Rail staff with stage fresh strike action on June 2 ahead of the FA Cup Final in London the next day.
Some 20,000 RMT members at 14 train companies will down tools as part of a long-running dispute over pay, jobs and conditions, the union announced.
Catering workers, train managers and station staff will all take action, which is expected to affect train services across the country.
The Aslef train drivers' union has already announced strike action on June 3, when Manchester United and Manchester City are due to play at Wembley.
The walkout could also affect travel to the Epsom Derby, one of horse racing's classic contests which takes place on June 3.
It comes after RMT members voted to renew their strike mandate - meaning disruption could continue for another six months.
RMT General Secretary Mick Lynch said: "The Government is once again not allowing the Rail Delivery Group (RDG) to make an improved offer that we can consider.
"Therefore, we have to pursue our industrial campaign to win a negotiated settlement on jobs, pay and conditions.
"Ministers cannot just wish this dispute away.
"They underestimate the strength of feeling our members, who have just given us a new six-month strike mandate, continue to support the campaign and the action and are determined to see this through until we get an acceptable resolution.
"The Government now needs to unlock the RDG and allow them to make an offer that can be put to a referendum of our members."
An RDG spokesperson said: "In recent discussions with the RMT, we have continued to stand by the fair, industry-level dispute resolution proposal agreed line by line with their negotiating team, which would have resolved this dispute and given our lowest-paid staff a rise of up to 13%.
"By calling more strike action, the RMT leadership have chosen to prolong this dispute without ever giving their members a chance to have a say on their own offer.
"Instead, they will be subject to yet more lost pay through industrial action, customers will suffer more disruption, and the industry will continue to suffer huge damage at a time when the railway is taking more than its fair share from taxpayers to keep trains running post-Covid.
"We remain open and willing to engage in national-level talks so that we can secure a pay rise for our people and the long-term future of an industry vital to Britain's economy."
The 14 train operators involved are:
Chiltern Railways
Cross Country Trains
Greater Anglia,
LNER,
East Midlands Railway,
c2c,
Great Western Railway,
Northern Trains,
South Eastern
South Western Railway
Transpennine Express,
Avanti West Coast,
West Midlands Trains
GTR (including Gatwick Express