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    Cristiano Ronaldo’s girlfriend Georgina Rodriguez slips into her night-time kit — ahead of his opening Euros game

    GEORGINA Rodriguez slips into her night-time kit — ahead of her boyfriend Cristiano Ronaldo’s opening game in the Euros.The Spanish model, 27, posed in matching white lingerie for a shoot.
    Georgina Rodriguez poses in matching white lingerie for a shootCredit: Yamamay
    Footie ace Ronaldo will play for his native Portugal in the Euros match against Hungary todayCredit: Eroteme
    Ronaldo, 36, lines up for Portugal in their group game against Hungary in Budapest at 5pm today.
    He has been getting last-minute support from Georgina who posted, “Boa sorte meu amor”, which is Portuguese for “Good luck, my love”.
    Recently Georgina paid tribute to his hard work preparing to open his new Madrid hotel.
    The Pestana CR7 Gran Via in the centre of the Spanish capital was scheduled to swing open its doors in June last year.
    Georgina posted, ‘Boa sorte meu amor’, which is Portuguese for ‘Good luck, my love’Credit: The Mega Agency
    Georgina posed in the famous Number7 shirt worn by her fellaCredit: Instagram
    Georgina gets in the spirit of the Euros showing her support for RonaldoCredit: Instagram
    Georgina stuns in a patterned two-piece swimsuitCredit: @effek
    Georgina wows in a white bikiniCredit: Instagram
    Georgina said she was ‘very excited’ about Ronaldo’s new hotel in MadridCredit: Getty

    But the coronavirus pandemic saw those plans put on hold.
    Georgina posted on Instagram: “Congratulations @cristiano for the opening of this dream hotel, in the heart of Madrid.
    “I am very excited about what you are building, with so much effort and courage.”
    Georgina Rodriguez shares video of Cristiano Ronaldo training on controversial rooftop of luxury £6m Lisbon apartment More

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    The protective shield Christian Eriksen’s team-mates embrace him with is both wonderful and awful to behold

    THERE’S so much to unpack in this photograph, I’m not quite sure where to start.At the heart of this scene there is something truly ghastly, but that itself brings to the fore all that’s beautiful about humanity — life, love, wisdom and compassion.
    The protective shield Christian Eriksen’s team-mates embrace him with is both wonderful and awful to beholdCredit: Reuters
    The players’ protective ring preserves his dignity, but also saves us from ourselvesCredit: Reuters
    The photo also comes with its own unforgettable soundtrack, the sound of Finnish fans chanting “Christian” and their Danish counterparts responding with “Eriksen”. That was quite something, too.
    The protective shield Christian Eriksen’s team-mates embrace him with is both wonderful and awful to behold.
    The men linking arms to encircle him look incredibly vulnerable too. Some look on because they have to, others look away.
    We must acknowledge the fact that, as horrified as we are, we can’t help but look on.
    It’s impossible to tear your eyes away from evidence of the mortality that we all share.
    The players’ protective ring preserves his dignity, but also saves us from ourselves.
    These young men ordinarily stride the big stage with some swagger. It’s an achievement against all the odds to become any kind of professional foot-baller, let alone an international.
    They’re hard-working, dedicated, blessed with great confidence and skill and they’re doubtless vastly wealthy too.
    But here we see them for what they really are, what we all really are when faced with such crises, merely bewildered, frightened human beings quite unable to compute what we’re faced with.
    GRACE UNDER PRESSURE
    A few minutes earlier, I’m sure they all felt indestructible. At the moment this picture was taken they’re coming to terms with feeling rather differently about themselves, and life itself.
    Not for the first time, footballers, a frequently maligned species, show us how we might all aspire to be, in a team, as one, unashamedly emotional and all the more masculine for that.
    Later on, when Romelu Lukaku scored for Belgium against Russia, he ran over to a TV camera, cupped the lens and shouted: “Chris, Chris, stay strong boy, I love you.”
    We’re often told that men are poor at showing emotion to express their true feelings. If this is the case, then it is footballers who best show us the way forward.
    They are good at kicking balls, but also brilliant at having the balls to let their feelings out. It’s better that way.
    They speak, without blushing, of loving each other. They hug in public, and even have the odd kiss.
    And why not? They also share their despair and aren’t afraid to cry. They have the courage to succeed and fail in public. The rest of us can learn from them.
    The men linking arms to encircle him look incredibly vulnerable too. Some look on because they have to, others look awayCredit: EPA
    There’s something else critically important in that picture, albeit hidden from us. And it goes way beyond the emotion of the moment.
    That thing is expertise. Simon Kjaer, the team captain, knew what to do at the moment it really mattered.
    Demonstrating more grace under pressure than he’ll ever need on the field of play, he seemed to be the first to recognise the gravity of the situation and had the wherewithal to clear his team-mate’s airways and prepare him for the CPR that would shortly save Christian Eriksen’s life.
    “Ah yes,” I thought, watching it. “CPR. Very important.” And then I realised that while I knew what it was, and had a vague idea how to do it, I couldn’t even tell you what it stands for.
    Cardiopulmonary resuscitation, since you ask. Ok, let’s stick with CPR. But the point is you don’t need to be captain of a football team to know how to do it, it is the duty of all of us to get ourselves educated and practised in these matters.
    It could save a life, and that life will be worth no more or less than Christian Eriksen’s. If his captain hadn’t taken the trouble to learn this stuff at some stage, the picture we’re so captivated by would have a much darker meaning.
    I keep thinking about what Teddy Sheringham told me when I interviewed him for these pages last week about the importance of being a team — of looking out for each other and every player taking responsibility for making the next player’s job easier.
    He also talked about how adversity could bring a team closer together and drive them on. I’m not sure, in terms of Denmark’s performance in this tourn-ament, whether that’s going to apply here. But in any case, it’s beside the point.
    They’ve shown us they’re truly a team in a way that transcends anything that could happen in the course of play.
    We stand in admiration and wish them all, especially Christian Eriksen, nothing but the best.
    GREECE LED TO A SLIP
    WHENEVER the Euros come around, I recall an encounter I had more than ten years ago in a hotel pool in Norwich.
    I’d dragged my kids there so I could get to see West Brom play at Carrow Road later in the day. I got talking to a guy about my age with kids of his own.
    Whenever the Euros come around, I recall an encounter I had more than ten years ago in a hotel pool in NorwichCredit: Handout
    “I used to be a Norwich fan,” he told me. I pulled a quizzical face and asked him why he was no longer a proud Canary.
    His reply sticks in my mind. He explained that three years earlier he’d been on holiday in Greece for the last two weeks of the 2004 Euros.
    He became caught up in their unlikely march to the final to the extent that he came to feel part of it.
    And then, when they won the title, the explosion of joy was such that he realised nothing in football – or at least in Norwich – could ever come close to matching it.
    So he completely gave the game up.
    I have some sympathy with this – I’d never do the same thing myself, but I definitely see where he was coming from.
    FAB SO KEANE ON BOY
    WHEN I worked on ITV Sport I had lots of great colleagues, on and off screen, not least Roy Keane.
    I sometimes felt rather sorry for us because, however hard Lee Dixon, Andy Townsend or countless others worked, all anyone watching at home seemed to remember after the show was something Roy said, or even merely a look he gave me.
    People love to ask: ‘What’s Roy Keane like?’Credit: Getty
    Not that we begrudged Roy this, he was a joy to be with, both on and off screen.
    In the street at that time all I was ever asked by members of the public was, “What’s Roy Keane like?” At home, abroad, wherever, I grew to sense when the question was coming.
    I’d just say, “He’s great”, as soon as they opened their mouths.
    This weekend, for obvious reasons, Fabrice Muamba has been on my mind.
    It was my privilege to go to interview him at his home a few months after his dreadful near-death experience at White Hart Lane.
    “Can I ask you something?” Fabrice said. “Of course,” I nodded.“What’s Roy Keane like?” he asked.
    This was surely the Roy Keane enquiry to end all Roy Keane enquiries.
    IN THE DARK
    UNLIKE some, I don’t have a strong view on whether Joe Biden needs to be sent to the Tower of London for wearing sunglasses in the company of Her Majesty the Queen.
    Surely, after all her years on the throne, she is relaxed about these “protocol” matters.
    I’m just delighted that the mizzle cleared, and the sun shone on the Cornish corner of her queendom, for long enough to necessitate the wearing of sunglasses in the first place.
    I’m also somewhat relieved that the leader of the free world is, unlike me, compos mentis enough to lay his hands on his sunglasses when he needs them.
    I can only ever find mine if it is raining. When the sun shines, they vanish.
    The only things I’ve lost more than sunglasses in my life are my marbles, and my patience with myself.
    FEAR WE GO
    EVER since I was an adolescent on holiday in my mum’s country, I’ve been admiring Croatian women from afar.
    And I mean from afar. I’m far too intimidated by their beauty to go anywhere near them, let alone actually presume to address them in any way.
    Apart from anything else, they invariably seem to be taller than me, and I’m 6ft 1in.
    There’s no escaping them. Check out the Croatian support at Wembley on Saturday. Frightening.
    I was wondering whose fans I’d sit with if England and Croatia met in the final. It won’t be this lot. Far too scary.
    I think I’d just stay at home.

    RE the tips in yest-erday’s Sun about how to have sex like a Scandanavian I have only this to say: I’ve often idly wondered what tantric sex is all about but, having seen the photo accomp-anying the piece, I now know for sure it isn’t for meCredit: Shutterstock
    Christian Eriksen’s cardiologist at ex-club Tottenham says cardiac arrest could be related to Covid, hot weather or be down to a blocked artery More

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    Euro 2020: England star Kalvin Phillips says ‘Mum skipped meals for me…I ran to her when we scored’

    NEW England hero Kalvin Phillips last night told how he dedicated his match-winning performance against Croatia to his mum.During a stunning all-round display, playmaker Phillips, 25, beat two Croatians before pinpointing a perfect pass for Raheem Sterling to grab the winner on Sunday.
    ⚽ Read our Football live blog for the very latest news from around the grounds
    Kalvin Phillips, 25, beat two Croatians before pinpointing a perfect pass for Raheem Sterling to grab the winner on SundayCredit: Getty
    He dedicated his man-of-the-match showing to mum Lindsay Crosby who guided him on his path to stardom during his tough childhood in Leeds — and was in the stands at Wembley celebrating her birthday.
    The man dubbed The Yorkshire Pirlo after the genius Italian midfielder said: “I’m buzzin’ — it’s hard to put it into words.
    “I can’t even remember doing it [setting up the winner] — it was just a blur, then the ball hit the back of the net.
    “It was my mum’s birthday the day before and she was right at the front in the stands right at that side so I felt I was celebrating with her.”
    Superstar Kalvin is now a millionaire Premier League ace with a stunning childhood sweetheart in Ashleigh Behan.
    But his tale of rags to riches is all down to proud mum Lindsay, who has been instrumental in her son’s success.
    It’s an inspirational tale of hard work and the selfless devotion of amazing women in his life, in the face of tragedy.
    Kalvin was born a triplet but his sister Lacreasha died when she was just a couple of months old.
    Growing up in Armley, West Leeds, Kalvin would often find mum Lindsay crying in the kitchen, playing music that reminded her of her daughter.
    It forced him to grow up and, in the absence of his father, Mark, become the man of the house.
    Growing up in Armley, West Leeds, Kalvin would often find mum Lindsay crying in the kitchen, playing music that reminded her of her daughterCredit: INSTAGRAM/KALVIN PHILLIPS
    He said: “Seeing her like that made me feel I’ve got to help her out, make tea, look after my brother and sisters when she was working.”
    Every year, he and his twin, Deren, say “happy birthday” to Lacreasha on their special day and place flowers on her grave.
    And every time he scores, he kisses his arm where he has a tattoo in her honour and points heavenward for the sister he never got to know.
    At the family’s three-bed home, a stone’s throw from Leeds’ Elland Road ground, Lindsay slept on the sofa so Kalvin, Deren and younger siblings Terrell and Tasiana, could have the bedrooms.

    Lindsay worked two jobs but money was scarce and she would skip meals to ensure her children were well fed.
    Kalvin said: “There have been times where my mum didn’t eat at night because she had to feed us.”
    Kalvin’s beloved grandma, Valerie Crosby, who died in February, aged 82, would “chip in for food”.
    Like his fellow England international, Marcus Rashford, Kalvin relied on free school meals at The Farnley Academy, Leeds.
    Lindsay worked two jobs but money was scarce and she would skip meals to ensure her children were well fedCredit: INSTAGRAM/KALVIN PHILLIPS
    He said: “I’d see kids coming in with packed lunches, having sandwiches and chocolate bars.
    “Some kids would laugh at me, saying, ‘You’re getting free school meals’. I’d come home and say, ‘Mum, why can’t I have a packed lunch?’ She’d say, ‘We can’t afford it’.”
    And like Marcus, who succeeded in funding food parcels for low-income families through the pandemic, Kalvin now donates to a food bank.
    Lindsay has only recently stopped working one of her two jobs, as a receptionist and cashier at Harpo’s Pizza, Leeds.
    On Sunday, the takeaway tweeted a picture of Kalvin grinning in his post-match interview, with the caption: “Our Kalvin! Well done, great assist!”
    Kalvin’s Jamaican father, Mark, has been in and out of prison since Kalvin was a boy.
    Kalvin with his little brotherCredit: INSTAGRAM/KALVIN PHILLIPS
    Kalvin told the Times last year: “He got into the wrong crowd, drugs, fighting, anything you can name.”
    He has visited him at HMP Wealstun, not far from Leeds’ Thorp Arch training ground, but prefers to speak to Mark on the phone every couple of weeks.
    He called him after Leeds were promoted to the Premier League and could hear inmates singing the club’s anthem, Marching On Together, in the background.
    Kalvin said of his dad: “He is proud of me. He’s lived in Leeds all his life.”
    As well as his mum, sister and grandma, there is one other woman who holds a special place in Kalvin’s heart — girlfriend Ashleigh Behan, a make-up artist he’s been with for 11 years, having met at school.
    Kalvin said: “I don’t want to meet anybody else because we’re that close. I keep my circle tight, keep newcomers at a distance.”
    Superstar Kalvin is now a millionaire Premier League ace with a stunning childhood sweetheart in Ashleigh BehanCredit: TWITTER/KALVIN PHILLIPS

    Kalvin made his international debut last September against Denmark and admitted joining the squad was nerve-racking.
    He said last year: “Every single day, I go home to my girlfriend, see my mum and grandma, and I always talk about football.
    “It’s what I live for, it’s what I do, and they have always supported me 100 per cent. I don’t think I’d be here right now if it wasn’t for my mum and grandma.”
    Kalvin made his international debut last September against Denmark and admitted joining the squad was nerve-rackingCredit: Rex
    Kalvin was born a triplet but his sister Lacreasha died when she was just a couple of months oldCredit: INSTAGRAM/KALVIN PHILLIPS
    England manager Gareth Southgate names Leeds star Kalvin Phillips named for first time More

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    Raheem Sterling’s mum celebrated his England goal by calling their old neighbours to say he had achieved his dream

    RAHEEM Sterling’s thrilled mum celebrated his England goal by calling their old neighbours to say he had achieved his dream.The Three Lions ace netted the winner in the opening Euros 1-0 victory on Sunday just yards from his old Wembley home.
    ⚽ Follow ALL of the latest news and updates from Euro 2020 with our live blog
    Raheem Sterling scored Sunday’s winning goal just yards from where he grew upCredit: Getty
    His proud mum Nadine celebrated by calling their old neighbours and telling them he’d achieved his dreamCredit: BackGrid
    Afterwards, he revealed his wish to score in a game “in his back garden”.
    Mum Nadine, 47, rang mates in the North London cul-de-sac, saying she was “so happy”.
    One pal said: “It was brilliant to see him score. Everyone here is thrilled.”
    Raheem, 26, was made an MBE earlier for services to racial equality in sport.
    Raheem netted the winning goal at Wembley – the area he was raised in
    Raheem posted this picture before the game, writing ‘never forget where it started’Credit: Tim Stewart

    Irene Bhahewandeem, 53, who lived opposite the family, said: “He would come for ice cream with my kids when he was little.
    “It was unbelievable to see him score in his home town.”
    Before the game with Croatia, the Man City star shared a picture of his younger self holding a ­trophy, captioned: “Never forget where it started.”
    The England ace said he’s always wanted to score in a game ‘in his back garden’Credit: Rex
    England beat Croatia to win their Euro 2020 opener after Raheem Sterling scores winning goal More

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    Sheffield United star Oli McBurnie avoids court after video of him attacking man in street went viral

    PREMIERSHIP striker Oli McBurnie has avoided court after a video of him attacking a man in the street went viral.The £20million Sheffield United striker was arrested after he was caught on camera stamping on a phone and assaulting insurance broker Elliott Wright, 21.
    Oli McBurnie has avoided court after attacking a man in the street
    A viral video showed the striker stamping on a phone and assaulting insurance broker Elliott Wright
    The Sheffield United star was arrested and held in custody last monthCredit: PA
    Leeds United fan Wright had been with friends when he spotted McBurnie arguing with a girl in the street.
    He said he told him to calm down – and then poked fun at him for his team getting relegated to the Championship.
    Scottish international McBurnie, 25, who missed the Euros because of injury, was seen in the video to approach Wright before knocking the phone to the ground.
    The 24-second film – which was viewed more than a million times online–showed him stamping on the phone before kneeing and punching Wright who was left with a swollen black eye and cuts to his face.
    McBurnie was arrested and held in custody overnight following the incident in his home town of Knaresborough, North Yorkshire, last month.
    He has now accepted a caution for a public order offence of threatening behaviour which means he does not have to go to court.
    Footage later emerged showing McBurnie being harassed in the street before approaching a heckler and swatting at his phone
    He became angered after being mocked for getting relegated
    The first film was viewed more than a million times online
    Elliott Wright was left with a swollen black eye and cuts to his face
    Police said a 21-year-old man involved in the incident was issued with a penalty notice for the same offence.
    Wright said at the time: “We were walking and I saw him arguing with this girl. I said chill out mate it can’t be worse than getting relegated as a joke.
    “He seemed alright at first. He was saying put your phone away lads, put your phone away. I said: ‘Why? Why would I want to put my phone away?’ And then he’s just smacked me.”
    McBurnie earned a £20m move to United from Swansea in 2019 after scoring 24 goals in a season for the South Wales side.
    He was joint top scorer for United in his first season with six goals but struggled to find form this season, hitting the net just once.
    The £20,000-a-week forward missed the end of the season after he broke his foot in the 3-0 defeat to Arsenal in April.
    McBurnie earned a £20million move to Sheffield United from Swansea in 2019Credit: Getty

    In July last year he was fined £30,000 by Leeds JPs after he was caught drink driving in his Audi R8 in October 2019.
    A spokesman for North Yorkshire Police said: “Following an investigation, a man in his 20s has been cautioned for a public order offence, namely using threatening behaviour.
    “A second man, also in his 20s, was issued with a penalty notice for the same offence.”
    Sheffield United refused to comment. More

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    Baby set to be Tottenham Hotspur fan like his dad after club cockerel appears on ultrasound scan

    DAD-to-be Jordan Hall is sure his baby will be a Tottenham Hotspur fan like him — after a scan revealed its cockerel crest.Jordan, 23, was wearing a Spurs shirt when he and fiancé Shannon Pickin, 24, went for the check-up last week.
    Dad-to-be Jordan Hall was stunned to notice a ‘Tottenham Hotspur’ cockerel crest on his unborn baby’s ultrasound scan
    Jordan (pictured with fiancé Shannon Pickin and her son Tyler) was wearing a Spurs shirt to the appointment
    And any doubts about his unborn baby’s footie allegiance ended when he saw the ultrasound screen.
    He said: “I’d been saying to Shannon ever since she got pregnant that the baby was going to be a little Spurs fan and this just seals the deal.
    “We showed the scan to my mum and a few other people and, initially, they thought it looked like a duck.
    “But the more we looked at it the more we realised that it was exactly the same shape as the Tottenham cockerel.
    “So, obviously, I was over the moon.”
    The supermarket worker has been a Spurs fan since he was seven, despite living in Pontefract, West Yorks, as his mum’s then-boyfriend supported them.

    Shannon, who has a five-year-old son called Tyler, is also a fan.
    Jordan said they did not know the baby’s sex but believe it was conceived on March 21 — after Spurs won 2-0 at Aston Villa.
    He joked: “Maybe it gave me a bit of extra edge that evening.”
    Jordan has been a Spurs fan since he was seven
    Jordan said they did not know the baby’s sex but believe it was conceived on March 21 — after Spurs won 2-0 at Aston Villa
    Tottenham ‘in advanced talks’ with Paulo Fonseca, the man AXED by Roma to make way for Jose Mourinho More

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    I hope England and Croatia go far – but I can’t cope with both in the final

    THANK God, or hvala Bogu, that’s out the way.The best team won, but no one’s heartbroken; no one’s been humiliated. I’d have settled for that.
    ⚽ Follow ALL of the latest news and updates from Euro 2020 with our live blog
    Watching England play Croatia yesterday, my heart was as split as the light and dark areas of the Wembley pitchCredit: Getty
    From the anthems to the final whistle, it was an hour and a half of hell during which my heart was as split as the light and dark areas of the Wembley pitch.
    Early on the commentary said: “Croatia are all over the place.” Quite right, but it still enraged me; it felt like he was criticising my mum.
    Then Croatia improved, which was a relief but only led me to start feeling bad for England.
    I looked at Tyrone Mings playing so well and wondered how I could possibly have wanted anything other than for him to be on the winning side.
    In the interview I did for The Sun with Tony Adams, Tony said how much he rated him.
    Tyrone Mings played so well, I was convinced I was just on his sideCredit: Getty
    I shared this with Tyrone by text and he responded immediately, saying how appreciative he was.
    “I’m just an England fan, but actually playing,” he added, evidently still pinching himself. Well played, my man.
    Croatia can at least console themselves that they won the fans’ beauty contest hands-down.
    Every shot of England fans seemed to feature pale, shirtless blokes ­leaping about, bellies a-wobbling.
    Croatia’s fans seemed, as usual, to be mainly female supermodels.
    I’ve made enquiries in the past as to whether agencies are flying them in especially from Zagreb or Split, but this has always been denied. Loving their work, anyway.
    Just like his shirt, Adrian is half-English, half-Croatian

    And I’m loving the thought that I can now go crazy for two different teams in at least four more games.
    Hopefully they’ll both go further than that, but please not both of them as far as the final.
    That would finish me off.
    Raheem Sterling’s immediate reaction to England’s victory over Croatia More

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    Raheem Sterling gets England off to winning start with goal in his ‘back garden’

    HOTSHOT Raheem Sterling got England off to a winning start at the Euros yesterday — scoring a goal just a stone’s throw from where he grew up.The Manchester City star gave “football’s coming home” a meaning of his own as he netted at Wembley — the area where he was raised.
    ⚽ Follow ALL of the latest news and updates from Euro 2020 with our live blog
    Raheem Sterling got the Three Lions off to a winning start yesterdayCredit: AFP
    Fans around the country celebrated England’s 1-0 win against CroatiaCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    Raheem netted the winning goal at Wembley – the area he was raised in
    Raheem, who was awarded the MBE two days earlier for services to racial equality in sport, was the only scorer as England beat Croatia 1-0 in front of thrilled fans.
    It was the Three Lions’ first opening game triumph in a Euro tournament in 53 years and sent them roaring into Friday’s crunch clash with Scotland.
    Raheem, 26, lived in Neeld Crescent in the shadow of the stadium in the North West London borough of Brent.
    As a kid he dreamed of football glory as he gazed up at its iconic arch being built.
    Before yesterday’s match he posted a picture of himself as a boy clutching a trophy with the words: “Never forget where it started. #boyfromBrent.”
    England’s glory overshadowed a moment of controversy before kick-off when their players took the knee in an anti-racism gesture.
    Some fans booed but they were drowned out by massive cheers for Gareth Southgate’s team.
    He paid tribute to his boyhood dream with this throwback snap
    Raheem said if he ever played a major tournament at Wembley, he’d be scoring in his own ‘back garden’Credit: AFP
    Last night Raheem said: “It’s a great feeling for me playing at Wembley, not far from where I grew up as a young boy and seeing the stadium being built.
    “I’ve always said, if I played at Wembley in a major tournament I’m scoring at Wembley, in my back garden. I said I have to score — and it’s great to finally do that.”
    A noisy Covid-reduced 22,500- strong crowd watched the tight match in blistering 30C heat.
    I’ve always said, if I played at Wembley in a major tournament I’m scoring at Wembley, in my back garden. Raheem Sterling
    They — and millions watching on TV — erupted in celebration early in the second half when Leeds midfielder Kalvin Phillips sent an inch- perfect pass through for Sterling to blast home.
    Some people had queued outside pubs and restaurants from 7am to bag their spots for the 2pm kick-off — with table service still in force.
    Harry Leach, who waited outside The Distillery, in Birmingham, said:: “When I started queuing there were already 120 people in front of me and I would say about 120 behind.
    “Everyone was excited, they were all singing England chants.”
    It comes just two days after Raheem was made an MBECredit: AFP
    Manager Gareth Southgate said he was thrilled for RaheemCredit: EPA
    Millions of others gathered in homes, gardens and fan zones.
    Huge screens were put up in Trafalgar Square.
    Mayor of London Sadiq Khan, who was hosting key workers as a “thank you”, said the excitement of the Euros was needed after “the darkness and trauma” of the pandemic.
    James Wright, 43, of Great Cornard, Suffolk, who was at Wembley, said: “The atmosphere was electric. When that goal went in you would have had no idea Wembley was three quarters empty and full of fans in masks. It was deafening.”
    Boris Johnson, at a press conference at the end of the G7 summit in Cornwall, sidestepped calls to condemn fans who booed. He said: “Everybody should cheer for England”.
    The PM tweeted congratulations on the team’s “fantastic start”.
    England boss Southgate said: “It’s lovely to have given our fans and our country a really enjoyable afternoon.”
    Wayne Rooney and his family were spotted in the crowdCredit: AFP
    Brits queued outside bars and pubs from 7am to bag their Euros seatsCredit: SWNS
    Huge screens were erected in many city centresCredit: PA

    Skipper Harry Kane said: “Massive performance to start the Euros with a win in the sun at Wembley. Raheem Sterling on fire — perfect.”
    The result was payback after Croatia beat England in the World Cup semi-final in 2018.
    Richard Wilson, 60, watching in Teddington, West London, said: “What a start — just what the country needs.”
    England beat Croatia to win their Euro 2020 opener after Raheem Sterling scores winning goal More