Nearly 15MILLION viewers tuned into BBC One for England's 1-0 Euros win over Serbia, new figures reveal

  • A peak audience of 14.8million watched Gareth Southgate's men's nervy win 

Nearly 15 million people tuned in to BBC1 last night to watch England battle to a 1-0 win over Serbia in their opening game of the Euros, new figures have revealed. 

A peak audience of 14.8 million watched Gareth Southgate's men make the perfect start to the tournament as Jude Bellingham scored the only goal of a nervy encounter with a powerful header after 13 minutes. 

It easily secured the highest rating of the night, with an audience share of 60.3 per cent, according to Overnights.tv who provided the data.

The match was also streamed 3.5 million times on BBC iPlayer. 

The figure is lower than the estimated 17 million that analysts had predicted would watch the game, with an average of 10.4 million tuning in across the 90 minutes. 

By comparison, a peak of 10.4 million tuned into ITV to watch the Euros opener on Friday when Germany thrashed Scotland 5-1. 

The number eclipsed the average audience of 7.4 million that watched England's first game of the 2022 World Cup against Iran

Nearly 15 million people tuned in to BBC1 last night to watch England battle to a 1-0 win over Serbia in their opening game of the Euros

Nearly 15 million people tuned in to BBC1 last night to watch England battle to a 1-0 win over Serbia in their opening game of the Euros

A peak audience of 14.8 million watched Gareth Southgate 's men make the perfect start to the tournament as Jude Bellingham (pictured) scored the only goal of the game with a powerful header

A peak audience of 14.8 million watched Gareth Southgate 's men make the perfect start to the tournament as Jude Bellingham (pictured) scored the only goal of the game with a powerful header

Alex Kay-Jelski, director of BBC Sport, said: 'The nations came together in huge numbers to follow BBC Sport's coverage of the first weekend of the men's Euros. 

'Whether it was the tension of England's opening win, the fallout of Scotland's tough start, the exciting performances from Germany and Spain or the heartwarming story of seeing Christian Eriksen score three years on from his collapse on the pitch, it's great that we can showcase the best sporting storytelling across BBC TV, iPlayer, Radio and Online.'

Stay-at-home fans were thought to have downed an estimated 30 million pints in pubs and their houses while watching the match. 

England's 35,000 pubs were bracing themselves for Super Sunday, with more than 14 million pints expected to have been sold. Another 16 million were predicted to be quaffed at home, say analysts. 

Ahead of the game in Gelsenkirchen bullish Three Lions fans headed to pubs in the  former mining city in western Germany where they down steins of lager and sang 'Sweet Caroline'. 

Some 40,000 were expected to have travelled to the city, with around 300,000 expected to travel to Germany during the month-long tournament.  

Some could be heard belting out the Neil Diamond classic that has become the unofficial anthem of the England football team.

Stay-at-home fans were thought to have downed an estimated 30 million pints in pubs and their houses while watching the match

Stay-at-home fans were thought to have downed an estimated 30 million pints in pubs and their houses while watching the match

It comes as more than a million English fans are expected to skip work today, after 30 million pints were downed in pubs and homes. Another eight million will likely work from home, experts said.

BrightHR, which monitors absence among more than a million employees at 50,000 companies, projected a repeat of the 128 per cent sickness increase the day after England's Euro 2020 Sunday group game.

Chief executive Alan Price said: 'England fans are preparing to nurse sore heads following the Serbia match, with 'Hangover Monday' on the way.

'Businesses should brace for a wave of questionable sick-leave submissions, unexpected absences, lateness and last-minute holiday requests.'