England beat Spain 5-2 to WIN the Under-17 World Cup

England has won the Under-17 World Cup after beating Spain 5-2 in a spectacular comeback from being two goals down in the first half an hour.

The youngsters lifted the trophy for the first time ever amid scenes of jubilation at the tournament in India with an explosion of joy as the final whistle sounded.

But there will be no popping of champagne corks tonight because the whole team is too young to drink – and several are due back in school next week.

Goal followed goal as the team made a remarkable comeback despite being two down just one minute before the end of the first half.

They showed monumental strength of character to pick themselves off the floor against arch rivals Spain – who had beaten England in agonising circumstances in the European final back in May. 

England are the champions of the world at Under-17 level following a staggering turnaround to beat Spain 5-2

Morgan Gibbs White, draped in and England flag, leads the celebrations as England win this trophy for the first time

Morgan Gibbs White, draped in and England flag, leads the celebrations as England win this trophy for the first time

England parade their trophy at the Salt Lake Stadium in Kolkata following a momentous comeback win over Spain

England parade their trophy at the Salt Lake Stadium in Kolkata following a momentous comeback win over Spain

It completes an unprecedented year of success for English youth sides, with Steve Cooper’s under 17s joining the under 20s in standing on top of the world during 2017.

When you add in the under 20 second string retaining the Toulon Tournament and the under 19 side being crowned European champions, there is very definite evidence now that the future is bright for the national team. Or should be. 

A sell-out crowd of over 66,000 enthusiastic fans in the Salt Lake Stadium gave the occasion the sprinkling of stardust that the young players deserved.

And as soon as the first whistle blew, those spectators were treated to an open, entertaining and end-to-end contest as both teams set their stall out.

Phil Foden scored celebrates scoring twice as England come from behind to win the Under-17 World Cup out in India

Phil Foden scored celebrates scoring twice as England come from behind to win the Under-17 World Cup out in India

Morgan Gibbs White stabs the ball into the Spanish net to complete the comeback from two goals down just after the break

Morgan Gibbs White stabs the ball into the Spanish net to complete the comeback from two goals down just after the break

It was England, appearing in their first World Cup final at under-17 level, who started the brighter and Spain goalkeeper Alvaro Fernandez needed to push out a Morgan Gibbs White strike inside the first minute.

Rhian Brewster – who is crowned the tournament’s Golden Boot winner – scored his eighth of the competition to offer hope just before half-time. 

Then Morgan Gibbs White equalised early in the second-half to shift the momentum before Phil Foden fired England into a lead that had seemed impossible after half-an-hour.

Marc Guehi added a fourth late on and Foden scored again in the closing minutes to make absolutely sure of a famous victory in Kolkata, India.

Gibbs White celebrates levelling the tie at 2-2 and the momentum of the final had shifted in England's favour

Gibbs White celebrates levelling the tie at 2-2 and the momentum of the final had shifted in England’s favour

Chelsea defender Marc Guehi points to the sky after scoring England's fourth and practically assuring victory

Chelsea defender Marc Guehi points to the sky after scoring England’s fourth and practically assuring victory

Foden was outstanding throughout, his silky left foot carrying England forward on countless occasions and his two goals were taken superbly.

Callum Hudson-Odoi was also excellent, destroying the Spanish defence with his blistering pace and producing dangerous crosses.

Sessegnon was also on top form, delivering crosses that were almost impossible to deal with.

Seconds later, the Young Lions found more joy down the right, with Steven Sessegnon bursting forward into the box but opting unwisely to shoot high and wide with better options available. 

Sergio Gomez stole the plaudits before half time after a first-half brace gave Spain a commanding lead  

Sergio Gomez stole the plaudits before half time after a first-half brace gave Spain a commanding lead  

Spain celebrate taking a two-goal lead thanks to Gomez and they were in complete control of the final at this stage

Spain celebrate taking a two-goal lead thanks to Gomez and they were in complete control of the final at this stage

Brewster raised English spirits just before the break after scoring the first of their five and his eighth of the tournament

Brewster raised English spirits just before the break after scoring the first of their five and his eighth of the tournament

Marc Guehi scores the fourth goal for England from close range as they completed their breathtaking comeback

Marc Guehi scores the fourth goal for England from close range as they completed their breathtaking comeback

England celebrate Foden's goal and England's third to complete the turnaround and leave Spain reeling

England celebrate Foden’s goal and England’s third to complete the turnaround and leave Spain reeling

MATCH FACTS

England (4-5-1): Anderson; Sessegnon, Guehi, Latibeaudiere (c), Panzo; McEachran (Gallagher 87), Oakley-Boothe (Gomes 90); Foden, Gibbs White (Kirby 81), Hudson-Odoi; Brewster

Substitutes not used: Bursik (GK), Crellin (GK); Eyoma, Gibson, Smith Rowe, Loader

Coach: Steve Cooper 

Scorers: Brewster 44; Gibbs White 58; Foden 69, 88; Guehi 85

Booked: Brewster 90 

Spain (4-3-3): Fernandez; Jaume, Miranda, Guillamon, Chust; Blanco (Beitia 81), Torres, Moukhliss (Diaz 85); Ruiz (c), Gomez, Cesar (Lara 71)

Substitutes not used: Vidal (GK); Alfonso (GK); Ruiz, Garcia, Garcia, Pampin, Perea, Pastor

Coach: Santiago Denia 

Scorer: Gomez 10, 31

Booked: Miranda, Mateu Jaume

Referee: Enrique Caceres (Paraguay) 

But England’s ascendancy didn’t last long and Spain, from their first real chance of the contest, opened the scoring on 10 minutes.

Cesar Gelabert turned a cross towards goal under pressure but the final touch came off the boot of Gomez, who sprinted away to celebrate with gusto on the touchline.

England’s defenders looked across at the linesman for an offside flag that never came, the replays showing that Gomez had been played onside by Sessegnon as the Fulham man tried to stop the initial cross.

The confidence was flowing through Spain and they could easily have added a second when an England corner suddenly transformed into Mohamed Moukhliss bursting over the half-way line, leaving white-shirted defenders in his wake.

Goalkeeper Curtis Anderson was alert and raced from his line, taking advantage of a heavy touch by the Real Madrid man to save at his feet. It was an enormous let-off for England.

But the reprieve didn’t last long. Spain doubled their lead just after the half-hour and it was Gomez once again who inflicted the damage.

Also again it was the result of a quick counter led by Abel Ruiz down the right. He was allowed to cross and the ball broke through to Gomez, who used the shield of two defenders to fire clinically across Anderson and into the far corner.

It was a lovely strike and once again Gomez made for the corner flag, where the Spain bench had emptied and almost all of the substitutes sprinted down the touchline to celebrate with him. 

Barcelona forward Sergio Gomez (No 10) is mobbed by his Spain team-mates after putting his side two goals in front

Barcelona forward Sergio Gomez (No 10) is mobbed by his Spain team-mates after putting his side two goals in front

Gomez celebrates in front of a sell-out 66,000-strong crowd at the Salt Lake Stadium in Kolkata, India 

Gomez celebrates in front of a sell-out 66,000-strong crowd at the Salt Lake Stadium in Kolkata, India 

England were rattled and had to roll with the punches as Spain committed more men forward in an effort to kill off the contest.

But this played into England’s hands and they began to find pockets of space in behind once again. Phil Foden headed wide at the back post amid suspicions that Hugo Guillamon was tugging his shirt.

Then Callum Hudson-Odoi found space down the left, cut inside and curled a shot onto the far post.

England were knocking at the door and it opened a minute before the break. Sessegnon found half a yard of space down the right and crossed nicely. In the middle, Brewster ghosted in between two defenders to head home from six yards.

Brewster quickly retrieved the ball from the Spain net after heading home England's first to give them cause for hope

Brewster quickly retrieved the ball from the Spain net after heading home England’s first to give them cause for hope

It was still a considerable way back for England after Brewster's goal but he and the rest of the team believed they could do it

It was still a considerable way back for England after Brewster’s goal but he and the rest of the team believed they could do it

Wolves player Morgan Gibbs White turns the ball home from close range to equalise for England early in the second half

Wolves player Morgan Gibbs White turns the ball home from close range to equalise for England early in the second half

It was his eighth goal of the tournament and, as he retrieved the ball from the net, England were very much still alive and kicking.

Unsurprisingly, England started the second period with renewed purpose and Foden started to become increasingly influential. He saw a shot deflected wide and then played a big hand in England’s equaliser on 58 minutes.

It was the City man’s disguised pass that sprung the overlapping Sessegnon down the right and the Fulham man’s cross was inch-perfect to find Gibbs White steaming in down the middle. The Wolves forward finished easily from just a few yards.

The momentum had certainly shifted, with Hudson-Odoi’s energy running the Spanish defenders ragged. So it came as little surprise that the Chelsea man was the architect of the goal that completed England’s turnaround.

Phil Foden celebrates after scoring England's third goal, giving them the lead for the first time in the final

Phil Foden celebrates after scoring England’s third goal, giving them the lead for the first time in the final

Foden is mobbed by team-mates, both on the field and the bench, as he celebrates scoring the third of the five goals

Foden is mobbed by team-mates, both on the field and the bench, as he celebrates scoring the third of the five goals

Guehi can't believe it as he turned the ball home to score England's fourth goal and seal their victory

Guehi can’t believe it as he turned the ball home to score England’s fourth goal and seal their victory

Guehi is left bent over the advertising boards during mad celebration following the fourth goal 

Guehi is left bent over the advertising boards during mad celebration following the fourth goal 

He sprung clear down the left, glanced up and saw Foden coming in at the back post. His cross was perfect and Foden finished on his right boot at the back post.

We awaited the Spanish storm and there was almost an equaliser when Victor Churst headed towards goal, only for the alert Sessegnon to clear off the line.

Incredibly though, it was England who moved further ahead with a fourth goal. A free-kick was swung into the back post, where the tall Joel Latibeaudiere knocked it down and his fellow defender Guehi spun to fire home.

And there was even time for a fifth in the closing minutes. The irrespressible Hudson-Odoi pinged a cross-field ball to Foden, who fired home first time and ran straight to the crowd to celebrate.

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