England face Italy at home at Wembley for the Euro final on Sunday evening (9 p.m.).

It is the sixteenth final of the European Championship which will take place in London.

Number of goals scored, extra time, the oldest and youngest players to have played ... Here are the eight statistics of the Euro finals.

For the first time, it took five years instead of four to attend a new Euro final ... England and Italy face each other on Sunday evening in London, in Wembley stadium (21 hours) to try to win the Henri-Delaunay trophy for the 2020 edition and succeed Portugal.

By the way, which nation has the most Euro titles?

How many goals were scored in the final?

Are these last matches prolific?

Europe 1 offers you eight statistics to know before enjoying the sixteenth final of the European Championship on Sunday.

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1. Most successful nations: Germany and Spain (3 wins)

Of the 15 Euro finals, Germany (ex-FRG) and Spain have won three, the highest total for the moment.

The Mannschaft only had 20th century victories against the Soviet Union in 1972 (3-0), Belgium in 1980 (2-1) and the Czech Republic in 1996 (2-1 ap).

La Roja won in 1964 against the USSR (2-1) before lifting the European trophy twice consecutively, in 2008 against Germany (1-0) and in 2012 against Italy. (4-0).

The Spaniards are also the only ones to have managed to keep their title.

2. Most present nation: Germany (5 times)

In nearly a third of the Euro finals, Germany came forward to lift the Henri-Delaunay trophy.

The Germans came out with an honorable record: they won three times for two failures on the last step, in 1976 against Czechoslovakia (2-2 ap, 3 tab to 5) and in 1992 against Denmark (0-2).

Behind the Mannschaft, we find with four finals Spain (three titles) and Italy (one title in 1968) which will play the fourth ultimate opposition in its history in a Euro on Sunday.

France comes just behind with three participations for two victories, in 1984 (2-0) against Spain and 2000 against Italy (2-1 ap).

3. Number of goals scored: 37

Since the first final played in France in 1960 between the USSR and Yugoslavia (2-1 victory for the Russians), 37 goals have been scored in the last match of an edition (2.47 goals / match). The most hooked meeting at this level of the competition remains undoubtedly the opposition between Czechoslovakia and West Germany in 1976. Led 2-0, the FRG managed to equalize in the last minute of regulation time by through Bernd Hölzenbein. It was only on penalties that Czechoslovakia won thanks to the famous Panenka of the player of the same name.

It is the most prolific final just like that of 2012 between Spain and Italy.

The Spaniards led by their golden generation - Iniesta, Xavi, Sergio Ramos ... - inflicted a severe 4-0 to their opponents, signing the biggest victory in the history of the Euro finals.

Note that none of them ended with a goalless draw 0-0 at the end of extra time.

4. Number of overtime: 5

Five finals had their outcome after the end of regulation time.

The latest one remains a bad memory for French fans who saw Portuguese striker Eder score in the 109th minute of the last match of Euro 2016 (0-1 loss).

Previously, this had succeeded for the France team in 2000 against Italy thanks to the golden goal of David Trezeguet, the only final which saw the application of this rule disappeared in 2004.

The 1976 edition also ended beyond 90 minutes of play and even continued until the penalty shoot-out between Czechoslovakia and Germany.

This is the only Euro final that ended with a penalty shootout.

Otherwise, the European Championships 1960 and 1996 also ended with an extension.

5. The player who has experienced it the most: Rainer Bonhof (ALL, 3)

The finals would be nothing without the players in the game. The one who totals the greatest number is the German midfielder Rainer Bonhof with three consecutive participations (1972, 1976, 1980).

On the bench during the success of his people in 1972, he was titular during the defeat of the Mannschaft in 1976 before winning the Euro a second time in 1980, once again as a substitute.

6. Most goals scored by a player: 2

All those who made a double

Torres on 2 editions

7. The youngest player: Renato Sanches (POR, 18 years and 326 days)

To have played the final.

Bellingham can exceed it at 18 years and 13 days.

8. The oldest player: Jens Lehman (ALL, 38 years and 232 days old)

Jens Lehman, 38 years and 232 days old.

Oldest to score: Bernd Hölzenbein (FRG) in 1976

9. Number of winning teams for their first appearance in the final: 10

Logical presence of the first victorious teams.

England can do it 2021.

Winners: USSR 1960, Spain 1964, Italy 1968, FRG 1972, Czechoslovakia 1976, France 1984, Netherlands 1988, Denmark 1992, Greece 2004, Portugal 2016

10. The stadium that most often hosted the Euro final: Wembley (2 times)

Wembley 2 times (1996 and 2021).

France: Parc des Princes and SDF.

The attendance record should not be broken despite 90,000 seats (covid).

Spain USSR 1964, 79,115 spectators.

Should not be beaten even though there are 90,000 places.

11. The greatest number of years before reaching the final: 61 years for England!

First for England. Italy: 1968-2012 = 44 years. Spain: 1964-2008 = 44 years