
Lee Carsley confident England Under-21s can take ‘biggest step'
Lee Carsley is confident England Under-21s have the quality, experience and self belief to beat Germany in Saturday's Euros final and retain their continental crown.
Two years on from winning the competition for the first time since 1984, the Young Lions are preparing for another final having narrowly avoided a shock group stage exit.
Slovenia's defeat of the Czech Republic meant England edged through as Group B runners-up despite losing 2-1 to much-changed Germany, who they will face again in Saturday's Bratislava showpiece.
Carsley's side have kicked on since then, with a 3-1 quarter-final win against favorites Spain followed by Wednesday's impressive 2-1 semi-final triumph against the Netherlands.
'One more step, which is the biggest step,' the Under-21s boss told BBC Radio 5 Live.
'But we've got that experience, we've done it before, so hopefully we can play with a lot of respect for opponents but try and impose our gameplan on them.
'We all set out with one objective, and that was to try and win it again.
'It's obviously easier said than done, but I wanted the lads to have the confidence and belief that we could do that.
'We tried to leave all of the hope at St George's (Park) and come out here with belief and I think that the players have got a great spirit about them.
'I think they really are together, they're committed to what they're trying to do and I'm very lucky as a coach, along with the rest of the staff, to work with these players.'
England overcame tough opposition and stifling heat in Slovakia to reach a second successive Euro Under-21s final.
Harvey Elliott smashed them ahead and, having been rocked by Noah Ohio levelling from distance, the Liverpool midfielder slalomed through to spectacularly seal a 2-1 semi-final triumph.
'You forget the age of this team,' Carsley said. 'Very young, had a setback but went again. I thought they played with such maturity, they've got great team spirit.
'The most important thing now is, like we said after the Spain game, this can't be our highlight. We have to make sure that now we try and get the job done.'
England played with a swagger, much like they did in Georgia two years ago, as Carsley seeks to follow Dave Sexton in masterminding a second Under-21 Euros triumph.
'We try and put them in positions, try and give them some basic direction on what we're looking from them, and then they take on board where the space is,' the former senior England interim boss said.
'I want them to be different. We have to play different, we have to be expansive, we have to be exciting, we have to be creative, and I think we're going in the right direction.'
England's progress is made all the most impressive by the fact they are without some key players due to the Club World Cup, with Liam Delap and Jobe Bellingham among those unavailable after summer switches.
'We were fully aware of what the situations were going to be, so we were able to pivot and adjust quite quickly,' Carsley added.
'We haven't mentioned who's not here. What we've tried to do is make sure that the players who are here feel special and feel wanted, and I'm sure they do.'
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South Wales Guardian
44 minutes ago
- South Wales Guardian
Lee Carsley challenges England Under-21s to complete European hat-trick
Harvey Elliott and Omari Hutchinson gave England a 2-0 first-half lead before Nelson Weiper and Paul Nebel drew Germany level. Germany came close to snatching it late on when Nebel rattled the woodwork. Substitute Jonathan Rowe then made an instant impact from the bench in extra-time as his header put England ahead with Germany nearly salvaging an equaliser in the dying moments when Merlin Rohl was denied by the crossbar. Carsley expressed his pride at his players' achievement. 'I'm proud of the players, the commitment they've shown over the last 28 days and all the instruction we've tried to put into them so quickly, they've taken it on board,' he told Channel 4 post-match. 'They've got so much belief, we spoke about it when we were at St George's that this squad believe that they can win and that's the kind of players we need. 'I'm so proud of them, so happy for them. To be European champions for the second time is a great achievement and I suppose the challenge now is to do it again in two years. 'Any setback we've had, the players have just got together. I think I said at the start of the tournament, the longer we stay in, the better we play. THAT full-time feeling! 🤩🤩 — England (@England) June 28, 2025 'I didn't think we played great tonight, I thought we sat a little bit too deep and didn't have as much control as I would've wanted, but we probably won't remember that in a couple of days.' Carsley's side had won the tournament two years ago in Georgia and steered his side to back-to-back titles with a thrilling victory in Bratislava. The 51-year-old had an interim stint in charge of the senior England team following Gareth Southgate's departure last year and at the start of June, he signed a new deal through to the end of the 2027 European Championship. When asked what was next and if he could work alongside Thomas Tuchel, Carsley replied: 'I'm not sure, I'm going to try and enjoy tonight. I love my job, I'm very proud of the job that I do, I love working with the players. Back-to-back 🏆🏆 Lee Carsley becomes the first England U21 manager to win consecutive #U21EUROs since Dave Sexton in '82 and '84 💫 — England (@England) June 28, 2025 'Obviously I've had a chance with the senior team and loved that. So the best thing I can do is help the pathway and try to help the senior team.' Marseille forward Rowe ensured England wrapped up the title, flicking a header home two minutes after coming off the bench in extra time and he hailed his team's mentality. 'Everyone's exceptional, the mindset from the minute I came into the camp, I could just tell that everyone had the same mindset,' Rowe said. 'We all wanted to win, we've done that now, job's finally finished and we can all celebrate.'

South Wales Argus
an hour ago
- South Wales Argus
Lee Carsley challenges England Under-21s to complete European hat-trick
Harvey Elliott and Omari Hutchinson gave England a 2-0 first-half lead before Nelson Weiper and Paul Nebel drew Germany level. Germany came close to snatching it late on when Nebel rattled the woodwork. Substitute Jonathan Rowe then made an instant impact from the bench in extra-time as his header put England ahead with Germany nearly salvaging an equaliser in the dying moments when Merlin Rohl was denied by the crossbar. Carsley expressed his pride at his players' achievement. Harvey Elliott had sent England ahead (PA Wire) 'I'm proud of the players, the commitment they've shown over the last 28 days and all the instruction we've tried to put into them so quickly, they've taken it on board,' he told Channel 4 post-match. 'They've got so much belief, we spoke about it when we were at St George's that this squad believe that they can win and that's the kind of players we need. 'I'm so proud of them, so happy for them. To be European champions for the second time is a great achievement and I suppose the challenge now is to do it again in two years. 'Any setback we've had, the players have just got together. I think I said at the start of the tournament, the longer we stay in, the better we play. 'I didn't think we played great tonight, I thought we sat a little bit too deep and didn't have as much control as I would've wanted, but we probably won't remember that in a couple of days.' Carsley's side had won the tournament two years ago in Georgia and steered his side to back-to-back titles with a thrilling victory in Bratislava. The 51-year-old had an interim stint in charge of the senior England team following Gareth Southgate's departure last year and at the start of June, he signed a new deal through to the end of the 2027 European Championship. When asked what was next and if he could work alongside Thomas Tuchel, Carsley replied: 'I'm not sure, I'm going to try and enjoy tonight. I love my job, I'm very proud of the job that I do, I love working with the players. Back-to-back 🏆🏆 Lee Carsley becomes the first England U21 manager to win consecutive #U21EUROs since Dave Sexton in '82 and '84 💫 — England (@England) June 28, 2025 'Obviously I've had a chance with the senior team and loved that. So the best thing I can do is help the pathway and try to help the senior team.' Marseille forward Rowe ensured England wrapped up the title, flicking a header home two minutes after coming off the bench in extra time and he hailed his team's mentality. 'Everyone's exceptional, the mindset from the minute I came into the camp, I could just tell that everyone had the same mindset,' Rowe said. 'We all wanted to win, we've done that now, job's finally finished and we can all celebrate.'

Leader Live
an hour ago
- Leader Live
Jonathan Rowe clinches England Under-21 Euros glory with extra-time winner
Both sides had met earlier in the competition – where Germany ran out 2-1 victors in their Group B clash – but England opened the scoring early in Bratislava through Harvey Elliott. Omari Hutchinson doubled the lead 20 minutes later, but goals from Nelson Weiper and Paul Nebel either side of the break dragged Germany back into the game. 2025 #U21EURO Champions! 🏴🏆 — England (@England) June 28, 2025 England were given a scare when Nebel's deflected strike hit the crossbar with a minute to go in normal time and a pulsating encounter went into extra time. Substitute Rowe made an instant impact after coming off the bench, scoring with a diving header, and his goal proved decisive, despite Germany coming close again at the death when Merlin Rohl's effort hit the bar. Lee Carsley's side struck after five minutes when Hutchinson forced Noah Atubolu into a brilliant low save and the rebound was cleared to Elliott, who coolly slotted the ball into the bottom-right corner to score his fifth goal of the tournament. James McAtee sliced a shot across the face of goal and Jay Stansfield was inches away from converting a McAtee cross. Germany captain Eric Martel sent an effort over the crossbar before England grabbed a second goal in the 25th minute. McAtee had a chance blocked and he tapped the ball to Hutchinson, who drilled a strike between the legs of Atubolu and into the net. Hutchinson came close again moments later as his shot flew wide and another dangerous England counter-attack saw Atubolu make a diving stop to deny McAtee. Carsley was forced to make a change when Alex Scott was forced off through injury and Germany pulled a goal back in first-half stoppage-time when Nebel's pinpoint cross reached Weiper, who powered a header past James Beadle. McAtee had an effort roll just past the upright after the break before Beadle was called into action at the other end to push away Nebel's effort. Back-to-back 🏆🏆 Lee Carsley becomes the first England U21 manager to win consecutive #U21EUROs since Dave Sexton in '82 and '84 💫 — England (@England) June 28, 2025 Germany began to threaten and equalised in the 61st minute when a corner reached the unmarked Nebel and he hit a stunning finish into the top corner. McAtee curled a strike over the bar as England looked to regain some control and substitute Brooke Norton-Cuffy had a shot comfortably collected by Atubolu. Germany missed the chance to snatch a dramatic winner when Nebel rattled the crossbar. McAtee and Elliott came off for Ethan Nwaneri and Rowe, with the Marseille forward scoring just two minutes into extra time when he flicked Tyler Morton's superb cross into the bottom corner. A solid defensive display saw England fend off some promising Germany attacks and Rohl hit the woodwork with two minutes to play as Carsley's Young Lions managed to successfully defend their European crown.