THEY think it’s all over. It is now.

Time, then, to reflect on a glorious Euro 2016.

Wales’ fairytale run. Iceland’s heroics. England’s failures.

Pessimistic Dean Saunders’ astronomical short-stay car park bill at Birmingham airport.

And the funniest penalty miss of all time by Italy’s Simone Zaza, who trotted up to the spot straight from a Harry Enfield 1930s football sketch and blazed the ball into row Z.

But who were the real winners in France? The BBC or ITV?

It’s a close call but I’m going with ITV. They had the worst commentary pairing in Clive Tyldesley and Glenn “at the end of the day” Hoddle and a grey host in Mark Pougatch.

But their rooftop studio with the Notre Dame backdrop and the brilliant Slaven Bilic just edged it.

Speaking of which, here are my Euro 2016 awards.

Best pundit: Bilic. Until he selfishly went back to his day job as West Ham manager midway through the tournament, the Croatian was sensational, most memorably climbing on ITV’s glass table when his star player Dimitri Payet, who he “loaned to France”, scored in injury time.

Highly commended: The BBC’s Gianluca Vialli: “Italy could be the new Leicester.”

Sticking his neck on the line award: Jermaine Jenas: “I feel Germany are going to have a good tournament.” (World champions Germany, you say?) Lost in translation award: Lothar Matthaus: “The Czech team were very good in the qualification and they qualificate first.”

Runner-up: Jonathan Pearce: “Uefa haven’t made these laws any easier to interpretate.”

Commentator’s curse: Tony Pulis: “The important thing now is that Turkey get through to half-time without conceding again.”

Tyldesley: “Fabregas, hooked in towards Nolito. And Spain lead 2-0.”

Best Carry On moment: Guy Mowbray to Robbie Savage and Gerry Armstrong: “You were both straining next to me, trying to put your nuts on it.”

Most obsessed with Arsenal: Lee Dixon on Ivan Perisic: “He’s the Croatian Ray Parlour.”

Most inappropriate subtitles: A Spanish voice on BBC1’s Spain v Italy build-up: “We went 44 years without a major trophy.”

On-screen: “We went 44 years without HIV.”

Best Penalty shootout analysis: Dixon: “Do you put your best player first or last?”

Pougatch: “Or your best in the middle?”

Dixon: “Or second? Or fourth?”

Forgetting he’s on the radio award: Five Live’s Conor McNamara as Ireland beat Italy: “Look at those scenes!”

And finally, services to commentary: A tie between all these… Hoddle: “We have to football our way in now in a footballing way because they’ve got all footballers out there at the moment.”

Andy Townsend on Poland’s penalty shootout miss: “He had a little look at the goalkeeper but if they guess right, they go the right way.”

Hoddle: “Players have to remember what they need to remember out on that pitch.”

Martin Keown on Gareth Bale: “I think he’s the best player if not THE best player in Europe.’ Hoddle: “If it’s inside the post, it goes in.”

Iain Dowie: “It’s half of one, six of the other.”

Hoddle: “The referee has got to referee it as he sees it.”

And Mark Lawrenson: “Match winners win you matches.”

Which is why they pay them the big bucks.

Spudulikes…

Chris Evans saving Top Gear by quitting.

Sky1 scheduling My Chimp and Me to clash with Celebrity MasterChef’s John Torode and pet Gregg Wallace.

Vernon Kay’s All Star Family Fortunes question: “Name something a man might have that he thinks will make him attractive to women.” (A mobile phone and unlimited texts?) Love Island’s narrator: “Adam and Adam are having a chat on the sunbeds. For viewers tuning in for the first time, Adam’s the one on the left. And the right.”

And The Wright Stuff guest Labour MP Chris Bryant revealing C5’s pre-briefing notes for its debate on grammar: “It said ‘Whats the best way to correct children’ with no question mark at the end and no apostrophe on the ‘whats’.” Dimwit’s.

Spuduhates…

Corrie dragging out the Callum murder dull-fest almost as long as EastEnders’ Who Killed Lucy?

Big Brother defeating its entire point with housemates’ loved ones staying overnight. Twice.

“Eternal child” Gemma Collins blaming everyone but herself for becoming a horrendous, emotionless, humility-free human being, on C5’s In Therapy.

C4’s Life Stripped Bare turning what could have been an interesting experiment into a cheap giggle at six naked people running through the streets.

And Holly Willoughby’s psychic bananas incorrectly predicting Wales would beat Portugal in the Euro 2016 semi-finals, on This Morning. I mean, it’s almost as if it’s not scientific at all, isn’t it?