In a tactical sense, the final is rarely the most fascinating game of a major international tournament. It's usually a tight and tense, but not particularly tactical, contest between two sides playing cautiously, waiting for the opposition to make a mistake rather than prompting it through clever strategy.
In all probability, we've probably seen the most interesting tactical battles from Euro 2016: Italy's 2-0 second-round win over Spain, their subsequent 1-1 draw with Germany at the quarterfinal stage, and Germany's 2-0 defeat to France on Thursday.
Those three matches will be as good as this tournament gets.