Best XI of Euro 2016: who has impressed in France this summer?
The European Championships are coming to a close, it's time to pick your best team.
And so we're down to the final two. Hosts France and Portugal will face each other at the Stade de France on Sunday to be crowned champions of Euro 2016.
There has been drama and great goals aplenty, but who has impressed the most over the past month or so?
Antoine Griezmann is the championships' top goalscorer heading into the final game with six goals from six games, so does he make our best XI?
Agree with this selection? Who would you have picked?
Billed as the best goalkeeper in the game, Manuel Neuer has underlined why he is worthy of that title at these championships. The German shot-stopper was in typically astonishing form over the tournament, keeping a clean sheet all the way up to the quarter-finals.
Neuer edged out Gigi Buffon in the penalty shootout that saw Germany beat Italy, but he was impressive throughout the competition, making a number of saves that a lesser goalkeeper wouldn't have been able to. He was at fault for France's second goal in the semi-final, but the game had already been lost by then.
Questions were asked of France's full-back positions before the start of the tournament, with Patrice Evra now in the twilight of his career. But the Juventus man has highlighted his quality over the course of the competition.
He endured a difficult start, giving away a penalty kick on opening night against Romania, but Evra has generally been one of France's best performers at Euro 2016. He remains one of the best left-backs in the game.
So maligned is Pepe for his feigning and flailing, it's easy to forget that he is in actual fact a very good centre-back. He has reminded his critics of that for Portugal at Euro 2016, forming the bedrock of their entire team.
His best performance to date came in the quarter-final win over Poland, when Robert Lewandowski and Arkadiusz Milik were largely kept at arm's length by the Real Madrid defender. Portugal managed to get by without Pepe in the semi-final, but his return is crucial to their chances of beating France on Sunday.
The Juventus man is one of the most in-demand players in European football this summer, and on the basis of his performances for Italy at Euro 2016 it's easy to see why. Leonardo Bonucci reached top form for the Azzurri in France and deserves a large share of the credit for how they performed above expectations.
His assist for Emmanuel Giaccherini for Italy's opener against Belgium was one of the passes of the tournament, picking out his teammate with a raking ball over the opposition defence. Bonucci is arguably the best ball-playing defender in football right now. Euro 2016 has boosted his stock even further.
The Croatia veteran lost his father during the tournament, flying back home before returning for the last 16 clash against Portugal. Somehow Darijo Srna didn't allow that to affect his performances in France, with the Shakhtar Donetsk man demonstrating just why he is still so highly rated.
He provided Croatia with a constant outlet down the right wing and was especially impressive in the win over defending European champions Spain. Srna seems to keep his best performances for his national team, and that was certainly the case for Croatia this summer.
The Wales midfielder was always likely to catch the eye at Euro 2016 with his peroxide blonde hairdo (perhaps in tribute to Romania's team of 1998?), but Aaron Ramsey has also glimmered by virtue of his performances on the pitch.
Countless players could have been picked out as stars of Wales' astonishing run all the way to the semi-finals, but Ramsey shone brighter than most. He was missed desperately against Portugal, sitting out through suspension. That absence highlighted just how good he has been for Chris Coleman's side.
Another player who seems to keep his best performances for Croatia, Ivan Perisic was revelation as his side topped their group and stormed into the last 16 of Euro 2016. His winning goal against Spain, driven in from a tight angle after a surging run down the left wing, demonstrated everything bombastic about his game.
Perisic hasn't always lived up to his potential at club level, but for this national team he is consistently one of their best players. Croatia had an extra dimension with the Inter Milan winger marauding down the left flank.
Antoine Griezmann has become the man to define France's Euro 2016 charge in the latter rounds, but in the group stage Les Blues found its brightest spark in Dimitri Payet. The West Ham man twice came to the rescue of his national team, scoring a stunning stoppage-time winner on opening night at the Stade de France.
It wasn't just his goals that caught the eye, though. Payet's overall performances over the course of the tournament have been impressive, giving France creativity and imagination in and around the box. He has become central to Didier Deschamps' side over the past month.
As far as pressure goes, Gareth Bale has played with more heaped on his shoulders than most at Euro 2016. The world's most expensive player was expected to carry Wales this summer, and to a certain extent he did. He found the net three times in six outings, including two free kicks from range in his first two games.
He faded as the competition progressed, with his Welsh teammates stepping up for the quarter-final against Belgium, but Bale will still go down as one of the stars of Euro 2016 for his performances in the group stage. He lived up to his billing and handled the expectation.
Hungary, along with Iceland, were probably the biggest surprise package at these championships, making the last 16 without losing a game. And Balazs Dzsudzsak was their best player, showing why not so long ago he was rated so highly. He rediscovered whatever it was that made him so good for PSV Eindhoven all those years ago.
His double in the whirlwind 3-3 draw against Portugal in Hungary's final group game was the peak of Dzsudzsak's tournament, but he also impressive against both Austria and Iceland. Not much was expected of Hungary this summer, but they - and Balazs Dzsudzsak - exceeded all prior predictions.
Billed as the posterboy of these European Cha mpionships for the host nation, Griezmann took some time to come to the boil for France. He was even dropped by Deschamps for the second group game against Albania.
But he now has six goals in six games and has been crucial in leading his team all the way to the final. Against world champions Germany he demonstrated how he can thrive against even the best teams. If France go all the way Griezmann will have been their Zinedine Zidane figure.