Twelve months on from when it was originally supposed to take place, this year's European Championships are finally here - and Gareth Southgate's England look primed and ready to bring it home.
Southgate has now named his 26-man man squad for Euro 2020 and his youthful and talented side will be one of the tournament favourites.
In what looks sure to be a mouth-watering prospect, the Three Lions will take on neighbours Scotland in the group stages - their first tournament clash since Euro 96.
As well as Scotland, England will also face the likes of the Czech Republic and their 2018 World Cup nemesis' in Croatia.
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Last week, England warmed up for the tournament opener on June 13 against Croatia with narrow wins over Austria and Romania - and all eyes will now be on the biggest prize on Europe's international stage.
Euro 2020 will consist of 24 teams, split across six groups.
The top 16 teams will then progress to the knockout stages, with the top two in each group plus four best third-placed teams to go through.
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The competition then enters a traditional knockout stage en route to the final.
Here, we take a look at England's Euro 2020 fixtures in full, as well as their potential route to the knockout stages.
Group stage
Sunday, June 13 - Group D: England vs Croatia; kick-off 2pm (London)
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Friday, June 18 - Group D: England vs Scotland; kick-off 8pm (London)
Tuesday, June 22 - Group D: Czech Republic vs England; kick-off 8pm (London)
The top two in each group qualify, plus four of the six best third-placed teams.
Knockout phase
Round of 16
Saturday, 26 June
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1: 2A vs 2B (17:00, Amsterdam) 2: 1A vs 2C; kick-off 8pm (London)
Sunday, 27 June
3: 1C vs 3D/E/F (17:00, Budapest) 4: 1B vs 3A/D/E/F; kick-off 8pm (Seville)
Monday, 28 June
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5: 2D vs 2E (17:00, Copenhagen) 6: 1F vs 3A/B/C; kick-off 8pm (Bucharest)
Tuesday, 29 June
7: 1D vs 2F (17:00, London) 8: 1E vs 3A/B/C/D; kick-off 8pm (Glasgow)
Quarter-finals
Friday, 2 July
QF1: Winner 6 vs Winner 5 (17:00, St Petersburg) QF2: Winner 4 vs Winner 2; kick-off 8pm (Munich)
Saturday, 3 July
QF3: Winner 3 vs Winner 1 (17:00, Baku) QF4: Winner 8 vs Winner 7; kick-off 8pm (Rome)
Semi-finals
Tuesday, 6 July
SF1: Winner QF2 vs Winner QF1; kick-off 8pm (London)
Wednesday, 7 July
SF2: Winner QF4 vs Winner QF3; kick-off 8pm (London)
Final
Sunday, 11 July
Winner SF1 vs Winner SF2; kick-off 8pm (London)
England 26-man squad
Goalkeepers: 1 Jordan Pickford (Everton); 13 Dean Henderson (Manchester United), 23 Sam Johnstone (West Brom)
Defenders: 2 Kyle Walker (Manchester City); 3 Luke Shaw (Manchester United); 5 John Stones (Manchester City); 6 Harry Maguire (Manchester United); 12 Kieran Trippier (Atletico Madrid); 15 Tyrone Mings (Aston Villa); 16 Conor Coady (Wolves); 21 Ben Chilwell (Chelsea); Ben White (Brighton); 24 Reece James (Chelsea)
Midfielders: 4 Declan Rice (West Ham); 8 Jordan Henderson (Liverpool); 14 Kalvin Phillips (Leeds); 19 Mason Mount (Chelsea); 26 Jude Bellingham (Borussia Dortmund)
Forwards: 7 Jack Grealish (Aston Villa); 9 Harry Kane (Tottenham); 10 Raheem Sterling (Manchester City); 11 Marcus Rashford (Manchester United); 17 Jadon Sancho (Borussia Dortmund); 18 Dominic Calvert-Lewin (Everton); 20 Phil Foden (Manchester City); 25 Bukayo Saka (Arsenal)
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