Raheem Sterling and Harry Kane struck as England reached the quarter-finals of the European Championship with a 2-0 win over rivals Germany at Wembley.
England will play either Sweden or Ukraine, who meet later on Wednesday (NZ time) in Glasgow in the last eight.
It was England's first knockout round tournament victory over Germany since the 1966 World Cup final and their first ever knockout round win at the Euros inside 90 minutes.
The goals came after midfielder Jack Grealish was introduced in the 69th minute when the entire tempo and mood of the game changed.
Six minutes after Grealish came on he was involved in a flowing passing move which ended with left wing-back Luke Shaw slipping the ball across the face of the goal for Sterling to slide in his third goal in four Euro 2020 games.
But shortly after scoring Sterling almost gifted the Germans a leveller when he gave the ball away on the halfway line and Kai Havertz sent Thomas Mueller through on goal.
The experienced World Cup-winner had only England keeper Jordan Pickford to beat, but dragged his shot wide of his right-hand post, leaving Sterling, who watched in anguish on his knees, to leap to his feet in relief.
After that reprieve, and with the crowd roaring England on, Grealish turned the direct provider for the second goal, crossing from the left for captain Kane to beat keeper Manuel Neuer with a stooping header.
It was Kane's first goal of the tournament and his return to scoring ways will be another positive for England manager Gareth Southgate as he looks ahead at a potential route to the final.
Southgate's cautious approach
Southgate's decision to play a five-man defence and two holding midfielders was a cautious one, but England did start the game brightly.
Sterling tested Neuer in the 16th minute, cutting in from the left flank and finding room to unleash a drive towards the far corner which the German keeper did well to get across to.
Much of England's probing was coming from Kieran Trippier down the right and he found Harry Maguire in a promising position with a lofted ball to the back post but the centre-half's header was over the bar.
Germany were enjoying plenty of possession in midfield with England sitting deep, but they provided a warning of their threat when Kai Havertz slipped through Timo Werner, although Pickford was out quickly to smother.
Just before the break Matt Hummels had to intervene quickly to clear as Kane looked to pounce after Sterling's burst into the box had caused chaos.
After the interval Germany sensed England had lost their way and came close when Havertz's powerful drive was superbly tipped over by Pickford.
The game was in the balance but then came Grealish, whose name had been sung by the England fans throughout the game and who lived up to those hopes and expectations by providing the spark England had been missing.
The visitors' defeat marked the end of Joachim Loew's time as Germany coach after 15 years in charge, during which he guided them to the 2014 World Cup title in Brazil.