The Lions swept the nation after a successful and ultimately heartbreaking Euros 2020 tournament, and that appetite continues for England women as they prepare to begin their campaign for the Women's Euros 2022.
After a devastating loss at the semi-final stages in 2017 to Holland, the Lionesses are hoping to stead better in this year's competition.
England also lost in the final four of the FIFA Women’s World Cup in 2019.
The tournament will be held across ten stadiums spread over eight cities, including Manchester United ’s Old Trafford, St Mary’s Stadium in Southampton and Brighton ’s AMEX.
Games will also be held at the Etihad Academy Stadium in Manchester, Bramall Lane in Sheffield, Stadium MK in Milton Keynes, Rotherham’s New York Stadium, and the Leigh Sports Village Stadium.
How to watch Women's Euro 2022
Every England match will be broadcast by talkSPORT, and Northern Ireland's games in England’s group will also be shown on the same network.
This includes their game against Norway and Austria, and lead commentator Sam Matterface will be heading up England coverage.
She is joined by co-commentator Lianne Sanderson and lead presenter Adrian Durham, while Faye Carruthers will be reporting live with all the latest England news.
TalkSPORT 2 will also air the Women’s Football Weekly programme, hosted by talkSPORT England Correspondent Faye Carruthers, and in podcast form, bringing updates from the camps.
It can be listened to through the app on DAB digital radio, through your smart speaker and on 1089 or 1053 AM.
When does Women's Euro start and when are England playing?
It begins on Wednesday July 6 at 8pm, with England vs Austria at Old Trafford, which is also the only game to be played at the Manchester United stadium for the entire competition.
The group stages continue until the final group D games, which will be on Monday July 18, and the knockout stages will begin two days later on July 20.
The quarter finals will run from July 20-23, followed by the semi-finals from July 26-27.
The final will be played on July 31, which will take place at Wembley.
There will not be a third-place play-off match.
All group games will begin at either 5pm or 8pm, and all of the quarter-finals and semi-finals will begin at 8pm while the final at Wembley will kick off at 5pm.
Who is in the Women's Euro England squad?
The team is led by captain Leah Williamson, and she will be supporting a 23-player line-up for the tournament.
Head coach Sarina Wiegman began her role in September 2021 and previously played football at home in The Hague.
Other star players in the England women's squad are:
- Mary Earps, Manchester United
- Hannah Hampton, Aston Villa
- Ellie Roebuck, Manchester City
- Millie Bright, Chelsea
- Lucy Bronze, Manchester City
- Jess Carter, Chelsea
- Rachel Daly, Houston
- Alex Greenwood, Manchester City
- Demi Stokes, Manchester City
- Lotte Wubben-Moy, Arsenal
- Fran Kirby, Chelsea
- Jill Scott, Manchester City
- Georgia Stanway, Bayern Munich
- Ella Toone, Manchester United
- Keira Walsh, Manchester City
- Leah Williamson, Arsenal
- Bethany England, Chelsea
- Lauren Hemp, Manchester City
- Chloe Kelly, Manchester City
- Beth Mead, Arsenal
- Nikita Parris, Arsenal
- Alessia Russo Manchester United
- Ellen White, Manchester City
Full fixtures for Women's Euro 2022
Wednesday July 6
Group A: England vs Austria (8pm, Old Trafford)
Thursday July 7
Group A: Norway vs Northern Ireland (8pm, Southampton)
Friday July 8
Group B: Spain vs Finland (5pm, Milton Keynes)
Group B: Germany vs Denmark (8pm, Brentford)
Saturday July 9
Group C: Portugal vs Switzerland (5pm, Wigan & Leigh)
Group C: Netherlands vs Sweden (8pm, Sheffield)
Sunday July 10
Group D: Belgium vs Iceland (5pm, Manchester)
Group D: France vs Italy (8pm, Rotherham)
Monday July 11
Group A: Austria vs Northern Ireland (5pm, Southampton)
Group A: England vs Norway (8pm, Brighton & Hove)
Tuesday July 12
Group B: Denmark vs Finland (5pm, Milton Keynes)
Group B: Germany vs Spain (8pm, Brentford)
Wednesday July 13
Group C: Sweden vs Switzerland (5pm, Sheffield)
Group C: Netherlands v Portugal (8pm, Wigan & Leigh)
Thursday July 14
Group D: Italy vs Iceland (5pm, Manchester)
Group D: France vs Belgium (8pm, Rotherham)
Friday July 15
Group A: Northern Ireland vs England (8pm, Southampton)
Group A: Austria vs Norway (8pm, Brighton & Hove)
Saturday July 16
Group B: Finland vs Germany (8pm, Milton Keynes)
Group B: Denmark vs Spain (8pm, Brentford)
Sunday July 17
Group C: Switzerland vs Netherlands (5pm, Sheffield)
Group C: Sweden vs Portugal (5pm, Wigan & Leigh)
Monday July 18
Group D: Iceland vs France (8pm, Rotherham)
Group D: Italy vs Belgium (8pm, Manchester)