Leonardo Bonucci claimed the booing of the Italian national anthem by England fans helped to inspire the Azzurri to Euro 2020 glory.
Italy beat England 3-2 on penalties in Sunday's final at Wembley after the match had finished 1-1 following extra time.
Bonucci, who equalised to cancel out Luke Shaw's opener – the quickest goal ever scored in a European Championship final – and then converted his spot-kick in the shoot-out, was a rock at the heart of Italy's defence throughout the tournament.
No defender made more interceptions at Euro 2020 than Bonucci, whose tally of 12 tied him with Ukraine's Mykola Matvienko.
Several incidents occurred outside the ground on Sunday, with groups of supporters without tickets managing to force entry into Wembley.
With an already tense atmosphere perhaps not aided by these scenes, boos rang around the stadium during the Italian anthem.
Bonucci, though, said the jeers only helped lift Roberto Mancini's team and, in particular, his defensive partner Giorgio Chiellini.
"They whistled the anthem. They thought they had brought it home," Bonucci told Radio RAI 1.
"This, to me and the old man there [Chiellini] did nothing but increase our motivation. It was a personal satisfaction for me and Giorgio, who have not always been getting the praise we deserved."
Italy paraded the trophy in an open-top bus tour on Monday and Bonucci dedicated the win to those who had lost loved ones during the coronavirus pandemic, with Italy one of the worst-hit nations in Europe.
He also paid tribute to Azzurri legend Paolo Rossi, who died from lung cancer in December last year.
"The dedication goes to those who left us in this year and a half," he added.
"Among so many champions, as done for Davide Astori, I want to make a special dedication to Paolo Rossi, a great man.
"The cup is for him and the Italians who have suffered."
Gianluigi Donnarumma ultimately proved Italy's hero in London, as he kept out Bukayo Saka's penalty to seal victory.
Had the England youngster scored, the shoot-out would have gone to sudden death, with Jordan Pickford having previously denied Jorginho.
However, the midfielder joked that his miss was a deliberate ploy to enable Donnarumma – named UEFA's Player of the Tournament – would get the glory.
"It was all planned. I knew that Donnarumma would have saved it," Jorginho quipped in an interview with SportTV.
"I always give everything I have for the team, but unfortunately, sometimes it's not enough.
"I ended up missing the penalty, and in that moment the world collapsed around me, because I wanted to hand Italy the win. Luckily, we have this phenomenon in goal that saved me."
The 719 minutes racked up by Donnarumma was the most by any player at Euro 2020; he missed only the closing stages of Italy's win against Wales in the group stage and also helped the Azzurri to a penalty shoot-out win over Spain in the semi-finals.
In fact, of the five shoot-outs he has been involved in so far in his career for club and country, Donnarumma – who is set to join Paris Saint-Germain – has always finished on the winning side.