A few points
Old Trafford, Anfield and St James’s Park in Newcastle were all half-empty throughout the tournament. Here we were, with our first major championship for 30 years, and the English public was so disenchanted with football that we couldn’t fill our grounds.
There were many complaints that a lot of tickets for Euro 96 went to corporate types, I remember being in a lift at Morgan Stanley the day after England were knocked out of Euro 2000 and eavesdropping a conversation where someone said they wasn't into football but did go to 'an England match' once where we lost against Germany on penalties.
You also have to take into account the cost of tickets for the games outside of Wembley and the economic difference between London and the regions under John Major in 1996. Believe it or not the regions outside London and the South East have more disposable cash since Blair came in in 1997.
Would a Geordie at this time spend big bucks on Romania v Bulgaria or watch a near Premiership winning Newcastle side under Keegan that played good football? There was no great difficulty in filling St. James's, Anfield and Old Trafford for Premiership games in 1995/96. Premiership attendances rose from the early to mid 1990s.
There was also no sign of hooliganism inside the grounds, a problem that had driven many away over the previous 20 years or so.
Can you note a major instance of football hooliganism inside an English football ground in the five years prior to Euro 96?
Suddenly we were seeing what the rest of Europe saw week-in, week-out. The English public loved it, and they returned to the national game in their droves.
How's this different to any other international tournament?
In Mexico 86 we saw Maradona, Laudrup, Scifo, Platini, Tigana, Careca, Matthaus, Rossi and Sanchez yet we saw no rebirth of fashionable football.
It was no rarity to see the best of what Europe had to offer as we had Football Italia on Channel 4.
These “newâ€