The funniest football chants to learn for the England game
The England game is back on the horizon and the terraces are already warming up. For American viewers tuning in via stream or social feed, the real soundtrack is the crowd noise that turns every match into a sing-along. This guide gathers the most recognizable, repeatable chants so anyone can join the chorus without needing a season ticket.
Three Lions leads the pack
Three Lions arrived in 1996 and never left. Written for Euro 96 by David Baddiel, Frank Skinner, and The Lightning Seeds, it hit number one and keeps returning every tournament cycle.
The chorus “It’s coming home” functions as shorthand for hope and memory at once. Fans sing the full verse about three lions on a shirt and the Jules Rimet trophy still gleaming.
Stateside viewers know the hook from highlight reels and memes. When the next England game kicks off, expect this one to open the evening.
Vindaloo keeps the party loud
Released ahead of the 1998 World Cup, Vindaloo by Fat Les offered a deliberate contrast to Three Lions. The track leaned into silliness with a hook that promised England would simply outscore the opponent.
Lyrics about a lump of cheddar cheese and a marching band turned the song into a running joke that still surfaces in pub playlists. It ranks second only to Three Lions in most fan polls of tournament anthems.
The chant works because it needs no context. Drop the chorus at any England game and the section around you will pick it up instantly.
Southgate gets the pop treatment
During Euro 2020, England fans lifted the Atomic Kitten melody “Whole Again” and turned it into a tribute for manager Gareth Southgate. The new words praised his calm style and steady leadership.
The chant spread from stands to social clips within days. Southgate himself acknowledged the song, which only increased its volume at subsequent matches.
Its appeal lies in the update cycle. Every new England game now carries the possibility that supporters will rewrite another pop hit for the current squad.
Two World Wars keeps old rivalries alive
The chant “Two World Wars and One World Cup” dates back decades and rides the tune of Camptown Races. It surfaces mainly when England faces Germany.
The lyrics reference the 1966 final and earlier conflicts, delivered in the blunt style of terrace humor. Media coverage tends to note the song whenever the fixture returns.
Its endurance shows how some England game moments still carry historical shorthand that travels beyond the pitch.
Ten German Bombers draws the line
Another longstanding anti-Germany number adapts the children’s rhyme “Ten Green Bottles.” The version counts imaginary bombers shot down one by one.
Football authorities have warned against the chant and issued stadium bans in past tournaments. Despite that, the melody still drifts through fan zones on occasion.
Its presence reminds viewers that terrace culture includes both celebration and provocation, sometimes in the same afternoon.
England Till I Die stays simple
This loyalty chant repeats a single line with call-and-response energy. No melody required beyond volume and commitment.
Fans use it early in matches when nerves run high and again late when results hang in the balance. The repetition makes it easy for newcomers to learn mid-game.
Its endurance proves that basic statements of allegiance can outlast flashier productions.
Rule Britannia sets the pre-match tone
Before kickoff, supporters sometimes launch into the traditional naval song Rule Britannia. The moment feels more formal than most terrace fare.
The chant bridges older patriotic repertoire with modern tournament rituals. It surfaces mainly at Wembley or major neutral venues.
Listeners who recognize the melody from other British events will spot the football adaptation quickly.
Harry Kane versions keep it current
Striker Harry Kane has inspired several short-form chants that update with each tournament cycle. Supporters slot his name into existing frameworks rather than inventing new melodies.
The approach mirrors how American sports fans recycle fight songs for star players. Quick adaptation keeps the section engaged without rehearsal.
Expect fresh Kane lines whenever the next England game features him in the lineup.
Universal lines travel everywhere
Chants such as “You’re Not Singing Anymore” and “Can We Play You Every Week?” belong to global terrace language. England fans deploy them against any quiet or overmatched opponent.
The phrases require no national loyalty, only timing and volume. They appear in fan footage from every confederation.
Learning these portable lines gives casual viewers an entry point that works at any England game regardless of the fixture.
Keep the chorus rolling forward
Mastering a handful of these chants turns passive viewing into active participation. The next England game will test which songs survive and which new adaptations surface.

