Eimantas Stanionis def. Thomas Dulorme UD12 (12 rounds – welterweight)

    🗓 April 10 – 🇺🇸 Tulsa, Oklahoma

    Joe Smith Jr def. Maxim Vlasov MD12 (12 rounds – light-heavyweight, WBO title)

    🗓 April 10 – 🇬🇧 London, England

    Conor Benn def. Samuel Vargas TKO1 (10 rounds – welterweights)
    Shannon Courtenay def. Ebanie Bridges UD10 (10 rounds – bantamweight, WBA title)
    Savannah Marshall def. Maria Lindberg KO3 (10 rounds – super-middleweight, WBO title)
    Kash Farooq def. Alexander Espinoza UD10 (10 rounds – bantamweight)
    John Hedges def. Milan Dvorak UD4 (4 rounds – super-middleweight)
    Nick Campbell def. Peter Frohlich TKO2 (4 rounds – heavyweight)

    🗓 April 3, 🇦🇪 Dubai, UAE

    Jamel Herring def. Carl Frampton TKO6 (12 rounds – super-featherweight, WBO title) More

  • in

    Euro 2020 squads: England 33-man list, Wales squad TONIGHT, Sergio Ramos AXED by Spain, France recall Karim Benzema

    EURO 2020 is almost here and the squads are already being announced.England are the latest country to announce their pool of players – but it is only a provisional squad for the tournament which starts on June 11.

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

    All competing Euro 2020 countries must name a squad of 26 players by June 1, though some are choosing to name larger preliminary squads beforehand.
    Euro 2020 squads
    Group A
    Gareth Bale will be key to Wales’ hopes in Euro 2020 Group ACredit: PA
    Italy
    Roberto Mancini has named a provisional squad, but is yet to finalise his pool of players:

    Gianluigi Donnarumma (GK)
    Alessio Cragno (GK)
    Alex Meret (GK)
    Salvatore Sirigu (GK)
    Francesco Acerbi
    Alessandro Bastoni
    Cristiano Biraghi
    Leonardo Bonucci
    Giorgio Chiellini
    Giovanni Di Lorenzo
    Alessandro Florenzi
    Gianluca Mancini
    Leonardo Spinazzola
    Rafael Toloi
    Nicolo Barella
    Gaetano Castrovilli
    Bryan Cristante
    Manuel Locatelli
    Lorenzo Pellegrini
    Matteo Pessina
    Stefano Sensi
    Marco Verratti
    Andrea Belotti
    Domenico Berardi
    Federico Bernardeschi
    Federico Chiesa
    Vincenzo Grifo
    Ciro Immobile
    Lorenzo Insigne
    Moise Kean
    Matteo Politano
    Giacomo Raspadori

    Switzerland
    Vladimir Petkovic has named a 29-man provisional squad and intends to cut it down before the June 1 deadline.
    Provisional squad:

    Yann Sommer (GK)
    Yvon Mvogo (GK)
    Jonas Omlin (GK)
    Gregor Kobel (GK)
    Manuel Akanji 
    Loris Benito 
    Nico Elvedi 
    Kevin Mbabu 
    Becir Omeragic 
    Ricardo Rodriguez  
    Silvan Widmer
    Fabian Schar 
    Jordan Lotomba 
    Eray Comert
    Granit Xhaka 
    Denis Zakaria 
    Remo Freuler 
    Djibril Sow 
    Admir Mehmedi 
    Xherdan Shaqiri 
    Ruben Vargas 
    Steven Zuber 
    Edimilson Fernandes 
    Christian Fassnacht 
    Dan Ndoye 
    Andi Zeqiri
    Breel Embolo 
    Mario Gavranovic  
    Haris Seferovic

    Turkey
    Senol Gunes has announced his provisional 30-man squad. The final squad will be announced on June 1.

    Mert Günok (GK)
    Uğurcan Çakır (GK)
    Altay Bayındır (GK)
    Gökhan Akkan (GK)
    Kaan Ayhan
    Çağlar Söyüncü
    Zeki Çelik
    Merih Demiral
    Umut Meraş
    Ozan Kabak
    Mert Müldür
    Rıdvan Yılmaz
    Ozan Tufan
    Hakan Çalhanoğlu
    Okay Yokuşlu
    Yusuf Yazıcı
    Cengiz Ünder
    Mahmut Tekdemir
    İrfan Kahveci
    Dorukhan Toköz
    Abdülkadir Ömür
    Efecan Karaca
    Taylan Antalyalı
    Orkun Kökçü
    Halil Akbunar
    Turkey Göztepe
    Kerem Aktürkoğlu
    Burak Yılmaz (c)
    Kenan Karaman
    Enes Ünal
    Halil Dervişoğlu

    Wales
    Interim manager Robert Page has announced a 28-man squad for a training camp in Portugal. He will name his Euro 2020 squad today.

    Wayne Hennessey (GK)
    Danny Ward (GK)
    Adam Davies (GK)
    James Lawrence
    Ben Davies
    Joe Rodon
    Chris Mepham
    Chris Gunter
    Rhys Norrington-Davies
    Neco Williams
    Joe Allen
    Joe Morrell
    Ethan Ampadu
    Matthew Smith
    Jonathan Williams
    Kieffer Moore
    Aaron Ramsey
    Harry Wilson
    Gareth Bale
    David Brooks
    Tyler Roberts
    Tom Lawrence
    Rabbi Matondo
    Dylan Levitt
    Tom Lockyer
    Rubin Colwill
    Mark Harris
    George Thomas

    Group B
    Kevin de Bruyne and Belgium are among the favourites for Euro 2020Credit: Reuters
    Belgium
    Belgium manager Roberto Martinez’s full 26-man squad is as follows:

    Thibaut Courtois (GK)
    Simon Mignolet (GK)
    Mats Sels (GK)
    Toby Alderweireld
    Dedryck Boyata
    Jason Denayer
    Thomas Vermaelen
    Jan Vertonghen
    Yannick Carrasco
    Timothy Castagne
    Nacer Chadli
    Thorgan Hazard
    Thomas Meunier
    Kevin de Bruyne
    Leander Dendoncker
    Dennis Praet
    Youri Tielemans
    Hans Vanaken
    Axel Witsel
    Jeremy Doku
    Eden Hazard (c)
    Dries Mertens
    Leandro Trossard
    Michy Batshuayi
    Christian Benteke
    Romelu Lukaku

    Standby: Thomas Kaminski (GK), Alexis Saelemaekers, Albert Sambi Lokonga, Bryan Heynen, Thomas Foket, Adnan Januzaj, Brandon Mechele, Jordan Lukaku, Zinho Vanheusden, Yari Verschaeren, Charles de Ketelaere
    Denmark
    Denmark’s final 26-man squad is as follows:

    Kasper Schmeichel (GK)
    Frederik Ronnow (GK)
    Jonas Lossl (GK)
    Simon Kjaer (c)
    Andreas Christensen
    Mathias Jorgensen
    Jens Stryger Larsen
    Jannik Vestergaard
    Nicolai Boilesen
    Joakim Maehle
    Joachim Andersen
    Christian Eriksen
    Thomas Delaney
    Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg
    Daniel Wass
    Mathias Jensen
    Anders Christiansen
    Christian Norgaard
    Yussuf Poulsen
    Martin Braithwaite
    Andreas Cornelius
    Kasper Dolberg
    Robert Skov
    Jonas Wind
    Andreas Skov Olsen
    Mikkel Damsgaard

    Finland
    Finland have announced a 29-man preliminary squad. The final squad will be revealed on Tuesday, June 1.

    Lukas Hradecky (GK)
    Jesse Joronen (GK)
    Anssi Jaakkola (GK)
    Carljohan Eriksson (GK)
    Paulus Arajuuri
    Jere Uronen
    Juhani Ojala
    Thomas Lam
    Sauli Vaisanen
    Albin Granlund
    Nikolai Alho
    Daniel O’Shaughnessy
    Niko Hamalainen
    Leo Vaisanen
    Robert Ivanov
    Aapo Halme
    Tim Sparv (c)
    Rasmus Schuller
    Glen Kamara
    Pyry Soiri
    Joni Kauko
    Fredrik Jensen
    Onni Valakari
    Jasin-Amin Assehnoun
    Teemu Pukki
    Joel Pohjanpalo
    Lassi Lappalainen
    Roope Riski
    Marcus Forss

    Russia
    Russia manager Stanislav Cherchesov’s preliminary squad is as follows:

    Yury Dyupin (GK)
    Andrey Lunev (GK)
    Anton Shunin (GK)
    Matvei Safonov (GK)
    Georgi Dzhikiya
    Igor Diveev
    Mario Fernandes
    Roman Yevgenyev
    Yuri Zhirkov
    Vyacheslav Karavaev
    Fyodor Kudryashov
    Ilya Samoshnikov
    Andrei Semyonov
    Dimitri Barinov
    Rifat Zhemaletdinov
    Maksim Mukhin
    Aleksandr Golovin
    Arsen Zakharyan
    Roman Zobnin
    Daniil Fomin
    Aleksei Ionov
    Daler Kuzyaev
    Andrei Mostovoy
    Magomed Ozdoyev
    Denis Makarov
    Aleksei Miranchuk
    Denis Cheryshev
    Artem Dzyuba (c)
    Anton Zabolotny
    Aleksandr Sobolev

    Group C
    Holland are back in tournament football after a seven-year absenceCredit: AFP
    Austria
    Austria’s final Euro 2020 squad is as follows:

    Daniel Bachmann (GK)
    Pavao Pervan (GK)
    Alexander Schlager (GK)
    David Alaba  
    Aleksandar Dragovic
    Marco Friedl
    Martin Hinteregger  
    Stefan Lainer 
    Philipp Lienhart 
    Stefan Posch 
    Christopher Trimmel 
    Andreas Ulmer
    Julian Baumgartlinger
    Christoph Baumgartner 
    Florian Grillitsch
    Stefan Ilsanker 
    Konrad Laimer
    Valentino Lazaro
    Marcel Sabitzer
    Luis Schaub  
    Xaver Schlager 
    Alessandro Schopf
    Marko Arnautovic 
    Michael Gregoritsch 
    Sasa Kalajdzic
    Karim Onisiwo

    Holland
    Holland manager Frank de Boer announced his preliminary 34-man squad on Friday, May 14.

    Jesper Cillessen (GK)
    Tim Krul (GK)
    Martin Stekelenburg (GK)
    Patrick van Aanholt
    Nathan Ake
    Daley Blind
    Denzel Dumfries
    Matthijs de Ligt
    Jurrien Timber
    Joel Veltman
    Stefan de Vrij
    Owen Windal
    Donny van de Beek
    Ryan Gravenberch
    Frenkie de Jong
    Davy Klaassen
    Teun Koopmeiners
    Martin de Roon
    Georginio Wijnaldum (c)
    Steven Berghuis
    Cody Gakpo
    Luuk de Jong
    Donyell Malen
    Memphis Depay
    Quincy Promes
    Wout Weghorst

    North Macedonia
    North Macedonia manager Igor Angelovski announced his squad on May 20.

    Stole Dimitrievski (GK)
    Damjan Shishkovski (GK)
    Riste Jankov (GK)
    Stefan Ristovski
    Visar Musliu
    Egzon Bejtulai
    Kire Ristevski
    Gjoko Zajkov
    Darko Velkovski
    Ezgjan Alioski
    Arijan Ademi
    Enis Bardhi
    Stefan Spirovski
    Boban Nikolov
    Tihomir Kostadinov
    Ferhan Hasani
    Eljif Elmaz
    Daniel Avramovski
    Darko Churlinov
    Marjan Radeski
    Goran Pandev
    Aleksandar Trajkovski
    Ivan Trichkovski
    Vlatko Stojanovski
    Krste Velkovski
    Milan Ristovski

    Ukraine
    Ukraine manager Andriy Shevchenko’s preliminary squad is as follows:

    Andriy Pyatov (c) (GK)
    Andriy Lunin (GK)
    Heorhiy Bushchan (GK)
    Anatoliy Trubin (GK)
    Mykola Matviyenko
    Oleksandr Karavayev
    Serhiy Kryvtsov
    Eduard Sobol
    Vitaliy Mykolenko
    Bohdan Mykhaylichenko
    Illya Zabarnyi
    Oleksandr Tymchyk
    Viktor Korniyenko
    Denys Popov
    Oleksandr Syrota
    Andriy Yarmolenko
    Taras Stepanenko
    Oleksandr Zinchenko
    Ruslan Malinovskyi
    Serhiy Sydorchuk
    Viktor Tsyhankov
    Marlos
    Yevhenii Makarenko
    Mykola Shaparenko
    Oleksandr Zubkov
    Artem Bondarenko
    Bohdan Lyednyev
    Heorhiy Sudakov
    Roman Yaremchuk
    Artem Besyedin
    Artem Dovbyk

    Group D
    Harry Kane will hope to lead England to a first international trophy since 1966Credit: Andy Hooper-The Daily Mail
    Croatia
    Croatia manager Zlatko Dalic’s final 26-man Euro 2020 squad is as follows:

    Lovre Kalinic (GK)
    Dominik Livakovic (GK)
    Simon Sluga (GK)
    Domagoj Vida
    Dejan Lovren
    Sime Vrsaljko
    Borna Barisic
    Duje Caleta-Car
    Josip Juranovic
    Domagoj Bradaric
    Mile Skoric
    Josko Gvardiol
    Luka Modric (c)
    Mateo Kovacic
    Marcelo Brozovic
    Milan Badelj
    Mario Pasalic
    Nikola Vlasic
    Luka Ivanusec
    Ivan Perisic
    Andrej Kramaric
    Ante Rebic
    Josip Brekalo
    Bruno Petkovic
    Mislav Orsic
    Ante Budimir

    Czech Republic
    Czech Republic manager Jaroslav Silhavy’s 26-man Euro 2020 squad is as follows:

    Tomas Vaclik (GK)
    Jiri Pavlenka (GK)
    Ales Mandous (GK)
    Pavel Kaderabek
    Ondrej Celustka
    Tomas Kalas
    Jan Boril
    Jakub Brabec
    Vladimir Coufal
    Tomas Holes
    Ales Mateju
    David Zima
    Vladimir Darida (c)
    Jakub Jankto
    Tomas Soucek
    Lukas Masopust
    Antonin Barak
    Alex Kral
    Petr Sevcik
    Adam Hlozek
    Jakub Pesek
    Michal Sadilek
    Matej Vydra
    Michael Krmencik
    Patrik Schick
    Tomas Pekhart

    England
    England manager Gareth Southgate has named a 33-man provisional squad, which he intends to trim down before the June 1 deadline.
    Here is the provisional squad:

    Dean Henderson (GK)
    Sam Johnstone (GK)
    Jordan Pickford (GK)
    Aaron Ramsdale (GK)
    Trent Alexander-Arnold
    Ben Chilwell
    Conor Coady
    Ben Godfrey
    Reece James
    Harry Maguire
    Tyrone Mings
    Luke Shaw
    John Stones
    Kieran Trippier
    Kyle Walker
    Ben White
    Jude Bellingham
    Jordan Henderson
    Jesse Lingard
    Mason Mount
    Kalvin Phillips
    Declan Rice
    James Ward-Prowse
    Dominic Calvert-Lewin
    Phil Foden
    Jack Grealish
    Mason Greenwood
    Harry Kane
    Marcus Rashford
    Bukayo Saka
    Jadon Sancho
    Raheem Sterling
    Ollie Watkins

    Scotland
    Steve Clarke’s Scotland squad is as follows:

    Craig Gordon (GK)
    David Marshall (GK)
    Jon McLaughlin
    Liam Cooper
    Declan Gallagher
    Grant Hanley
    Jack Hendry
    Scott McKenna
    Stephen O’Donnell
    Nathan Patterson
    Andy Robertson
    Greg Taylor
    Kieran Tierney
    Stuart Armstrong
    Ryan Christie
    John Fleck
    James Forrest
    Ryan Fraser
    Billy Gilmour
    John McGinn
    Callum McGregor
    Scott McTominay
    David Turnbull
    Che Adams
    Lyndon Dykes
    Kevin Nisbet

    Group E
    Zlatan Ibrahimovic (right) had come out of retirement but will not feature for Sweden after getting injuredCredit: EPA
    Poland
    Poland manager Paulo Sousa’s squad is as follows:

    Lukasz Fabianski
    Wojciech Szczesny
    Kukasz Skorupski
    Kamil Glik
    Maciej Rybus
    Bartosz Bereszynski
    Jan Bednarek
    Tomasz Kedziora
    Pawel Dawidowicz
    Michal Helik
    Kamil Piatkowski
    Tymoteusz Puchacz
    Grzegorz Krychowiak
    Piotr Zielinski
    Mateusz Klich
    Karol Linetty
    KamiL Jozwiak
    Przemyslaw Frankowski
    Jakub Moder
    Przemyslaw Placheta
    Kacper Kozlowski
    Robert Lewandowski (c)
    Arkadiusz Milik
    Dawid Kownacki
    Jakub Swierczok
    Karol Swiderski

    Slovakia
    Slovakia manager Stefan Tarkovic’s 24-man squad has been announced, with the full 26-man squad to follow on June 2.

    Martin Dubravka (GK)
    Dusan Kuciak (GK)
    Marek Rodak (GK)
    Petar Pekarik
    Tomas Hubocan
    Milan Skriniar
    Lubomir Satka
    Denis Vavro
    Jakub Holubek
    Marek Hamsik (c)
    Juraj Kucka
    Vladimir Weiss
    Robert Mak
    Ondrej Duda
    Patrik Hrosovsky
    Stanislav Lobotka
    Matus Bero
    Lukas Haraslin
    Laszlo Benes
    Tomas Suslov
    Erik Jirka
    Michal Duris
    Robert Bozenik
    David Strelec

    Spain
    Manager Luis Enrique decided to pick only 24 players instead of the 26 he was allowed to select.

    David de Gea (GK)
    Robert Sanchez (GK)
    Unai Simon (GK)
    Aymeric Laporte
    Jose Gaya
    Jordi Alba
    Pau Torres
    Eric Garcia
    Diego Llorente
    Cesar Azpilicueta
    Marcos Llorente
    Sergio Busquets (c)
    Rodri
    Pedri
    Thiago
    Koke
    Fabian
    Dani Olmo
    Mikel Oyarzabal
    Gerard Moreno
    Alvaro Morat
    Ferran Torres
    Adama Traore
    Pablo Sarabia

    Sweden
    Sweden manager Janne Andersson announced his final 26-man squad on Tuesday, May 18.

    Robin Olsen (GK)
    Karl-Johan Johnsson (GK)
    Kristoffer Nordfeldt (GK)
    Mikael Lustig
    Ludwig Augustinsson
    Victor Lindelof
    Marcus Danielson
    Martin Olsson
    Pontus Jansson
    Filip Helander
    Emil Krafth
    Andreas Granqvist (c)
    Sebastian Larsson
    Albin Ekdal
    Emil Forsberg 
    Ken Sema
    Viktor Claesson
    Jens Cajuste 
    Mattias Svanberg
    Kristoffer Olsson
    Dejan Kulusevski
    Gustav Svensson
    Jordan Larsson
    Alexander Isak
    Robin Quaison
    Marcus Berg

    Group F
    Dominik Szoboszlai will be key to Hungary’s hopes as they look to defy the odds and escape the Group of DeathCredit: Getty
    France
    France manager Didier Deschamps’ 26-man squad is as follows:

    Hugo Lloris (GK) (c)
    Steve Mandanda (GK)
    Mike Maignan (GK)
    Leo Dubois
    Benjamin Pavard
    Kurt Zouma
    Jules Kounde
    Raphael Varane
    Clement Lenglet
    Prinsel Kimpembe
    Lucas Digne
    Lucas Hernandez
    N’Golo Kante
    Paul Pogba
    Adrien Rabiot
    Corentin Tolisso
    Moussa Sissoko
    Karim Benzema
    Olivier Giroud
    Kylian Mbappe
    Marcus Thuram
    Kingsley Coman
    Wissam Ben Yedder
    Antoine Griezmann
    Thomas Lemar
    Ousmane Dembele

    Germany
    Germany manager Joachim Low – who is departing after Euro 2020 – announced his 26-man squad.

    Manuel Neuer (GK) (c)
    Bernd Leno (GK)
    Kevin Trapp (GK)
    Robin Koch
    Christian Gunter
    Mats Hummels
    Antonio Rüdiger
    Matthias Ginter
    Emre Can
    Niklas Sule
    Lukas Klostermann
    Marcel Halstenberg
    Robin Gosens
    Toni Kroos
    Joshua Kimmich
    Thomas Muller
    İlkay Gundogan
    Leon Goretzka
    Leroy Sané
    Kai Havertz
    Florian Neuhaus
    Jonas Hofmann
    Jamal Musiala
    Timo Werner
    Serge Gnabry
    Kevin Volland

    Hungary
    Hungary manager Marco Rossi’s 30-man preliminary squad is as follows:

    Peter Gulacsi (GK)
    Adam Bogdan (GK)
    Denes Dibusz (GK)
    Balasz Toth (GK)
    Gergo Lovrencsics
    Adam Lang
    Attila Fiola
    Willi Orban
    Attila Szalai
    Endre Botka
    Akos Kecskes
    Bendeguz Bolla
    Csaba Spandler
    Adam Nagy
    Laszlo Kleinheisler
    Filip Holender
    David Siger
    Dominik Szoboszlai
    Loic Nego
    Daniel Gazdag
    Andras Schafer
    Tamas Cseri
    Adam Szalai (c)
    Nemanja Nikolic
    Roland Sallai
    Roland Varga
    Jevin Varga
    Janos Hahn
    Szabolcs Schön

    Portugal
    Portugal manager Fernando Santos’ squad is as follows:

    Rui Silva (GK)
    Anthony Lopes (GK)
    Rui Patricio (GK)
    Raphael Guerrero
    Nuno Mendes
    Ruben Dias
    Jose Fonte
    Pepe
    Joao Cancelo
    Nelson Semedo
    Bruno Fernandes
    Renato Sanches
    Joao Palhinha
    Danilo Pereira
    Ruben Neves
    William Carvahlo
    Joao Moutinho
    Sergio Oliveira
    Bernardo Silva
    Rafa Silva
    Andre Silva
    Joao Felix
    Pedro Goncalves
    Diogo Jota
    Goncalo Guedes
    Cristiano Ronaldo (c) More

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    Blackpool vs Lincoln: Live stream, TV channel, teams, kick-off time for League One play-off final

    BLACKPOOL are looking to return to the Championship for the first time since 2015 as they play Lincoln at Wembley.The Seasiders made it to the final with a 6-3 aggregate win over Oxford in the semis.
    Blackpool are looking to make it back to the ChampionshipCredit: PA
    Lincoln overcame Sunderland in the semi-finalCredit: Getty
    Lincoln meanwhile have not played in the English second tier since 1961.
    But they showed their class by seeing off giants Sunderland in the semi-final to reach this stage.
    What time does Blackpool vs Lincoln kick off?

    Blackpool take on Lincoln in the League One play-off final on Sunday, May 30 – TODAY.
    The League One play-off final kicks off at 3pm UK time.
    It will take place in front of fans at Wembley, with capacity restricted to ten thousand.
    Last time the two sides met they played out a 2-2 draw at Sincil Bank in April.

    What TV channel is Blackpool vs Lincoln on and can I live stream it?

    Blackpool vs Lincoln is live on Sky Sports Main Event and Sky Sports Football.
    To stream the game live, head to your Sky Go app.
    Non-Sky Sports subscribers can still watch all the action with a Now TV Day Pass from £9.99.

    Team news

    Latest odds
    To win in 90 minutes
    Blackpool 7/5
    Draw 11/5
    Lincoln 2/1
    To be promoted
    Blackpool 8/11
    Lincoln 11/10
    *Odds from Paddy Power correct as of Saturday, May 29. More

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    Euro 2020 fixtures: England, Scotland, Wales – all teams’ kick-off times, TV channel, live stream and full schedule

    THE domestic season is over and Euro 2020 is days away as a massive festival of football gets underway.It’s set to be a huge summer of action from around Europe as Gareth Southgate’s Three Lions go for glory.
    Southgate will be hoping to build on a good performance in the 2018 World CupCredit: AFP
    Billy Gilmour will be in action for Scotland after being picked by Steve ClarkeCredit: The Sun
    WIN £50,000! Play Dream Team Euros – our FREE fantasy football game

    There is plenty of home nations interest as well with Wales and Scotland involved in this summer’s showpiece.
    Re-arranged from last year’s cancelled tournament, Turkey face Italy in the Group A curtain-raiser in Rome.
    Euro 2020 confirmed groups
    There are 24 nations competing in Euro 2020, which will get underway on Friday, June 11 2021.
    Of the Home Nations, three have made it to the finals with England and Scotland both in Group D, while Wales have a tough ask in Group A.

    Group A: Turkey, Italy, Wales, Switzerland.
    Group B: Denmark, Finland, Belgium, Russia.
    Group C: Netherlands, Ukraine, Austria, North Macedonia.
    Group D: England, Croatia, Czech Republic, Scotland.
    Group E: Spain, Sweden, Poland, Slovakia.
    Group F: Germany, France, Portugal, Hungary.

    England boast the most-valuable squad of all Euro 2020 nations
    Euro 2020 fixtures
    Every single match of this summer’s tournament will be shown on free-to-air TV in the UK.
    You can catch the games on either the BBC or ITV, so anyone with a valid TV licence can watch.
    Games kick-off at 2pm, 5pm and 8pm BST – so there’s no late nights or early mornings like we’ve had in some recent World Cup’s.
    If you want to stream, the BBC iPlayer and ITV Hub will allow you to do so – all you have to do is create a free account.
    GROUP STAGE – Matchday 1
    Friday, June 11

    Turkey vs Italy, 8pm (Group A, BBC)

    Saturday, June 12

    Wales vs Switzerland, 2pm (Group A, BBC)
    Denmark vs Finland, 5pm (Group B, BBC)
    Belgium vs Russia, 8pm (Group B, ITV)

    Sunday, June 13

    England vs Croatia, 2pm (Group D, BBC)
    Austria vs North Macedonia, 5pm (Group C, ITV)
    Holland vs Ukraine, 8pm (Group C, ITV)

    Monday, June 14

    Scotland vs Czech Republic, 2pm (Group D, BBC)
    Poland vs Slovakia, 5pm (Group E, ITV)
    Spain vs Sweden, 8pm (Group E, BBC)

    Tuesday, June 15

    Hungary vs Portugal, 5pm (Group F, ITV)
    France vs Germany, 8pm (Group F, ITV)

    How England’s path to Euros glory could look
    GROUP STAGE – Matchday 2
    Wednesday, June 16

    Finland vs Russia, 2pm (Group B, BBC)
    Turkey vs Wales, 5pm (Group A, BBC)
    Italy vs Switzerland, 8pm (Group A, ITV)

    Thursday, June 17

    Ukraine vs North Macedonia, 2pm (Group C, ITV)
    Denmark vs Belgium, 5pm (Group B, ITV)
    Holland vs Austria, 8pm (Group C, BBC)

    Friday, June 18

    Sweden vs Slovakia, 2pm (Group E, BBC)
    Croatia vs Czech Republic, 5pm (Group D, BBC)
    England vs Scotland, 8pm (Group D, ITV)

    Saturday, June 19

    Hungary vs France, 2pm (Group F, BBC)
    Portugal vs Germany, 5pm (Group F, ITV)
    Spain vs Poland, 8pm (Group E, BBC)

    GROUP STAGE – Matchday 3
    Sunday, June 20

    Italy vs Wales, 5pm (Group A, ITV)
    Switzerland vs Turkey, 5pm (Group A, ITV)

    Monday, June 21

    Ukraine vs Austria, 5pm (Group C, ITV)
    North Macedonia vs Holland, 5pm (Group C, ITV)
    Russia vs Denmark, 8pm (Group B, BBC)
    Finland vs Belgium, 8pm (Group B, BBC)

    Tuesday, June 22

    Croatia vs Scotland, 8pm (Group D, ITV)
    Czech Republic vs England, 8pm (Group D, ITV)

    Wednesday, June 23

    Sweden vs Poland, 5pm (Group E, ITV)
    Slovakia vs Spain, 5pm (Group E, ITV)
    Portugal vs France, 8pm (Group F, BBC)
    Germany vs Hungary, 8pm (Group F, BBC)

    KNOCKOUT STAGE – Round of 16
    Saturday, June 26

    Match one – Runner up Group A vs Runner-up Group B, 6pm
    Match two – Winner Group A vs Runner-up Group C, 8pm

    Sunday, June 27

    Match three – Winner Group C vs 3rd Group D/E/F, 6pm
    Match four – Winner Group B vs 3rd Group A/D/E/F, 8pm

    Monday, June 28

    Match five – Runner-up Group D vs Runner-up Group E, 6pm
    Match six – Winner Group F vs 3rd Group A/B/C. 8pm

    Tuesday, June 29

    Match seven – Winner Group D vs Runner-up Group F, 6pm
    Match eight – Winner Group E vs 3rd Group A/B/C/D, 8pm

    KNOCKOUT STAGE – Quarter-finals
    Friday, July 2

    Winner of Match six vs Winner of Match five, 6pm
    Winner of Match four vs Winner of Match two, 8pm

    Saturday, July 3

    Winner of Match three vs Winner of Match one, 6pm
    Winner of Match eight vs Winner of match seven, 8pm

    KNOCKOUT STAGE – Semi-finals
    Tuesday, July 6

    Quarter-final two winner vs Quarter-final one winner, 8pm

    Wednesday, July 7

    Quarter-final four winner vs Quarter-final three winner, 8pm

    KNOCKOUT STAGE – Final
    Sunday, July 11

    Semi-final one winner vs Semi-final two winner, 8pm

    This summer’s showpiece will be held at Wembley in LondonCredit: PA
    Where will the Euro 2020 final be held?
    In a huge boost for Gareth Southgate and England, the semi-finals and final will be held at Wembley Stadium.
    Euro 2020 confirmed venues are:

    Rome (Stadio Olimpico)
    Baku (Olympic Stadium)
    Copenhagen (Parken Stadium)
    St Petersburg (St Petersburg Stadium)
    Amsterdam (Johan Crujff Arena)
    Bucharest (National Arena)
    London (Wembley Stadium)
    Glasgow (Hampden Park)
    Budapest (Puskás Aréna)
    Munich (Fußball Arena München)
    Seville (La Cartuja Stadium) More

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    Who is Pep Guardiola’s daughter Maria and what happened with her and Dele Alli?

    PEP Guardiola’s daughter was spotted kissing Dele Alli, after the football star’s split with girlfriend Ruby Mae.Spanish style icon Maria Guardiola, 20, was lucky to survive the devastating suicide bomb attack at the Ariana Grande concert in 2017. Here’s more about the Man City manager’s girl.
    Maria has become something of a style icon thanks to her impressive online following
    Who is Pep Guardiola’s daughter Maria?
    Student Maria, who lives in London, has won an army of online fans – boasting 40,000 followers on Instagram.
    She is considered a Spanish style icon, with glamorous, happy snaps of her jetset lifestyle shared on social media.
    Maria is the eldest of Pep’s three children with businesswoman Cristina Serra.
    She is close to her brother Marius, 18, and sister Valentina, 13, and the family have repeatedly posed together publicly at Pep’s end-of-season trophy celebrations.
    The former Barcelona and Bayern Munich boss has proudly beamed in front of cameras with his arm around Maria.
    Pep and his children have repeatedly posed together at his end-of-season trophy celebrationsCredit: PA:Press Association
    Is Maria dating Dele Alli?
    Dele Alli has been spotted snogging the daughter of Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola.
    The Spurs and England midfielder — who has not scored in the Premier League all season — cosied up with Maria at a rooftop bar.
    Dele, 25, was closely marking her as dozens of other drinkers looked on in London.
    Fittingly for a player who has spent most of the season as a sub, he made his move on Maria as they sat together on a bench.
    It appeared that he had put his bitter split from model Ruby Mae, 23, behind him.
    He leaned in for a smooch after he and Maria chatted for hours at the capital’s trendy Cloud 9 bar.
    Dele, in a white T-shirt and green baseball cap over his newly dreadlocked hair, hugged and kissed Maria, who was wearing a white hoodie.
    It is understood that Dele first met Maria in April.
    Dele Alli was spotted snogging Maria Guardiola
    An onlooker told The Sun: “Dele and Maria didn’t seem to have a care in the world.
    “They didn’t mind who saw them as they smooched in front of the DJ booth.
    “It was packed with hundreds of revellers watching on. All the tables had been booked and were completely full.
    “Strangers were wandering past and Dele and Maria didn’t blink an eye.
    “They were in a group together and it was very cosy. They looked so cute and could have been honeymooners.”
    Dele and Maria’s public smooch came last Sunday, May 9 — a day after Tottenham’s 3-1 Premier League defeat at Leeds United.
    The Spurs star recently became single after splitting with his long-term girlfriendCredit: Getty
    A friend told The Sun: “Dele looked smitten and finally over being dumped by his long-term lover Ruby Mae.
    “Dele and Maria are young, free and single. Who knows where it will go from here?
    Maria has told pals about the rooftop encounter with Dele but says they are “just friends”.
    The Sun told how Ruby ended her relationship with Dele after growing tired of his behaviour — including spending hours playing online game Fortnite.
    She has shared repeated public posts with her followers alluding to her joy at finally being free from the footballer.
    A spokesman for Dele declined to comment.
    Maria and Dele enjoyed a cosy night together at a rooftop bar in London
    How many children does Pep Guardiola have?
    Pep Guardiola has three children – son Marius and daughters Maria and Valentina – with his wife Cristina Guardiola.
    The couple met in a shop and dated for 20 years before marrying in 2014 in Matadepera, after their children were born.
    The Sun reported in 2019 that Cristina returned to Spain to take care of her fashion company, taking one of their children, while the other two remained in England with Pep.
    Cristina had been commuting back to work from Manchester for the previous three years after the former Bayern Munich gaffer replaced Manuel Pellegrini in 2016.
    Guardiola married fashion designer wife Cristina Serra back in 2014Credit: AFP – Getty
    “Like her husband, Cristina has a passion for fashion, poetry and photography,” reports the Mirror.
    “Cristina Serra Guardiola is known as a style icon back in her homeland – although she shies away from the limelight and rarely gives interview,” it adds.
    In 2018, Pep opened up for the first time about his wife and daughters being caught up in the horrific Ariana Grande concert bombing in Manchester, insisting that he was a Mancunian for life.
    Guardiola and his childhood sweetheart wife, CristinaCredit: Getty – Contributor
    Salman Abedi killed 22 men, women and children when he blew himself up in a suicide bomb attack at the end of an Ariana Grande concert in May 2017.
    The Man City boss’ wife and two daughters were at the arena and he was left with several agonising minutes of being unable to make contact.
    Fortunately, Guardiola’s family were safe but he paid tribute to those who were not as lucky.
    He told BBC 5 Live: “When the attack happened, I was at home with my son, and my wife and daughters were there – they were at the arena.
    Maria, 20, is the daughter of Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola
    “She called me but the line broke immediately. She told me ‘something happened and we are running but I don’t know what happened’ and the line broke.
    “We tried to call her again and it didn’t work – we went to the arena and after five or six minutes she rang again and said: ‘We are out, we’re coming back home.’
    “At the end we were lucky. Many people suffered, and we were lucky. Life is like this. We were in a better position than many unfortunate ones.”

    Pep Guardiola buys secluded £8.5m Barcelona mansion which belonged to his former defender Rafael Marquez More