DORTMUND, Germany — It seems the deeper England goes at the European Championship, the less pressure its players are feeling.
''You're now into that moment of the tournament,'' England coach Gareth Southgate said Tuesday, ''where it's about what's possible and what's achievable rather than what might go wrong.''
Southgate has noticed a gradual shift in mood in his squad at Euro 2024.
In theory, the stakes are higher now England has reached the semifinals and a match against the Netherlands. After all, the men's team is within one win of getting to back-to-back European Championship finals and of reaching the title match at a major tournament for the first time outside England.
Yet, Southgate said the pressure and ''noise'' was much higher on the players earlier in the tournament.
England came to Euro 2024 with what many regarded as its strongest squad for 20 years, only to limp through the group stage, require an equalizer in the fifth minute of stoppage time begore getting past Slovakia in the last 16 and then need a penalty-shootout win over Switzerland to advance from the quarterfinals.
''One of the strengths of us over the last seven, eight years has been less fear, less inhibition,'' Southgate said at a pre-match news conference in Dortmund. ''But I think at the beginning of the tournament, expectation weighed quite heavily and of course the external noise was louder than it has ever been.
''I felt we couldn't quite get ourselves in the right place. In the end, what was impressive was the players ground it out and found ways to win. I felt that shifted once we got to the knockout stage, definitely in the quarterfinal - we saw a better version of us with the ball. We're freer.''