In Slovakia, the England U19s beat Israel in extra time to win the European Championship for the second year in a row.
The Young Lions fell behind after a poor first half, but roared back in the second half.
It was Ian Foster's side that won the trophy after they scored two goals in extra time.
England have won two of the previous four tournaments after last tasting success in the last one.
Heading into the final, England had already beaten Israel in the group stage and were heavy favorites.
It was their opponents who were in front at the half and could have been further in front.
It was the 18-year-old who put his team ahead with a great finish five minutes before the interval after the Young Lions struggled to deal with Israel.
The teenager collected a pass inside the box and despite being surrounded by white shirts produced an exquisite piece of skill to lose his marker before firing a strike past Cox.
Tomer Tzarfati fumbled a cross to allow a Spurs player to shoot, but he redeemed himself to keep it out.
Israel U19 head coach Ofir Haim kept the same starting XI that defeated France in the semifinals.
Oscar and Ahmad Ebraheim started in the No 10 position.
Ian Foster made three changes to the team that beat Italy.
The starting line-up was changed with the addition of Alex Scott and Jamie Bynoe-Gittens.
After Foster's words at the break, England got themselves back into the game.
Jamie Bynoe-Gittens forced a corner when his shot was turned back by Tzarfati. The ball was headed back across goal by Jarell Quansah, and he turned the ball into the net.
Chukwuemeka could have won it in normal time but his long-range effort bounced back off the post with Tzarfati beaten, while Israel had their chances as well.
As the game went into extra-time and the final looked to be heading for a penalty shootout, it was England who looked better and stronger.
Chukwuemeka put England ahead before Ramsey put the result beyond doubt when he tapped in following some good work from Liam Delap.