England sealed their ticket to the quarter-finals of the European Championship with a come-from-behind 2-1 win over Slovakia on Sunday evening.
Manchester United youngster Kobbie Mainoo came in as the sole change for the English - replacing Conor Gallagher as the Slovaks featured no switches from the draw with Romania.
England had the first chance in anger eight minutes in where Kieran Trippier went on an overlapping run to meet a layoff from Jude Bellingham, but fired way beyond the far corner.
Danger signs though set on the Three Lions three minutes later after a lapse of concentration by Kyle Walker saw Ivan Schranz nicked possession to go and work Jordan Pickford.
Schranz did made up during the midway stage when he made a third-man run to meet a through pass from David Strelec and finished comfortably to make it 1-0 in Gelsenkirchen.
After trailing at the break, the Three Lions looked to have pulled level nine minutes thereafter as Phil Foden tapped in a well-worked layoff from Harry Kane.
Get the latest soccer news and be ahead of the game. Follow our WhatsApp Channel via this link.
Skipper Kane desperately aimed to go one better than his compatriot with a header from the area, but was kept in check by Paris Saint-Germain defender Milan Skriniar.
The Three Lions didn't stop probing the Slovaks who were at this point in time extremely comfortable in possession as well as out of it.
Nothing seemed to be going the way for Gareth Southgate and company who were forced to bring on Cole Palmer after Trippier battled with a knock in the latter stages.
However, the equaliser looked in sight ten minutes to fulltime when a low speculative shot outside the area by Declan Rice battered off the upright.
Slovakia's advantage were undone in added time after a long throw-in led to a flick-on for Bellingham to finish on the overhead and took the clash to extra-time.
The Three Lions were in complete control and were ahead a minute in the extra-time after a layoff from Ivan Toney pulled through to Kane to head in from close-range.
Given the limited time, the Slovaks desperately pushed for the equaliser but were unable to salvage anything and exited the tournament with the English into the last eight.