logo
England hold their nerve to beat Spain on penalties to win Euro 2025

England hold their nerve to beat Spain on penalties to win Euro 2025

Irish Times7 days ago
Euro 2025 Final: England 1 [Russo 57] Spain 1 [Caldentey 25] aet – England won 3-1 on pens
Chloe Kelly was the hero again for
England
, converting the winner in the penalty shootout and providing the assist for the equaliser, as they beat Spain in the Euro 2025 final after a battling defence of their European title across 120 minutes.
Mariona Caldentey's header had given the dominant world champions the lead, but it was cancelled out by her Arsenal team-mate Alessia Russo, England's ability to come from behind in each of their knockout games a testament to the character of a side that just never gives in.
You can't buy what Spain have. There is no quick fix. The Spaniards have a style of play that is so embedded in them from such an early age that it is as natural as breathing – when the support around them matches that, they will be unstoppable.
England have the resource though, the support of their federation and the hearts of the nation. Critically, they also have the best manager in world football in Sarina Wiegman, who claimed her third consecutive European title, and a spirit that just cannot be shaken.
READ MORE
There was one change to the starting XI for England, with Jess Carter returned at centre-back in place of Esme Morgan, Wiegman saying before kickoff that they needed the Gotham FC defender for Spain. 'Spain will show some different things to what Italy showed. Tonight we need Jess in the starting line-up,' she said, adding that Carter 'kept showing up' in training. Lauren James also retained her place in the team despite having been forced off with an ankle injury against Italy.
The more notable shift though was the switch of James and Lauren Hemp to opposite wings. England had learned from Germany's impressive defensive display in the semi-finals against Spain, Hemp dropping back on the outside of Lucy Bronze with the team falling into a back five as Jule Brand had done so effectively, the winger also possessing the pace to get back and cover for the battling right-back when she launched forward.
It was a game of chess and Wiegman moved her pieces across the board, having sat down and studied the playbook. England started brightly, Alessia Russo forced a save from Cata Coll from a tight angle, with James a little slow to the rebound perhaps a sign of where she was at, while Coll's shin spared Olga Carmona's blushes after Hemp had beaten her to the ball out from the goalkeeper and attempted to squeeze the ball in at the near post.
Those bright moments were few and far between, Montse Tome's side predictably dominated possession wise and it was only a matter of time before they manoeuvred their way through. Caldentey had missed the target from the edge of the area moments before and she made no mistake at the second time of asking, Aitana Bonmatí escaped Georgia Stanway on the right, found a threatening Athenea del Castillo who played to Ona Batlle and the full-back's cross was headed in by the Arsenal forward.
England's forward Alessia Russo celebrates after scoring their first goal. Photograph: Sebastien Bozon/Getty
Shortly after it was determined that the worthwhile gamble on James's fitness hadn't paid off. The Chelsea forward clearly struggled at St Jakob-Park and in the 40th minute she was off, following a small period with the medical team as Chloe Kelly stripped to her kit.
Impact sub turned emergency sub, the question was whether Kelly could be as effective when England are chasing a game late on as she has been throughout the tournament. The answer? An emphatic yes. The equalising goal was front to back football, Hannah Hampton fed Walsh, who had all the time in the world and sent Stanway coasting towards the box, the Bayern Munich player sent it wide to Kelly and the Arsenal forward pinged it in for club team-mate Russo to head in.
Russo's time was up less than 15 minutes later, the forward replaced by England's knockout hero Michelle Agyemang, the 19-year-old entrusted with almost 20 minutes of regular time. Meanwhile, Spain withdrew captain Alexia Putellas, much to the Barcelona midfielder's visible frustration, in favour of the versatile forward Claudia Pina. She tested Hampton within minutes, the Chelsea keeper tipping her powerful strike over the bar.
Extra time loomed, this final heading the same way as the Euro 2022 showpiece at Wembley. There was a worrying moment in the first 15 minutes of the extra period, with Bronze down seemingly clutching her knee. Niamh Charles was readied but sat back down, warrior Bronze refusing to bow out of the final and her 140th cap without a fight – the switch coming at the break.
Spain should have taken the lead through Salma Paralluelo, the forward attempting to back-heel in Batlle's cross instead of just poking it over the line.
Beth Mead stepped up first in the shoot but slipped as she converted, VAR ruling that she had touched the ball twice and her retaken effort was saved by Coll. The Spaniard also saved from Leah Williamson. It didn't matter though. Patri Guijarro, Alex Greenwood and Charles all scored but Hampton saved from Caldentey and Bonmati and Paraluello put her effort wide, before Kelly stepped up to rewrite her name in history. – Guardian
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tyrone go one better to beat Laois to intermediate title
Tyrone go one better to beat Laois to intermediate title

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Tyrone go one better to beat Laois to intermediate title

All-Ireland women's intermediate football final: Tyrone 2-16 Laois 1-13 Goals in either half from Aoife Horisk and Katie Rose Muldoon proved pivotal as Tyrone edged out Laois by six points to capture the TG4 All-Ireland intermediate title at Croke Park. Having succumbed narrowly to Leitrim in last year's decider, it was Tyrone's turn to celebrate as they finished strongly to secure the Mary Quinn Memorial Cup for the first time since their sole success in 2018. Tyrone enjoyed a 1-7 to 1-5 interval lead, with Horisk's 27th-minute goal cancelling out an equally superb finish from Laois' Shifra Havill four minutes earlier. There was little to separate the teams throughout a nervy second half, but the decisive moment arrived in the 54th minute as Muldoon left Laois goalkeeper Eimear Barry helpless with a shot from close range. READ MORE It was Tyrone who seized the early initiative through points from Sorcha Gormley and Cara McCrossan before Laois struck back to level parity by the fourth minute, courtesy of scores from Jane Moore and Emma Lawlor. Lawlor edged Laois in front in the seventh minute, immediately after Faye McEvoy produced a superb goal line clearance at the opposite end, with parity restored soon after through a Niamh O'Neill free. The sides remained level as Emily Lacey and Aoife Horisk traded points by the end of the first quarter before the Ulster side re-established their two-point advantage thanks to Sláine McCarroll and the lively Gormley. Aoife Horisk scores a goal Tyrone. Photograph: Shauna Clinton/Sportsfile However, their inaccuracy up front undermined their general control as O'Neill placed her shot too close to Eimear Barry in the 22nd minute and that profligacy was punished in an instant as Lawlor worked well in releasing Havill for an emphatic finish to the roof of Amelia Coyle's net. Frustration continued for Tyrone in the 26th minute as Gormley was denied from the penalty spot following a foul on Horisk, but the latter made no mistake a minute later as she drilled home from 10 yards to edge her side two points clear by half-time. Laois wasted little time in getting back on level terms as Mo Nerney and Fiona Dooley both scored within three minutes of the restart. Crucially, Laois were unable to get in front as O'Neill and Horisk responded for Tyrone, with the latter becoming increasingly influential as the contest evolved. The same could be said for Nerney, who added two points in quick succession to bring Laois to within a point by the 43rd minute. However, their momentum stalled 10 minutes from full-time as Ciara Crowley was yellow-carded and O'Neill's subsequent free helped double Tyrone's advantage. The contest was effectively settled as Muldoon followed up well to net after fellow substitute Emer McCanny had been denied and they pulled away by the final whistle thanks to insurance points from O'Neill, Gormley and captain Aoibhinn McHugh. TYRONE: A Coyle; J Lyons, G McKenna, E Quinn; C Campbell, M Mallon, C Canavan; A McHugh (capt, 0-1), S McCarroll (0-1); E McNamee, S Gormley (0-3), A Horisk (1-3, 0-1f); N O'Neill (0-7, 3f), C McCrossan (0-1), M Corrigan. Subs: E McCanny for McCrossan (36 mins), K Muldoon (1-0) for McNamee (45), A McGahan for Campbell (53), C McCaffrey for O'Neill (58), J Barrett for Horisk (59). LAOIS: E Barry; S Farrelly, C Dunne, F McEvoy; A Gorman, A Moore, A Moran (capt); F Dooley (0-1), J Moore (0-1); S Havill (1-0), E Galvin, C Crowley; E Lacey (0-1), E Lawlor (0-5, 3f), M Nerney (0-5, 3f). Subs: L Kearney for Gorman (39 mins), M Cotter for McEvoy (45), K Donoghue for Lacey (47), A Fitzpatrick for Havill (56). Referee: S Curley (Galway).

Ex-Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey set to join Villarreal two days before he is due to appear in court over rape charge
Ex-Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey set to join Villarreal two days before he is due to appear in court over rape charge

The Irish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Ex-Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey set to join Villarreal two days before he is due to appear in court over rape charge

SHOCK MOVE Ex-Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey set to join Villarreal two days before he is due to appear in court over rape charge FORMER Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey is set to join Villarreal, reports claim. The Ghana midfielder ended his five-year spell at the Emirates at the end of the 2024-25 season. 1 Thomas Partey is set to join Villarreal Credit: Getty Two days later leaving Arsenal, Partey was charged with five counts of rape against two women. He is also accused of sexually assaulting a third woman. Partey is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates Court on Tuesday, August 5. But now Partey is set to join Villarreal, according to The Athletic. THIS IS A DEVELOPING STORY.. The Sun is your go to destination for the best football, boxing and MMA news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures and must-see us on Facebook at and follow us from our main Twitter account at @TheSunFootball.

Louth defeat Antrim to claim Wee County's record fourth junior title
Louth defeat Antrim to claim Wee County's record fourth junior title

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Louth defeat Antrim to claim Wee County's record fourth junior title

All-Ireland women's junior football final: Louth 0-13 Antrim 1-8 Kate Flood kicked four points at Croke Park as Louth held off a stubborn challenge from Antrim to claim a record fourth All-Ireland junior football championship title. It was the Ulster side who initially hit the ground running, with captain Bronagh Devlin superbly drilling a third-minute penalty into the roof of the Louth net after Theresa Mellon was adjudged to have been fouled inside the square off a Maria O'Neill free that dropped short. Mellon followed up with a fine point for the Saffrons and even though Louth, who lost to Fermanagh in last year's junior decider, eventually opened their account through Aoife Russell, Omolara Dahunsi reinforced Antrim's early authority by splitting the posts at the opposite end. Dahunsi also found the range in response to back-to-back points from Russell and Ceire Nolan, but during the temporary absence of Bronagh Devlin for a yellow card offence, the Wee County cut their deficit to the bare minimum with impressive contributions from Flood and Shannen McLaughlin. READ MORE Bronagh Devlin celebrates scoring a goal for Antrim from a penalty. Photograph: Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile Although Antrim sharpshooter O'Neill was on target not long after Devlin's return, unanswered points by captain Áine Breen and the ever-dependable Flood ensured Louth brought a 0-8 to 1-4 cushion into the interval. Antrim were still very much in the reckoning, however, and were back on level terms with a second point from O'Neill three minutes into the second period, but Eimear Byrne was on hand to restore Louth's slender lead on 38 minutes. An outstanding score from the increasingly-influential Flood left Louth two points to the good moving into the final-quarter and they were a step closer to another junior crown when Breen and substitute Mia Duffy added points. Lucy White subsequently increased Louth's cushion and even though a late surge from Antrim produced three points on the bounce from Ana Mulholland, Mellon and O'Neill's goal-bound effort that was deflected over the bar, the Wee County ultimately prevailed. LOUTH: R Lambe Fagan; R Beirth, E Hand, E Murray; H Lambe Sally, S McLaughlin (0-1), L Byrne; A Breen (capt, 0-2), A Halligan; L White (0-1), E Byrne (0-1), S Matthews; A Russell (0-2), K Flood (0-4), C Nolan (0-1). Subs: M Duffy (0-1) for Matthews (42 mins), L Collins for Russell (56), G McCrave for Lambe Sally, Z Sweeney for White (both 59). ANTRIM: A Devlin; N McIntosh, M Blaney, M Mulholland; S O'Neill, C Brown, C McKenna; A Mulholland (0-1), A Tubridy; T Mellon (0-2), M O'Neill (0-3, 1f), Aoife Kelly; B Devlin (capt, 1-0 pen), O Dahunsi (0-2), L Agnew. Subs: A Turley for Tubridy, A Monaghan for Kelly (both 39 mins), B Nic Cathail for Agnew (47), N Jones for B Devlin, Aine Kelly for McKenna (both 56). Referee: K Corcoran (Mayo).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store