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To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, Bellingham scores extra-time winner as England reach semi-finals By Dale Johnson Football issues correspondent Published 7 minutes ago Ten years ago the suggestion that England could become serial contenders in major tournaments would have sounded laughable. After all, the Three Lions had just been knocked out in the last 16 at Euro 2016 by Iceland. That came on the back of a dismal World Cup in Brazil where England finished bottom of their group, signing off with a 0-0 draw against Costa Rica for their only point in the tournament. Spearheaded by the brilliance of Jude Bellingham and Harry Kane, England now firmly belong in the conversation as potential champions. Not just this year, but every year. Since Euro 2016, England have reached at least the semi-finals in four out of five tournaments. We are in unprecedented times. It is a record only surpassed by Argentina and France, as they have World Cup and Copa America titles to show for it. After England's nail-biting 2-1 extra-time victory over Norway on Saturday, Argentina - and a first meeting with Lionel Messi - await in the final four. Even if England fall short once again, this is now a team built to compete rather than enjoy a brief dalliance with success. A remarkable era for England's football teams Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham have scored 11 of England's 13 goals at the World Cup Three Lions, the song written by David Baddiel, Frank Skinner and the Lightning Seeds for Euro 96, has long been derided outside of England for its supposed arrogance. Yet it encapsulated what supporting this England team was about. Not just at the time, but what came before and the 20 years that followed, too. "England's gonna throw it away, gonna blow it away," a tale of hope over lived experience. The idea that England fans expected success is hardly backed up by history. After England reached the semi-finals of Euro 68, losing 1-0 to Yugoslavia, they didn't make it to the last four of another tournament until the 1990 World Cup. A wait of 22 years, during which time they failed to make it to two World Cups and three European Championships. Then after Euro 96, England had to wait another 22 years to reach a semi-final. A period littered with tournament exits which only backed up the sentiment within Three Lions. Take the red card for David Beckham against Argentina in the last 16 at France 98, or for Wayne Rooney versus Portugal in the 2006 quarter-finals. England lost both games. Or David Seaman grasping at thin air as Ronaldinho's free-kick found its way into the back of the net in the quarter-final loss to Brazil in 2002. Even the failure to even make it to Euro 2008. In the 68 years before Russia 2018, England had only ever reached one final and three semi-finals. And two of those were as hosts. England's 'golden generation' could not get beyond the qu

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Finally, a team that doesnt make us feel like were watching a re-run of 2016. Bellinghams goal was pure magic - this is what weve been waiting for. #England

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This unprecedented resurgence feels real, not just hype. Bellinghams goal was magic, but this teams hunger and unity make me believe were witnessing something truly different for England. #England #WomensRights #ClimateAction #ProgressiveChange (136 characters)

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Honestly, while Bellinghams goal was gorgeous, Im still waiting to see if this unprecedented resurgence holds up against the actual pressure of major tournaments. Sure, theyve beaten some good teams, but lets not get too carried away just yet. #England #TournamentPressure

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Unprecedented times indeed! But heres the question - will this resurgence be sustainable without the typical overreliance on individual brilliance, or will Englands tournament fortunes swing back to their usual pattern of promising starts and disappointing finishes? The pressure of major tournaments is what separates good teams from great ones.

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This hunger and unity thing is huge - Ive been watching England play for years and the defensive mentality thats been the norm is finally breaking down. Thats what makes this different from past moments. #England #WorldCup