Arsenal midfielder Ramsey will captain his country in their European Championship qualifier against England, thus fulfilling a lifelong ambition.

But the 20-year-old will not be satisfied with the honour of wearing the armband - he is desperate to become the first man to captain Wales to victory at Wembley for 34 years.

"This is what every young boy dreams about and to captain my country in this situation is going to be a big honour for me," said Ramsey.

"It's a derby game and everyone's looking forward to it.

"We have to control our emotions a bit.

"But I think we all know what our responsibilities are on the pitch and hopefully we can start the game a lot better than we did last time against them."

Indeed, Ramsey endured a nightmare debut as Wales captain in March when England cruised to victory in the reverse Group G fixture at the Millennium Stadium.

Wales never recovered from falling 2-0 behind inside the opening 15 minutes and Ramsey said: "We didn't start too cleverly.

"I think we've come on since then and we showed that in the last game in the way that we played and the way that we attacked."

That game, Friday night's clash with the previously-unbeaten Montenegro, saw Wales finally get off the mark in what has otherwise been another disappointing qualifying campaign.

"We have to start producing against the bigger opposition and we did that on Friday," said Ramsey, who scored the decisive goal at Cardiff City Stadium.

"This will be another massive game for us and hopefully we can take in what we learned from the last game and believe that we can get something out of the game."

Ramsey admitted tomorrow's match was one of the biggest of his fledgling career.

"It's up there," he said, admitting a shock win would be "massive" for a country where previous victories over England are the stuff of folklore.

"That's what we want to do now, get a few positive results on the bounce and hopefully now we can take our confidence and belief from the last game and get a good result out of the game.

"It'll be massive for us and what we want to achieve."

Ramsey has endured mixed fortunes at Wembley, losing the 2008 FA Cup final with Cardiff after winning the semi-final against Barnsley.

And he knows he faces an even tougher task tomorrow.

He said: "There's no question that they have great players playing for them, players who are in great form at the moment, and we're going to have to be alert to that and switch on and all do our jobs correctly."

Ramsey was part of the side that failed to stop England stars Wayne Rooney and Ashley Young running riot in Manchester United's 8-2 victory over Arsenal eight days ago.

"They're in great form at the moment and they confidence is sky high after the last few results that they've had," he said.

Wales boast their own superstars in the likes of Ramsey and Gareth Bale but they will be missing another tomorrow as new Liverpool striker Craig Bellamy serves a suspension.

Ramsey said: "He'll be a miss for us but we have players who are more than capable of filling in and playing their part in the game, and I'm sure they'll do that."