In a return to the talkSPORT studio on Thursday, Dyer said: "I just mentioned about the families and friction, but that wasn’t between each other. I went to the final and I had the honour of being with the families and it’s a very, very emotional thing watching England anyway.
"But when you've got a connection to the squad, like I have with Jarrod and you’re sitting with Trent Alexander-Arnold’s mum and Kyle Walker’s mum and dad, it’s a thing. And it’s just parents watching their kids, they’re all very working-class people, I love them all, they’re right up my street. And there’s been this clickbaity thing where I’m saying, ‘There’s friction between them’, like I’m some little grass.
"But that’s not the case. The friction is that all of those parents and brothers and sisters and children want to see their boy playing football and they don't all get that opportunity, unfortunately. We know Gareth stuck to the same side but they're all living in hope and they've got the shirts on with the names on the back and they just want to see their boy get a go at it.
"I was looking at [Dean] Henderson, and you know he's never gonna get shot as a keeper unless something happens to Jordan Pickford, but all of his family are there and they’d love him to get a shot. So I suppose they’re sort of praying that Pickford does get injured just so he gets on.
"That's a weird thing, and that's what I meant with the tension side of it - it’s not like at each other's throats. There's a lot of love there."