Men ‘s association football team
This article is about the men ‘s team. For the women ‘s team, see England women ‘s national football team
The England national football team has represented England in international football since the first base international match in 1872. It is controlled by The Football Association ( FA ), the governing body for football in England, which is affiliated with UEFA and comes under the ball-shaped jurisdiction of world football ‘s governing body FIFA. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] England competes in the three major international tournaments contested by european nations : the FIFA World Cup, the UEFA European Championship, and the UEFA Nations League.

England is the joint oldest national team in football. It played in the world ‘s beginning external football match in 1872, against Scotland. England ‘s home ground is Wembley Stadium, London, and its prepare headquarters is St George ‘s Park, Burton upon Trent. The team ‘s coach is Gareth Southgate. England is one of eight nations to have won the World Cup. [ 5 ] England has qualified for the World Cup 15 times. It won the 1966 World Cup Final, a tournament it besides hosted, and finished fourthly in both 1990 and 2018. England has never won the European Championship, with its best performance to date being runner-up in 2020. As a part state of the United Kingdom, England is not a member of the International Olympic Committee and so does not compete at the Olympic Games. England is presently the lone team to have won the World Cup but not won any major continental claim at senior degree, and the lone non-sovereign entity to have won the World Cup .

history

early years

The England team before a peer against Scotland at Richmond in 1893 The England national football team is the joint-oldest in the world ; it was formed at the same clock as Scotland. A representative match between England and Scotland was played on 5 March 1870, having been organised by the Football Association. [ 6 ] A return regular was organised by representatives of scottish football teams on 30 November 1872. This match, played at Hamilton Crescent in Scotland, is viewed as the foremost official external football peer, because the two teams were independently selected and operated, preferably than being the sour of a unmarried football association. [ 7 ] Over the following 40 years, England played entirely with the early three Home Nations —Scotland, Wales and Ireland —in the british Home Championship. At inaugural, England had no permanent home stadium. They joined FIFA in 1906 and played their first games against countries other than the Home Nations on a enlistment of Central Europe in 1908. [ 8 ] Wembley Stadium was opened in 1923 and became their home land. [ 8 ] The relationship between England and FIFA became strain, and this resulted in their passing from FIFA in 1928, before they rejoined in 1946. [ 9 ] As a resultant role, they did not compete in a World Cup until 1950, in which they were beaten in a 1–0 get the better of by the United States, failing to get past the first base round in one of the most awkward defeats in the team ‘s history. [ 10 ] Their first base frustration on home dirty to a foreign team was a 2–0 passing to Ireland, on 21 September 1949 at Goodison Park. [ 11 ] A 6–3 personnel casualty in 1953 to Hungary, was their second base defeat by a extraneous team at Wembley. [ 12 ] In the come back match in Budapest, Hungary won 7–1. This stands as England ‘s largest ever get the better of. After the game, a baffled Syd Owen said, “ it was like playing men from out space ”. [ 13 ] In the 1954 FIFA World Cup, England reached the quarter-finals for the first time, and lost 4–2 to reigning champions Uruguay. [ 14 ]

Walter Winterbottom and Alf Ramsey

Although Walter Winterbottom was appointed as England ‘s first full-time coach in 1946, the team was still picked by a committee until Alf Ramsey took over in 1963. [ 15 ] [ 16 ] The 1966 FIFA World Cup was hosted in England and Ramsey guided England to victory with a 4–2 win against West Germany after extra time in the concluding, during which Geoff Hurst scored a hat-trick. [ 17 ] In UEFA Euro 1968, the team reached the semi-finals for the first time, being eliminated by Yugoslavia. [ 18 ] England qualified automatically for the 1970 FIFA World Cup in Mexico as reigning champions, and reached the quarter-finals, where they were knocked out by West Germany. England had been 2–0 up, but were finally beaten 3–2 after excess time. [ 19 ] They then failed to qualify for the 1974 FIFA World Cup, leading to Ramsey ‘s dismissal by the FA. [ 20 ]

Don Revie, Ron Greenwood and Bobby Robson

Following Ramsey ‘s dismissal, Joe Mercer took immediate irregular charge of England for a seven-match spell until Don Revie was appointed as new permanent coach in 1974. [ 21 ] Under Revie, the team underperformed and failed to qualify for either UEFA Euro 1976 or the 1978 FIFA World Cup. [ 22 ] Revie resigned in 1977 and was replaced by Ron Greenwood, under whom performances improved. The team qualified for UEFA Euro 1980 without losing any of their games, but exited in the group phase of the concluding tournament. [ 23 ] They besides qualified for the 1982 FIFA World Cup in Spain ; however, despite not losing a game, they were eliminated at the second group stage. [ 24 ] [ 25 ] Bobby Robson managed England from 1982 to 1990. [ 26 ] Although the team failed to qualify for UEFA Euro 1984, they reached the quarter-finals of the 1986 FIFA World Cup, losing 2–1 to Argentina in a game made celebrated by two highly contrasting goals scored by Maradona – the beginning being blatantly knocked in by his hand, prompting his “ Hand of God “ note, the second being an outstandingly adept individual goal, involving high focal ratio dribbling by respective opponents. [ 27 ] [ 28 ] England striker Gary Lineker finished as the tournament ‘s top scorekeeper with six goals. [ 29 ] England went on to lose every match at UEFA Euro 1988. [ 30 ] They next achieved their second gear best result in the 1990 FIFA World Cup by finishing fourth – losing again to West Germany after a close contested semi-final finish 1–1 after extra time, then 3–4 in England ‘s first gear punishment shoot-out. [ 31 ] Despite losing to Italy in the third base place play-off, the members of the England team were given bronze medals identical to the Italians ‘. Due to the team ‘s adept operation at the tournament against general expectations, and the emotional nature of the specialize defeat to West Germany, [ 32 ] the team were welcomed home as heroes and thousands of people lined the streets for an open-top bus parade. [ 33 ]

Graham Taylor, Terry Venables, Glenn Hoddle and Kevin Keegan

The 1990s saw four England managers follow Robson, each in the character for a relatively brief period. Graham Taylor was Robson ‘s immediate successor. [ 34 ] England failed to win any matches at UEFA Euro 1992, drawing with tournament winners Denmark and late with France, before being eliminated by host nation Sweden. The team then failed to qualify for the 1994 FIFA World Cup after losing a controversial crippled against the Netherlands in Rotterdam, which resulted in Taylor ‘s resignation. Taylor faced much newspaper criticism during his tenure for his tactics and team selections. [ 35 ] between 1994 and 1996, Terry Venables took charge of the team. At UEFA Euro 1996, held in England, they equalled their best performance at a european Championship, reaching the semi-finals as they did in 1968, before exiting via another punishment shoot-out loss to Germany. [ 36 ] England striker Alan Shearer was the tournament ‘s top scorekeeper with five goals. [ 37 ] At Euro 96, the song “ Three Lions “ by Baddiel, Skinner and The Lightning Seeds became the authoritative anthem for fans on the terraces. [ 38 ] Venables announced before the tournament that he would resign at the end of it, following investigations into his personal fiscal activities and ahead of upcoming court cases. Due to the controversy around him, the FA stressed that he was the coach, not the coach, of the team. [ 39 ] [ 40 ] Venables ‘ successor, Glenn Hoddle, took the team to the 1998 FIFA World Cup — in which England were eliminated in the second round of golf, again by Argentina and again on penalties ( after a 2–2 draw ). [ 41 ] In February 1999, Hoddle was sacked by the FA due to controversial comments he had made about disabled people to a newspaper. [ 42 ] Howard Wilkinson took over as caretaker director for two matches. Kevin Keegan was then appointed as the new permanent director and took England to UEFA Euro 2000, but the team exited in the group stagecoach and he unexpectedly resigned shortly afterwards .

Sven-Göran Eriksson, Steve McClaren and Fabio Capello

Peter Taylor was appointed as caretaker director for one match, before Sven-Göran Eriksson took charge between 2001 and 2006, and was the team ‘s first non-English director. He guided England to the quarter-finals of the 2002 FIFA World Cup, UEFA Euro 2004 and the 2006 FIFA World Cup. England lost alone five competitive matches during his stallion tenure, and rose to count four in the populace ranking under his guidance. Eriksson ‘s sign was extended by the FA by two years, to include UEFA Euro 2008, but was terminated by them after the 2006 World Cup. Steve McClaren was then appointed as director, but after failing to qualify for Euro 2008 he was sacked on 22 November 2007 after 18 matches in charge. The following month, he was replaced by a moment extraneous coach, italian Fabio Capello, whose previous experience included successful spells at Juventus and Real Madrid. England won all but one of their passing games for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, but at the tournament itself, England drew their opening two games ; this led to questions about the team ‘s spirit, tactics and ability to handle press. [ 43 ] They progressed to the adjacent attack, however, where they were beaten 4–1 by Germany, their heaviest kill in a World Cup finals tournament equal. In February 2012, Capello resigned from his role as England director, following a disagreement with the FA over their request to remove John Terry from team captainship after accusations of racial abuse concerning the player. [ 44 ]

Roy Hodgson, Sam Allardyce and Gareth Southgate

Following Capello ‘s passing, Stuart Pearce was appointed as caretaker coach for one match, after which in May 2012, Roy Hodgson was announced as the new director, just six weeks before UEFA Euro 2012. [ 45 ] England managed to finish top of their group, but exited the Championships in the quarter-finals via a penalty shoot-out, against Italy. [ 46 ] In the 2014 FIFA World Cup, England were eliminated at the group stage for the first meter since the 1958 World Cup, and the first clock time at a major tournament since Euro 2000. [ 47 ] England qualified unbeaten for UEFA Euro 2016, [ 48 ] but were ultimately eliminated in the Round of 16, losing 2–1 to Iceland. [ 49 ] Hodgson resigned as coach June 2016, [ 50 ] and just under a calendar month late was replaced by Sam Allardyce. [ 51 ] however, after merely 67 days in accusation, Allardyce resigned from his managerial post by reciprocal agreement, after an alleged breach of FA rules, making him the shortest serve permanent England coach. [ 52 ] Allardyce ‘s lone match as England coach was a 1–0 victory over Slovakia, however this besides makes him the only permanent wave England coach ever to leave with a 100 % succeed rate .
The England line-up before the death match of group G against Belgium, 28 June 2018 Gareth Southgate, then the coach of the England under-21 team, was put in impermanent charge of the home team until November 2016, [ 53 ] before being given the position on a permanent basis. [ 54 ] Under Southgate, England qualified comfortably for the 2018 FIFA World Cup [ 55 ] and came second in their group at the tournament. [ 56 ] [ 57 ] They defeated Colombia on penalties in the first knock-out round, [ 58 ] [ 59 ] and then beat Sweden 2–0 in the quarter-final to reach only their third gear World Cup semi-final. [ 60 ] In the semi-final, they were beaten 2–1 in extra meter by Croatia [ 61 ] [ 62 ] and then were beaten by Belgium for a second time, 2–0, in the third gear plaza match. [ 63 ] England striker Harry Kane finished the tournament as top scorer with six goals. On 14 November 2019, England played their thousandth International match, defeating Montenegro 7–0 at Wembley in a UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying catch. [ 64 ] [ 65 ] At UEFA Euro 2020 England were drawn in Group D along with Croatia, Scotland and Czech Republic. England finished with seven points from their three group games, winning 1–0 against Croatia and the Czechs, and drawing 0–0 with Scotland. In the knockout stages England defeated Germany, Ukraine and Denmark to advance to the final examination of a major tournament for the first time since 1966—and the nation ‘s first gear european Championship final—where they lost out to Italy in a penalty gunfight at Wembley on 11 July 2021. [ 66 ] [ 67 ]

team trope

Kits and crest

Kit suppliers

Kit supplier

Period

St. Blaize and Hope Brothers[68][69]
1949–1954

Umbro[70]
1954–1961

Bukta
1959–1965

Umbro
1965–1974

Admiral
1974–1984

Umbro
1984–2013

Nike
2013–present

Kit deals

Kit supplier

Period

Contract
announcement

Contract
duration

Value

Nike

2013–present

2012-09-03

Spring 2013 – July 2018 (5 years)[71]

Total £125m[72]
(£25m per year)

2016-12-13

August 2018 – 2030 (12 years)

Total £400m[73]
(£33.3m per year)

crest

The motif of the England national football team has three lions passant guardant, the emblem of King Richard I, who reigned from 1189 to 1199. [ 74 ] In 1872, English players wore flannel jerseys emblazoned with the three lions crown of the Football Association. [ 75 ] The lions, often blue, have had minor changes to colour and appearance. [ 76 ] Initially topped by a peak, this was removed in 1949 when the FA was given an official coat of arms by the College of Arms ; this introduced ten Tudor roses, one for each of the regional branches of the FA. [ 75 ] [ 77 ] Since 2003, England top their logo with a star topology to recognise their World Cup win in 1966 ; this was foremost embroidered onto the bequeath sleeve of the home kit, and a year late was moved to its current position, first on the aside shirt. [ 78 ]

Colours

England ‘s traditional home colours are white shirts, united states navy blue shorts and white or black socks. The team has sporadically worn an all-white kit. Although England ‘s foremost away kits were blue, England ‘s traditional away colours are crimson shirts, white shorts and red socks. In 1996, England ‘s away kit was changed to grey shirts, shorts and socks. This kit was only worn three times, including against Germany in the semi-final of Euro 1996 but the deviation from the traditional crimson was unpopular with supporters and the England aside kit remain red until 2011, when a united states navy blue away kit was introduced. The away kit is besides sometimes tire during dwelling matches, when a new edition has been released to promote it. England have occasionally had a third kit out. At the 1970 World Cup England wore a third base kit out with pale blue shirts, shorts and socks against Czechoslovakia. They had a kit alike to Brazil ‘s, with yellow shirts, chicken socks and gloomy shorts which they wore in the summer of 1973. For the World Cup in 1986 England had a third base kit of pale blue, imitating that wear in Mexico 16 years before and England retained pale blue third kits until 1992, but they were rarely used. Umbro beginning agreed to manufacture the kit out in 1954 and since then has supplied most of the kits, the exceptions being from 1959 to 1965 with Bukta and 1974–1984 with Admiral. Nike purchased Umbro in 2008 and took over as kit supplier in 2013 following their sale of the Umbro brand. [ 79 ]


The kit worn by England aside to Kosovo on 17 November 2019

home stadium

For the first 50 years of their being, England played their home matches all around the country. They initially used cricket grounds before later moving on to football club stadiums. The original Empire Stadium was built in Wembley, London, for the british Empire Exhibition. England played their first match at the stadium in 1924 against Scotland and for the following 27 years Wembley was used as a venue for matches against Scotland only. The stadium late became known merely as Wembley Stadium and it became England ‘s permanent home stadium during the 1950s. In October 2000, the stadium closed its doors, ending with a frustration against Germany. This stadium was demolished during the time period of 2002–2003, and make began to completely rebuild it. During this time, England played at venues across the country, though by the meter of the 2006 World Cup qualification, this had largely settled gloomy to having Manchester United ‘s Old Trafford stadium as the primary venue, with Newcastle United ‘s St. James ‘ Park used on occasions when Old Trafford was unavailable. Their foremost match in the new Wembley Stadium was in March 2007 when they drew with Brazil. The stadium is now owned by the Football Association, via its subsidiary company Wembley National Stadium Limited .

Rivalries

England has three main rivalries with other footballing nations. Their competition with Germany is considered to be chiefly an english phenomenon—in the run-up to any rival match between the two teams, many UK newspapers will print articles detailing results of former encounters, such as those in 1966 and 1990. football fans in England frequently consider Germany to be their independent dissipated rivals and care more about this competition than those with early nations. Most german fans consider the Netherlands or Italy to be their traditional footballing rivals, and as such, normally the competition is not taken quite equally badly there as it is in England. [ 80 ] Their competition with Scotland is one of the fiercest international rivalries that exists. [ 81 ] [ 82 ] It is the oldest external fastness in the universe, beginning played in 1872 at Hamilton Crescent, Glasgow. The history of the british Isles has led to much competition between the nations in many forms, and the social and cultural effects of centuries of antagonism and conflict between the two has contributed to the acute nature of the sporting contests. scottish nationalism has besides been a factor in the Scots ‘ desire to defeat England above all early rivals, with scots sports journalists traditionally referring to the English as the “ Auld Enemy ”. [ 83 ] The footballing competition has diminished reasonably since the former 1970s, peculiarly since the annual fastness stopped in 1989. For England, games against Germany and Argentina are now considered to be more crucial than the historic competition with Scotland. [ 84 ] Their competition with Argentina is highly competitive. Games between the two teams, even those that are only friendly matches, are often marked by luminary and sometimes controversial incidents such as in 1986. [ 85 ] [ 86 ] The competition is unusual in that it is an intercontinental one ; typically such footballing rivalries exist between countries that are close to one another, for exercise France–Italy or Argentina–Brazil. England is regarded in Argentina as one of the major rivals of the national football team, matched only by Brazil and Uruguay. The competition is, to a lesser extent reciprocal in England, locally described as a grudge match although matches against Germany carry a greater significance in popular perception. The competition emerged across several games during the latter half of the twentieth hundred, even though as of 2008 the teams have played each other on only 14 occasions in wax internationals. The competition was intensified, particularly in Argentina, by non-footballing events, specially the 1982 Falklands War between Argentina and the United Kingdom. [ 87 ]

Media coverage

All England matches are broadcast with full comment on talkSPORT and BBC Radio 5 Live. From the 2008–09 season until the 2017–18 season, England ‘s home and away qualifiers, and friendlies both home and away were broadcast hot on ITV Sport ( frequently with the exception of STV, the ITV franchisee in cardinal and northern Scotland ). England ‘s away qualifiers for the 2010 World Cup were shown on Setanta Sports until that company ‘s collapse. As a solution of Setanta Sports ‘s death, England ‘s World Cup modifier in Ukraine on 10 October 2009 was shown in the United Kingdom on a pay-per-view footing via the internet only. This one-off event was the first time an England game had been screened in such a manner. The number of subscribers, paying between £4.99 and £11.99 each, was estimated at between 250,000 and 300,000 and the full number of viewers at around 500,000. [ 88 ] In 2018, Sky Sports broadcast the England Nations League and in-season friendlies, until 2021 and ITV Sport broadcast the european Qualifiers for Euro-World Cups and pre-tournament friendlies ( after the Nations League group matches end ), until 2022. [ 89 ]

Results and fixtures

The follow is a list of match results in the last 12 months, a well as any future matches that have been scheduled. Win Draw Loss Fixture

2021

  • On 17 March 2020, UEFA announced that UEFA Euro 2020 would be postponed by twelve months with proposed new dates 11 June to 11 July 2021.[90]

2022

England v TBD 21–24 November 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup vQatar

Stadium: TBDEngland vanadium TBD 25–28 November 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup vQatar

Stadium: TBDEngland vanadium TBD 29 November – 2 December 2022 2022 FIFA World Cup vQatar

Stadium: TBD

Coaching staff

As of 25 May 2021

Players

For all by and present players who have appeared for the national team, see List of England international footballers

Read more: 2021–22 Ligue 1

current squad

The adopt 19 players were named to the team for the 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification fixtures against Albania, and San Marino on 12 and 15 November 2021. [ 96 ]
Caps and goals are correct as of 15 November 2021 after the match against San Marino.

late call-ups

The following players have besides been called up to the England police squad within the death twelve months .

individual records

musician records

Most caps

As of 15 November 2021.[97]

Goalkeeper Peter Shilton is England ‘s most capped musician with 125 appearances. Players with an peer issue of caps are ranked in chronological holy order of reaching the milestone .

Most goals

As of 15 November 2021.[97]

Wayne Rooney is England ‘s top scorekeeper with 53 goals .

Most clean sheets

As of 15 November 2021.[98]

coach records

Most manager appearances
Walter Winterbottom: 139
Highest win ratio (minimum 25 games in charge)
Fabio Capello: 66.7%
Youngest to take job
Walter Winterbottom: 33 years old
Oldest to take job
Roy Hodgson: 61 years, 9 months and 3 days

team records

Biggest victory[note 1]
13–0 vs. Ireland, 18 February 1882
Heaviest defeat
1–7 vs. Hungary, 23 May 1954

competitive criminal record

For the all-time record of the national team against opposing nations, see the team’s all-time record page

FIFA World Cup

2018 FIFA World Cup semi-final : Croatia five England . Line-ups of the 2018 FIFA World Cup semi-final : England ( white ) v Croatia. England first appeared at the 1950 FIFA World Cup, and have subsequently qualified for a total of 15 FIFA World Cup finals tournaments, tied for sixth best by number of appearances. They are besides tied for sixth by issue of wins, aboard Spain. The home team is one of eight national teams to have won at least one FIFA World Cup championship. The England team won their first and merely World Cup deed in 1966. The tournament was played on home dirty, and England defeated West Germany 4–2 in the final. In 1990, England finished in one-fourth place, losing 2–1 to host state Italy in the third place play-off, after losing on penalties to champions West Germany in the semi-final. They besides finished in one-fourth invest in 2018, after losing 2–0 to Belgium in the third place play-off and 2–1 to Croatia in the semi-final after extra time. The team besides reached the quarter-final stage in 1954, 1962, 1970, 1986, 2002 and 2006. England failed to qualify for the World Cup in 1974, 1978 and 1994. The team ‘s earliest exit in the finals tournament was its elimination in the first polish in 1950, 1958 and, most recently, the 2014 FIFA World Cup. This was after being defeated in both their open two matches for the beginning prison term, against Italy and Uruguay in Group D. In 1950, four teams remained after the first round, in 1958 eight teams remained and in 2014 sixteen teams remained. In 2010, England suffered its most resonant World Cup get the better of, 4–1 to Germany, in the Round of 16 stage. This came after drawing with the United States and Algeria, and defeating Slovenia 1–0 in the group stage .

FIFA World Cup finals record

Qualification record

Manager(s)

Year

Round

Pos

Pld

W

D*

L

GF

GA

Squad

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

Uruguay1930
Not a FIFA member
Not a FIFA member
None
Kingdom of Italy1934
French Fourth Republic1938
Fourth Brazilian Republic1950

Group stage

8th

3

1

0

2

2

2

Squad

3

3

0

0

14

3

Winterbottom
Switzerland1954

Quarter-finals

7th

3

1

1

1

8

8

Squad

3

3

0

0

11

4

Sweden1958

Group stage

11th

4

0

3

1

4

5

Squad

4

3

1

0

15

5

Chile1962

Quarter-finals

8th

4

1

1

2

5

6

Squad

4

3

1

0

16

2

England1966
Winners
1st
6
5
1
0
11
3
Squad
Qualified as hosts
Ramsey
Mexico1970

Quarter-finals

8th

4

2

0

2

4

4

Squad
Qualified as defending champions

Ramsey

West Germany1974
Did not qualify

4

1

2

1

3

4

Argentina1978

6

5

0

1

15

4

Revie
Spain1982

Second group stage

6th

5

3

2

0

6

1

Squad

8

4

1

3

13

8

Greenwood
Mexico1986

Quarter-finals

8th

5

2

1

2

7

3

Squad

8

4

4

0

21

2

Robson
Italy1990
Fourth place
4th
7
3
3
1
8
6
Squad

6

3

3

0

10

0

United States1994
Did not qualify

10

5

3

2

26

9

Taylor
France1998

Round of 16

9th

4

2

1

1

7

4

Squad

8

6

1

1

15

2

Hoddle
South KoreaJapan2002

Quarter-finals

6th

5

2

2

1

6

3

Squad

8

5

2

1

16

6

Keegan, Wilkinson, Eriksson[99]
Germany2006

Quarter-finals

7th

5

3

2

0

6

2

Squad

10

8

1

1

17

5

Eriksson

South Africa2010

Round of 16

13th

4

1

2

1

3

5

Squad

10

9

0

1

34

6

Capello
Brazil2014

Group stage

26th

3

0

1

2

2

4

Squad

10

6

4

0

31

4

Hodgson
Russia2018
Fourth place
4th
7
3
1
3
12
8
Squad

10

8

2

0

18

3

Allardyce, Southgate[100]
Qatar2022
Qualifed

10

8

2

0

39

3

Southgate

CanadaMexicoUnited States2026
To be determined
To be determined

Total

1 title

15/21

69

29

21

19

91

63

122

84

27

11

314

70

Champions   Runners-up   Third place   Fourth place

*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.
**Red border colour indicates tournament was held on home soil. ***England played all of their 2002 matches in Japan. Correct as of 14 July 2018 after the match against  Belgium

UEFA european championship

England ‘s greatest achievements at the UEFA European Championship have been to finish in third base place in 1968 and 1996, and to reach the final in the ‘ 2020 ‘ championship in 2021. England hosted Euro 96, and have qualified for ten UEFA European Championship finals tournaments, tied for one-fourth best by number of appearances. The team has besides reached the quarter-final on two far occasions, in 2004 and 2012. The team ‘s worst resultant role in the contest was a first-round elimination in 1980, 1988, 1992 and 2000. The team did not enter in 1960, and failed to qualify for the finals in 1964, 1972, 1976, 1984 and 2008 .

UEFA European Championship finals record

Qualification record

Manager(s)

Year

Round

Pos

Pld

W

D*

L

GF

GA

Squad

Pld

W

D

L

GF

GA

France1960
Did not enter
Did not enter
Francoist Spain1964
Did not qualify

2

0

1

1

3

6

Winterbottom, Ramsey[101]
Italy1968
Third place
3rd
2
1
0
1
2
1
Squad

8

6

1

1

18

6

Ramsey

Belgium1972
Did not qualify[102]

8

5

2

1

16

6

Ramsey

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia1976
Did not qualify

6

3

2

1

11

3

Revie
Italy1980

Group stage

6th

3

1

1

1

3

3

Squad

8

7

1

0

22

5

Greenwood
France1984
Did not qualify

8

5

2

1

23

3

Robson
West Germany1988

Group stage

7th

3

0

0

3

2

7

Squad

6

5

1

0

19

1

Sweden1992

Group stage

7th

3

0

2

1

1

2

Squad

6

3

3

0

7

3

Taylor
England1996
Semi-finals
3rd
5
2
3
0
8
3
Squad
Qualified as hosts
Venables
BelgiumNetherlands2000

Group stage

11th

3

1

0

2

5

6

Squad

10

4

4

2

16

5

Hoddle, Keegan[103]
Portugal2004

Quarter-finals

5th

4

2

1

1

10

6

Squad

8

6

2

0

14

5

Eriksson
AustriaSwitzerland2008
Did not qualify

12

7

2

3

24

7

McClaren
PolandUkraine2012

Quarter-finals

5th

4

2

2

0

5

3

Squad

8

5

3

0

17

5

Capello, Hodgson[104]
France2016

Round of 16

12th

4

1

2

1

4

4

Squad

10

10

0

0

31

3

Hodgson

Europe2020[105]
Runners-up
2nd
7
5
2
0
11
2
Squad

8

7

0

1

37

6

Southgate
Germany2024
To be determined
To be determined

Total

Runners-up

10/16

38

15

13

10

51

37

108

73

24

11

248

64

Champions   Runners-up   Third place   Fourth place

*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.
**Red border colour indicates tournament was held on home soil. ***Third place includes all tournaments where England reached the semi-finals following Euro 1980 as the third place play-offs were scrapped from the following editions of the tournament.[106]

UEFA Nations League

UEFA Nations League record

Manager(s)

Season**

Division

Group

Pld

W

D*

L

GF

GA

P/R

Rank

Portugal2018–19
A
4

6
2
2
2
7
8
Same position
3rd

Southgate
Italy2020–21
A
2

6
3
1
2
7
4
Same position
9th

Southgate

2022–23
A

TBA

To be determined

Total

12

5

3

4

14

12

3rd

Champions   Runners-up   Third place   Fourth place

*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.
**Group stage played home and away. Flag shown represents host nation for the finals stage. Correct as of 18 November 2020 after the match against  Iceland

minor tournaments

FIFA Rankings

Last update was on 21 December 2020. informant : [ 107 ] Best Ranking Worst Ranking Best Mover Worst Mover
England ‘s FIFA world rankings

Rank

Year

Games
Played

Won

Lost

Drawn

Best

Worst

Rank

Move

Rank

Move

4
2020
8
5
2
1

4
Increase
4
Decrease

4
2019
10
7
1
2

4
Increase 1
5
Decrease

5
2018
17
10
3
4

5
Increase 6
16
Decrease 1

15
2017
10
5
3
2

12
Increase 3
15
Decrease 3

13
2016
14
8
4
2

9
Increase 1
13
Decrease 2

9
2015
10
7
2
1

8
Increase 6
17
Decrease 2

13
2014
13
8
3
2

10
Increase 7
20
Decrease 10

13
2013
12
6
4
2

4
Increase 7
17
Decrease 6

6
2012
13
7
4
2

3
Increase 2
7
Decrease 2

5
2011
9
6
3
0

4
Increase 2
8
Decrease 4

6
2010
12
7
3
2

6
Increase 1
9
Decrease 1

9
2009
11
7
1
3

6
Increase 2
9
Decrease 2

8
2008
10
8
1
1

8
Increase 4
15
Decrease 6

12
2007
12
6
2
4

6
Increase 3
12
Decrease 4

5
2006
14
9
4
1

4
Increase 5
10
Decrease 1

9
2005
11
8
1
2

6
Increase 2
11
Decrease 4

8
2004
14
7
4
3

6
Increase 5
13
Decrease 4

8
2003
11
8
1
2

6
Increase 2
10
Decrease 2

7
2002
13
4
7
2

6
Increase 4
12
Decrease 2

10
2001
10
7
2
1

9
Increase 6
17
Decrease 2

17
2000
11
3
4
4

11
Increase 2
17
Decrease 3

12
1999
10
4
4
2

10
Increase 2
14
Decrease 2

9
1998
14
6
5
3

5
Increase 2
11
Decrease 5

4
1997
11
8
1
2

4
Increase 6
14
Decrease 2

12
1996
12
8
4
0

12
Increase 11
27
Decrease 3

21
1995
9
2
5
2

18
Increase 4
22
Decrease 4

18
1994
6
4
2
0

12
Increase 1
18
Decrease 4

11
1993
11
4
3
4

5
Increase 6
11
Decrease 6

Honours

The England team ( red ) that won the 1966 World Cup final examination against West Germany Major :
regional :
other :
exhibition Tournaments :
compendious :

Competition
1st place, gold medalist(s)
2nd place, silver medalist(s)
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)
Total

World Cup

1
0
0
1

European Championship

0
1
2
3

Nations League

0
0
1
1

Total
1
1
3
5

See besides

References

Notes

  1. ^ England ‘s two largest victories ( 13–0 away and then 13–2 at home ) coincidentally both occurred on 18 February, against Ireland. Four of England ‘s five largest margins of victory occurred away from home plate. vitamin a good as the 13–0 victory, they defeated Austria 11–1 in 1908, Portugal 10–0 in 1947, United States 10–0 in 1964 and San Marino 10–0 in 2021 .

Citations

Read more: Real Sociedad