A Song Born From Pessimism
The story begins in 1996. England was hosting the UEFA European Championship for the first time since winning the World Cup 30 years earlier. The Football Association wanted a song to capture the national mood and commissioned Ian Broudie, frontman of
the Britpop band The Lightning Seeds. Broudie wrote the music but, wanting to avoid a typical jingoistic anthem, he approached comedians David Baddiel and Frank Skinner to write the lyrics. Known for their TV show 'Fantasy Football League', they decided to write a song that reflected the genuine, often miserable, experience of being an England fan. The result was "Three Lions (Football's Coming Home)". Far from a declaration of victory, it was a song built on a foundation of failure. The opening lyric, "Thirty years of hurt," set a tone of long-suffering disappointment, not impending glory.
The Real Meaning of 'Coming Home'
The famous chorus, “It’s coming home,” was never originally about winning a trophy. Its primary meaning was literal: the sport of football, and a major tournament, was physically coming home to England, where the modern game was first codified. The song's verses are a catalogue of near-misses and nostalgic pain, referencing iconic moments of failure and fleeting glory like “that tackle by Moore” and “when Lineker scored.” The lyrics are self-deprecating, acknowledging the “jokes” and “sneers” that have followed the team for decades. As co-creator David Baddiel has explained, the song is fundamentally about the magical thinking required to be a fan—logically expecting to lose based on past experience, but still daring to dream that this time might be different.
How Hope Was Mistaken for Arrogance
As the years went by, the song’s context began to fade, especially for a global audience. The catchy, endlessly chantable chorus became detached from its melancholic verses. During England's surprising run in the 2018 World Cup, the phrase “It’s Coming Home” went viral. To many non-English fans and media outlets, who only heard the optimistic refrain, the chant was interpreted as a statement of arrogance and entitlement—a belief that England has a divine right to win. This perception was amplified on social media, turning the song into a polarising meme. For rivals, it became an easy way to mock England after yet another tournament exit. For the fans themselves, the misunderstanding only made singing it more defiant and, in a very English way, more ironic.
The Creators Defend Their Anthem
Baddiel and Skinner have spent years patiently explaining that their song is the opposite of arrogant. They have repeatedly stated that it is a song about vulnerability, doubt, and the emotional rollercoaster of supporting a team that so often falls short. They point to the lyrics that openly discuss past defeats and the feeling of being let down. Broudie, Baddiel, and Skinner never intended to create a boastful anthem; they wanted to write something truthful about the nature of fandom, which, for most teams, is filled with more loss than victory. Their defence highlights the cultural gap in humour; the self-deprecation at the heart of the song is often lost in translation, mistaken for the very triumphalism it was written to counter.
An Enduring Anthem for a New Era
Despite the controversy, or perhaps because of it, "Three Lions" remains the definitive anthem for England fans. It has been re-released for multiple tournaments and continues to chart every two years. The song has found new life with younger generations and the success of the women's team, the Lionesses, whose victory at Euro 2022 finally brought a major trophy home. In an era of social media, the chant functions as a shared experience, a unifying call to arms that binds fans together through shared memory and hope. As England competes in the 2026 World Cup, the sound of 'It's Coming Home' once again echoes, carrying with it decades of history—not as a promise of victory, but as a testament to the undying, and often irrational, spirit of the football fan.














