Boss Aidy Boothroyd vowed he will not walk away after England Under-21s' early exit from Euro 2019.

The Young Lions lost 4-2 to Romania in Cesena to crash out of the tournament following a second straight Group C defeat.

The former Watford manager's selection backfired after he named Phil Foden as a substitute for a game England had to win, only for them to ship four goals in the final 14 minutes.

George Puscas' 76th-minute penalty opened the scoring while Ianis Hagi's goal and Florinel Coman's brace won it.

Demarai Gray and Tammy Abraham twice drew England level briefly during a breakneck finish but it was not enough and France's 1-0 win over Croatia confirmed England's elimination.

Boothroyd only signed a contract extension, taking him through until Euro 2021, last month and insisted he would not quit.

"I'm not going anywhere. They will have to carry me out," he said. "It is important that we have a proper debrief about it and not just make a throwaway comment.

"It is important to pick the bones out of this. If we are going to win a tournament like this it is clear there are things we have to improve on.

"Some things have gone really well and there are some things we have to improve on.

"As you can imagine, I am absolutely gutted. Two years of preparation in qualifying and we have gone out in a way that is very, very disappointing.

"Even when they came back into it and scored their first goal, I still fancied us. It is very, very disappointing as we had been working towards this."

Boothroyd's decision not to start Manchester City's Foden - who scored a fabulous solo goal in Tuesday's 2-1 defeat to France - was controversial and the midfielder only came on after 57 minutes following Ryan Sessegnon's hamstring injury.

But Boothroyd said he had to manage the 19-year-old.

He said: "There is a fine line to tread. I have got to look after Phil. We all thought it would be right for him to come in as the game wore on and weave his magic.

"We want to keep him as fit as we can. We don't want him to break because he is a terrific player.

"There is no agreement with Manchester City. We follow him on a regular basis, we know where he is training and playing along with everything else."

Jonjoe Kenny brought down Coman to concede Puscas' penalty opener but Gray fired in off the post to make it 1-1 with 11 minutes remaining.

Hagi restored Romania's lead with a low drive with five minutes left before Abraham levelled again.

Goalkeeper Dean Henderson then let Coman's 89th-minute shot through his hands to allow Romania to make it 3-2 before the midfielder's fine 20-yard half-volley sealed victory.

And Manchester United goalkeeper Henderson insisted England are still a better side, despite defeat.

He said: "Are we better than Romania? Yes. Are we better than France? Yes I think we are at this age group, 100 per cent.

"Looking at the squad and players, I still believe we are the best team in the tournament.

"It is a shame because we said in the team huddle that for some of us it will be the last opportunity to play in a major tournament for England.

"With the group of players we have really under-achieved. We wanted to come here and win this tournament.

"Whoever goes on to win the tournament realistically we know we can beat as well. It is a shame. We have let ourselves down. We have let the country down."