We haven't been able to take payment
You must update your payment details via My Account or by clicking update payment details to keep your subscription.
Act now to keep your subscription
We've tried to contact you several times as we haven't been able to take payment. You must update your payment details via My Account or by clicking update payment details to keep your subscription.
Your subscription is due to terminate
We've tried to contact you several times as we haven't been able to take payment. You must update your payment details via My Account, otherwise your subscription will terminate.
EURO 2024

England 1-1 Switzerland (5-3 on penalties): Euro 2024 – as it happened

Gareth Southgate’s side win quarter-final, as Jordan Pickford and Trent Alexander-Arnold are the penalty shoot-out heroes after Bukayo Saka came to the rescue
England have made successive Euros semi-finals for the first time
England have made successive Euros semi-finals for the first time
KAI PFAFFENBACH/REUTERS
8.25pm
July 6

‘Palmer is like an old man’

Gareth Southgate, speaking on BBC One: “[Bukayo Saka was] so brave. He is one of our best so we were never questioning that he was going to take [a penalty], but we all know what he went through.

“But not just him. Trent [Alexander-Arnold] and Ivan [Toney] to come on and take them as they did. Cole [Palmer], he’s like an old man, fearless. Huge performance, huge result for us, and we’re still in it.”

8.25pm
July 6

Saka’s nerves of steel propel England to semis

Jonathan Northcroft: “Under pressure” was the stadium DJ’s choice when we went, with gruelling inevitability, to penalties. But Cole Palmer never feels it, Jude Bellingham never feels it, and Jordan Pickford has grown to revel in these situations.

To Ivan Toney, amazingly to Bukayo Saka given what he’s been through, and to Trent Alexander-Arnold, it proved nothing either. And so England did it — did it again. Stared pressure in the eye and laughed, and smashed apart the former national curse of penalties.

Read the full report: England reach semi-finals after shoot-out drama and Saka’s nerves of steel

Advertisement

Let the celebrations begin…
Let the celebrations begin…
CARL RECINE/GETTY IMAGES
8.10pm
July 6

‘A special bunch of players’

Jude Bellingham, on BBC One: “The things that you can’t measure are character and mentality, and we showed that again in the penalty shoot-out. Subs coming on, having only had ten kicks of the ball, and taking a penalty with that much pressure and the whole control expecting — it’s a special thing and there are a special bunch of players inside that changing room.

“These moments are only special if you go on to win the next game and hopefully win the tournament. It’s moments like these that you look back on if things go well in two weeks’ time that make it even more worth it: the last minutes when we went 1-0 down, coming back into the game, throwing everything at it — it all becomes worth it if we can back it up.”

8.03pm
July 6

Silverstone celebrations

Here’s George Russell and Lewis Hamilton, who today delighted the home crowd at Silverstone by qualifying first and second for tomorrow’s British Grand Prix, reacting to England’s shoot-out win.

7.59pm
July 6

‘I used Euro 2020 miss to become stronger’

An absolutely incredible night for Bukayo Saka. Three years on from missing the final penalty of the Euro 2020 final — and the abhorrent abuse that followed — he has rescued England with a late equaliser and then held his nerve in the shoot-out. He has spoken on BBC One:

“It was special. How we fought back, and to go to penalties as well, last time we had a penalty shoot-out at the Euros we all know what happened, so I’m so proud of everyone that we got over the line.

Advertisement

“I felt like we dominated the whole game and the chance would come and it did come, and I was the one that took it, so I’m proud of myself for that.

“I have faith in God, to come back from something like that [the missed penalty in the Euro 2020 final] was really difficult but I used it to make me stronger.”

7.46pm
July 6

England win on penalties

England have done it! A Jordan Pickford save from Switzerland’s first penalty — taken by Manuel Akanji — proved decisive as all other eight penalties were scored in the shoot-out.

Cole Palmer, Jude Bellingham, Bukayo Saka and Ivan Toney kept their nerve before Trent Alexander-Arnold, who had only been on the pitch for a few minutes, dispatched the winning spot-kick.

England are into the semi-finals, and they have got there on penalties!

7.42pm
July 6

Penalty updates – England win

Advertisement

Cole Palmer, scores (England 1-0 Switzerland)

Manuel Akanji, saved by Jordan Pickford (England 1-0 Switzerland)

Jude Bellingham, scores (England 2-0 Switzerland)

Fabian Schär, scores (England 2-1 Switzerland)

Bukayo Saka, scores (England 3-1 Switzerland)

Advertisement

Xherdan Shaqiri, scores (England 3-2 Switzerland)

Ivan Toney, scores (England 4-2 Switzerland)

Zeki Amdouni, scores (England 4-3 Switzerland)

Trent Alexander-Arnold, scores (England 5-3 Switzerland)

England win

7.28pm
July 6

Penalties it is

Advertisement

Jordan Pickford makes a decent save from Zeki Amdouni and England hold on. A couple of minutes later, the final whistle sounds to confirm a penalty shoot-out.

Stand by for more nerve-shredding tension.

Paul Joyce: Penalties it is then — but not before Xherdan Shaqiri hits a post direct from a corner. He had spotted Pickford take a step off his line.

7.25pm
July 6

Shaqiri hits post

Goodness me. Direct from a corner, Xherdan Shqiri whips his cross from the right off the near post. It looked like Jordan Pickford was beaten.

Two minutes left.

7.22pm
July 6

Alexander-Arnold on

Another change with penalties in mind? Trent Alexander-Arnold is on for Phil Foden.

7.20pm
July 6

Kane off, Toney on

Interesting. Harry Kane, moments after tumbling into Gareth Southgate having been nudged towards the England duhout by Gareth Southgate, has been replaced by Ivan Toney.

That’s one excellent penalty taker on, and another off.

Xherdan Shaqiri is on for Switzerland.

Paul Joyce: Toney is on now, replacing Kane, whose last act was to end up flying into the England dugout after coming off worse in a duel with Akanji. Southgate cushioned his skipper’s fall. No Kane for penalties if it comes to that.

7.16pm
July 6

Time for Toney?

Paul Joyce: England have two more substitutes up their sleeve. Will one be Ivan Toney at the end of this second period of extra time for his penalty prowess? Fifteen minutes left and the prospect of shoot-out looms ever larger. Remember goalkeeper Jordan Pickford scored — and saved — one when England beat Switzerland in a shoot-out to finish third in the inaugural Nations League finals in 2019.

7.15pm
July 6

It’s tense for everyone

How are your nerves, Prince William?

The Prince of Wales (and Luís Figo) take in the action
The Prince of Wales (and Luís Figo) take in the action
HOLLANDSE HOOGTE/REX/SHUTTERSTOCK
7.10pm
July 6

Half-time in extra-time

As in normal time, there is no stoppage time played at the end of the first half.

We may as well say it: a penalty shoot-out is 15 minutes away. Can someone be a hero and prevent that?

7.05pm
July 6

Schär on thin ice

Eberechi Eze drifts between Switzerland defenders and draws a foul from Fabian Schär — who is on a yellow card.

Daniele Orsato opts not to give a second booking but makes a gesture that looked very much like a final warning for the Switzerland defender.

Schär, No 22, was perhaps fortunate to stay on the pitch after fouling Eze
Schär, No 22, was perhaps fortunate to stay on the pitch after fouling Eze
PIROSCHKA VAN DE WOUW/REUTERS
7.02pm
July 6

Bellingham must be careful

Paul Joyce: It will be important for Jude Bellingham to be disciplined now. His natural instinct is to run forward and to try to get on the end of attacks, but he has to provide balance alongside Declan Rice. England do not need to play gung-ho with the best part of 30 minutes remaining.

6.59pm
July 6

Sommer denies Rice

A great effort by Declan Rice. His long-range effort is bending into the bottom-right corner, but Yann Sommer gets across and makes a fine save.

6.54pm
July 6

Back under way

Right, here we go. The first half of extra-time has begun.

6.50pm
July 6

Extra-time

A brilliant cross from Fabian Schär causes all sorts of scrambling but England get away with it. Breel Embolo inadvertently deflects the ball away from Dan Ndoye, whose diving header goes nowhere near Jordan Pickford’s goal.

That’s the last chance of normal time. We will have an extra 30 minutes — and maybe penalties.

6.45pm
July 6

Three minutes of stoppage time

England have had the better of proceedings since equalising but they must be careful. A Switzerland counterattack yields nothing but, at this stage, any attack is a heart-in-mouth moment.

We’re into stoppage time. There will be three additional minutes.

6.37pm
July 6

Saka equalises!

Rescue! A trademark Bukayo Saka goal, cutting in from the right and whipped into the far corner. Game on!

Paul Joyce: Bukayo Saka has not seen enough of the ball this half but cuts in on his left foot and finds the corner via the post. England’s first shot on target reaps reward. Equalising so quickly is important but some order is needed again. Declan Rice appears to be on his own in the middle, although Jude Bellingham has just dropped back.

6.35pm
July 6

Changes for England

Gareth Southgate has to roll the dice. Off come Kobbie Mainoo, Ezri Konsa and Kieran Trippier, on come Luke Shaw, Cole Palmer and Eberechi Eze.

Shaw, of course, is making his long-awaited return after not playing since February 18.

6.30pm
July 6

Goal for Switzerland

Sickener for England. Dan Ndoye turns and crosses from the right, and John Stones can only divert the ball into the path of Breel Embolo.

The striker has a tap-in and he duly converts, getting in front of Kyle Walker and forcing the ball home.

6.24pm
July 6

Curse of the live-blogger?

Paul Joyce: Make that six England players on a yellow. Harry Kane booked for an elbow in the face of Manuel Akanji.

6.22pm
July 6

Fans trying to lift England

Paul Joyce: Five England players – Bellingham, Foden, Trippier, Kobbie Mainoo and Conor Gallagher – are a booking away from missing a potential semi-final. So far England have kept their composure well thus far while also being aggressive. Remember that cautions are wiped at the end of this round.

Switzerland have started targeting Kieran Trippier and England’s left. There was a good spell of possession from Murat Yakin’s side. England’s supporters are noisy, trying to lift Gareth Southgate’s side again. They haven’t stopped singing in this half.

Five England players — Jude Bellingham, Phil Foden, Kieran Trippier, Kobbie Mainoo and Conor Gallagher — are a booking away from missing a potential semi-final. So far England have kept their composure well thus far while also being aggressive. Remember that cautions are wiped at the end of this round.

6.20pm
July 6

Changes for Switzerland

Murat Yakin, the Switzerland head coach, is the first to blink. Steven Zuber is on for Fabian Rieder, while Silvan Widmer has replaced Ruben Vargas. England have yet to make a substitution.

6.17pm
July 6

England need va-va-voom

Paul Joyce: There still has not been enough cutting edge from England. Harry Kane has found it difficult to make an impression, though he is being closely monitored by Manchester City’s Switzerland defender Manuel Akanji. This has been better from England, but more va-va-voom in the final third is required.

6.10pm
July 6

Team joker, serious defender

Paul Joyce: Ezri Konsa has portrayed himself as the joker around the England camp, someone who viewed one of his roles as keeping spirits high in the group. His room at the team’s headquarters back in Blankenhain has become an unofficial hub for the players to keep abreast of ITV show Love Island.

On his full tournament debut, the Aston Villa defender has done his bit to keep Gareth Southgate smiling with a composed display so far in what was an unfamiliar role on the left of England’s back three. He has been assured defensively, winning an excellent header above Dan Ndoye early on to settle his nerves, and also displayed composure on the ball. Marc Guéhi’s absence through suspension has been handled seamlessly. Thankfully, Konsa is back on his feet after receiving a whack of his knee from Breel Embolo’s follow-through.

Konsa has fared fantastically in an unfamiliar role
Konsa has fared fantastically in an unfamiliar role
CCHARLOTTE WILSON/OFFSIDE/OFFSIDE VIA GETTY IMAGES
6.08pm
July 6

Brief scare for Konsa

Breel Embolo has had Switzerland’s first shot on target but it is a tame effort on the turn that Jordan Pickford saves easily.

Ezri Konsa looks in a lot of pain after the passage, having clashed knees with Embolo. Fortunately for England, he is fine to continue.

6.01pm
July 6

Second half begins

No changes for either team at half-time. Ecstasy, agony, or extra-time is only 45 minutes away.

5.58pm
July 6

Happy pundits

“It’s nice to be able to be positive,” Gary Lineker says on BBC One. High praise for two of England’s more inexperienced internationals followed.

Micah Richards on Ezri Konsa: “It’s one of the biggest games of his career. Can you control your nerves? Can you do the basics very well? He’s done all of those things.

“His positioning has been great and this is why they’ve had no shots on target: because he’s putting his body on the line. His overall game has been fantastic.”

Rio Ferdinand on Kobbie Mainoo: “He just doesn’t look like a teenager. He is a prefect with the young kids in a school and he is saying, ‘This is what you do, this is how you do it, just give the ball to me and I’ll lend it here and there.’”

5.50pm
July 6

Saka can be the key

Paul Joyce: It feels like Bukayo Saka can be the key for England if they can get him the ball quickly. He has had the beating of Michel Aebischer throughout the opening half and the Switzerland wingback has rarely been able to attack himself. He was fortunate not to concede a penalty in the closing stages to the half as Saka tumbled to the turf.

Switzerland have not found the verve of their previous displays and have retreated into something of a defensive shell, bursting out only sporadically.

Saka had the beating of Aebischer for much of the first half
Saka had the beating of Aebischer for much of the first half
CARL RECINE/GETTY IMAGES
5.46pm
July 6

Half-time

And that’s the last action of the first half. The referee Daniele Orsato elects not to play any stoppage time.

5.45pm
July 6

Mainoo goes close

Nearly for England. Bukayo Saka wriggles free down the right (amid contact from Michel Aebischer) and pulls back to Kobbie Mainoo, but a superbly timed challenge from Granit Xhaka thwarts the Manchester United midfielder.

5.42pm
July 6

No saves so far

Neither side has had a shot on target as we enter the 42nd minute. That pretty much sums up what has been a tense, cagey first half.

5.35pm
July 6

Bright cameos – but England must look forward

Paul Joyce: Harry Kane was filling in at left wingback for a moment as England went from having a corner, which Kieran Trippier took, to defending in the blink of an eye. Sometimes England pass backwards too easily, but there have been bright cameos from Bukayo Saka, Phil Foden and Kobbie Mainoo, who has been driving forward from midfield.

5.33pm
July 6

Schär booked

A glimpse of Jude Bellingham at his best, as the Real Madrid man goes on a marauding run that forces Fabian Schär to foul him. Schär is booked for the challenge.

No bad thing to have an opposition defender on a yellow.

5.30pm
July 6

Saka in right place

There were suspicions that Bukayo Saka would start at left wingback for this game but he is proving why Gareth Southgate has kept him on the right. He turns away from Michel Aebischer adeptly but can’t quite pick out a white shirt with his subsequent cross.

5.25pm
July 6

Foden rejuvenated

Paul Joyce: It has taken four games for England to realise, but Phil Foden looks far more comfortable occupying the right side than the left. His passing range opens up, he looks more confident and that is because everything will feel more natural to him. The clipped pass over the top which freed Bukayo Saka and forced Fabian Schär, the Switzerland defender, to hack clear was evidence of that. Foden has been involved much more and that’s been a major positive of this opening passage.

5.20pm
July 6

England’s tempo improved

Paul Joyce: Some lovely skill by Bukayo Saka earlier to dupe Michel Aebischer by the touchline, and John Stones has been able to play higher than we have seen him in some previous matches. It has been a confident start by England and they are pressing aggressively. A slight concern is when they don’t press together, and Jude Bellingham has been caught out, Switzerland have found ways of building attacks. However, England’s tempo already feels better. They just need a goal.

5.18pm
July 6

Kane penalty claim

Harry Kane wants a penalty after nipping in front of Fabian Schär and drawing contact from the Newcastle United defender, but the referee is not interested. It would have been soft.

Kane appealed for a penalty after a challenge by Schär
Kane appealed for a penalty after a challenge by Schär
KENZO TRIBOUILLARD/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
5.15pm
July 6

England finding feet

After a slightly nervy start England have had a good spell, with much of their play coming down the right flank. Declan Rice has a decent opening from just outside the box but his shot cannot make it through the Switzerland bodies.

5.08pm
July 6

Trippier alright on the left

Paul Joyce: It is Kieran Trippier at left wingback which makes sense for a number of reasons. Firstly, it is easier to morph into a back four if necessary. Secondly, Gareth Southgate spoke about the Newcastle United defender’s communication skills which should help Ezri Konsa, the left-sided centre back. Thirdly, if we ever see Luke Shaw this afternoon it would mean less disruption. England’s wingbacks are very high up the pitch.

5.05pm
July 6

Konsa with important challenge

An encouraging early moment for Ezri Konsa, as he dispossesses Remo Freuler just as it looked like the Switzerland midfielder had a sight of goal.

5.02pm
July 6

Back three with Saka on right

Yep, it’s a back three for England. Bukayo Saka is on the right meaning Kieran Trippier starts on the left.

5.00pm
July 6

Kick-off!

Anthems done, pre-match festivities complete — we’re ready to go! A place in the last four on the line.

4.52pm
July 6

Here come the teams

The two XIs are lining up in the Dusseldorf Arena tunnel. Kick-off is moments away…

4.45pm
July 6

Prince William watching

Tension is building with only 15 minutes to go until kick-off. The Prince of Wales, who is also the president of the FA, is in attendance.

The Prince of Wales is at the Dusseldorf Arena
The Prince of Wales is at the Dusseldorf Arena
OZAN KOSE/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
4.35pm
July 6

Today’s other quarter

If England win this afternoon they will play either Turkey or Holland in the semi-finals. Turkey have had a particularly lively run, featuring raucous support and controversial political gestures.

Ian Hawkey: Turkey take a hefty set of numbers into tonight’s Euro 2024 meeting with Holland. There’s the estimated 200,000 Berliners of Turkish heritage, the vast majority committed to making the city hosting their quarter-final sound and feel like it’s a home contest. Then there’s the less helpful figures that punctuate the Turkish rollercoaster through the tournament so far: ten bookings and, as of Friday, the most significant individual ban imposed on a participant at the competition, the two-match suspension Uefa handed to defender Merih Demiral for what has been deemed a politically charged gesture.

Read more: One ban, 11 bookings and political strife on Turkey’s rollercoaster ride

4.20pm
July 6

Southgate coy about formation

Gareth Southgate has just spoken to the BBC, but would not confirm England’s formation as kick-off looms.

On England’s tactics: “Whatever formation we play, we want to try to get the pressure right on the opposition, so [it’s about] making that as simple as possible with the profile of players we’ve got, and always then adapting with the ball to try to pose as many problems as we can.”

On Bukayo Saka’s role: “He is a player that works diligently for the team. He is obviously a huge threat in one-against-one situations. He provides so much, he’s got a goal threat, so he’s been a really important player for us for a number of years.”

4.15pm
July 6

Back three v back three?

Paul Joyce: Switzerland have deployed a back three for their past nine matches and have been a well-oiled machine at this tournament. A danger man could be the left wingback Michel Aebischer, who has been joining attacks as a No 10. In the opening group game win over Hungary, he scored and assisted. However, all seven of their goals have come from different players and Remo Freuler’s strike against Italy last Saturday followed a move of 31 passes.

4.05pm
July 6

Fans out in force

Paul Joyce: Capacity at the Dusseldorf Arena is 46,533 with England’s official allocation approximately 7,000 tickets but, as always, there are thousands more here.

At lunchtime, there were lots of people milling around looking for tickets. Those who were fortunate enough to have one and came inside early would have seen the England backroom staff setting out the warm-up session. Three bags of balls, orange, blue and whistle discs all painstakingly arranged in one half of the pitch. A white square, for example, is 16 paces by 16 paces. Let’s hope the attention to detail has been the same in training this week. Southgate said his squad had trained very well, although I doubt he would have said anything different.

4.00pm
July 6

In at the deep end

Ezri Konsa has five England caps, made two starts for his country and never started a competitive international. What a moment for the Aston Villa defender.

3.55pm
July 6

Team news: back three brings intrigue

As expected, England make one change to the XI, with Ezri Konsa coming in for Marc Guéhi. With this XI, a back-three system seems likely.

Paul Joyce: Gareth Southgate wasn’t really in the mood yesterday evening to discuss the milestone of this being his 100th game in charge of England. He is eyeing match 102 as being the landmark and, in order to remain on course for the final of Euro 2024, he must first hope his tactical switch pays off.

Southgate could have reacted to four underwhelming displays by changing the personnel, Instead, England appear to have switched to a back three with Ezri Konsa replacing the suspended Marc Guéhi, and Kieran Trippier and Bukayo Saka as the wingbacks.

When Southgate was asked about this possibility last night he pointed out that he likes to be tactically flexible and then snapped it was not long ago he was getting “killed” for playing three at the back. All a little unnecessarily tetchy and also inaccurate.

There are so many points of intrigue with this system, such as which flanks will Saka and Trippier be on and where will Phil Foden and Jude Bellingham play? We think Foden and Bellingham will be just off Harry Kane and I would hope to the right and left respectively. Foden enjoys stepping inside, off the right and shooting with his stronger left foot.

England XI: Jordan Pickford; Kyle Walker, John Stones, Ezri Konsa; Kieran Trippier, Kobbie Mainoo, Declan Rice, Bukayo Saka; Jude Bellingham, Harry Kane, Phil Foden.

3.45pm
July 6

What happened yesterday

The two quarter-finals on Friday were contrasting contests. Spain beat Germany 2-1, with their winner coming late in extra-time to cap off a gripping encounter. Meanwhile, France and Portugal plodded through a 0-0 draw before Didier Deschamps’ side prevailed on penalties.

Spain will play France in the first semi-final next Tuesday. Catch up on the action below.

Read more: German dreams shattered by former Newcastle man’s 119th-minute header
Read more: Deschamps makes no apologies as nihilistic France grind way into semi-finals

3.40pm
July 6

Don’t be like Gazza

Among the most infamous moments in England football history is Paul Gascoigne’s yellow card against West Germany in the 1990 World Cup semi-finals. That booking ruled Gascoigne out of the final and reduced him to tears — though England lost the semi anyway.

Yellow cards are wiped after the quarter-finals at Euro 2024 but five England players will miss a potential semi-final should they pick up a second booking of the tournament. They are: Jude Bellingham, Phil Foden, Kobbie Mainoo, Conor Gallagher and Kieran Trippier.

Marc Guéhi, the centre back, was booked for a second time in the tournament during the round-of-16 win over Slovakia and is suspended for today’s game.

3.30pm
July 6

The Shaw thing

Luke Shaw, the only natural left back in England’s squad, may make his long-awaited return from injury today.

Matt Lawton: Luke Shaw is the player Southgate very much regards as his best option on the left, but no competitive action since February makes him a risk for the European Championship quarter-final encounter with Switzerland, even if he is now rated fully fit.

What Shaw gives England, however, is the balance that has been missing in their first four games, and with it a fluidity that enables Southgate’s side to be more flexible in their tactical approach.

Read more: Why Luke Shaw is key to England’s tactical flexibility

3.25pm
July 6

Switzerland led by familiar figurehead

England’s opponents are captained by Granit Xhaka, the former Arsenal man who has been superb in Switzerland’s midfield.

Paul Hirst: Xhaka, 31, has been Switzerland’s best player during their swashbuckling ride to the last eight, which has included victories over Italy and Hungary, and a draw against Germany that would have been a win had Niclas Füllkrug not scored a last-gasp equaliser.

Xhaka is one man-of-the-match award away from equalling the European Championship record of six, which is held by Andrés Iniesta and Cristiano Ronaldo. Ten months ago, such a feat would have seemed impossible.

Read more: How Granit Xhaka got Switzerland playing like Bayer Leverkusen

3.15pm
July 6

Time is right for back three

England are expected to switch systems this afternoon, deploying a 3-4-2-1 system rather than variations of 4-3-3 used so far at Euro 2024. The notoriously right-footed Kieran Trippier may move from left back to right wingback, while Bukayo Saka could swap right wing for left wingback.

Martin Samuel: A belt, but no braces. Gareth Southgate is right to go to a back three against Switzerland on Saturday evening, but right to temper attack with defence, too.

He could have gone gung-ho, picked two wingers, or one winger and Trent Alexander-Arnold, but this is a sensible compromise. Bukayo Saka to provide the threat, Kieran Trippier to play with his defensive head screwed on.

Read more: Back three is right call – but Gareth Southgate must be bold with it

3.10pm
July 6

Can Southgate reach 101?

Gareth Southgate will take charge of his 100th England game this afternoon. The England manager, who has been in the position since 2016 and is likely to exit the job after this tournament, will dearly hope he does not end on exactly a century.

Jonathan Northcroft: Quality has been absent from England’s football at Euro 2024. But the results have been there and brought them to a quarter-final against effervescent Switzerland, defeated only once (in a dead-rubber qualifier) since the 2022 World Cup. Will it be this time? You know, when England click at last. At the Merkur Spiel-Arena, Gareth Southgate is hoping for fifth time lucky. If not, his 100th game as England ­manager will be his last.

Read more: Gareth Southgate convinced time is right for ‘brave’ England team

3.00pm
July 6

Time to deliver

Hello and welcome to our live coverage of England’s Euro 2024 quarter-final against Switzerland.

It has been an underwhelming tournament for Gareth Southgate’s side thus far. Their run to the last eight has been defined by ponderous football, fan frustrations and an almighty scare in the round of 16. Yet, courtesy of Jude Bellingham’s last-gasp equaliser and Harry Kane’s extra-time winner against Slovakia, England’s hopes of a first men’s major trophy since 1966 are still alive.

They will have to improve this afternoon. Switzerland have played some of the best football in the tournament and, through their commanding 2-0 victory over Italy in the round of 16, displayed their ability to knock out a big-name opponent.

Stand by for updates and analysis from the Dusseldorf Arena, with kick-off at 5pm.