
Burgess urging consistency as Lightning aim for Grand Final
Consistency can be hard to come by but it is exactly what Vic Burgess wants her Loughborough Lightning side to produce when they face Manchester Thunder in the Netball Super League Preliminary Final on Sunday.
Lightning narrowly lost 50-49 to London Pulse in the major semi-final, with the reigning champions pushing the regular season table toppers all the way at the Copper Box.
It will give Burgess plenty of cause for encouragement heading into Sunday's winner-takes-all contest, following a season that has been chequered by some surprise defeats.
'You learn a lot by losing but it also gives the players that drive to show what they are capable of,' she said.
'Those games [we lost] have been against teams that we should have been beating. It gives the players drive to want to be better and perform more consistently.
'Hopefully we are in a good position this week where we can take accountability and learn how we didn't execute as consistently as we wanted to or needed to.'
Lightning lost twice to neighbours Nottingham Forest during the regular season and closed out their league campaign with defeat to Birmingham Panthers.
It look their tally of defeats up to four, following an early humbling at home to London Pulse, before Burgess' side exacted some revenge with a win at the Copper Box in May.
The one-point deficit in the major semi-final showed there was little between the sides, and the fine margins that are at play in knockout netball.
For Burgess, it comes down to one word.
'Losing to Forest the first time around was a definite shift for us into a more winning ways focus,' she reflected.
'Facing them the second time, we probably found it more frustrating in that it came with a similar result but it was about consistency across all four quarters for us.
"When we found out the Grand Final was at @TheO2 Arena, it gave us that extra bit of fight." 💗
🏟️ @Pulse_Netball captain @ZaraJaelE talks about what it means to have the opportunity to play at the 2025 Grand Final in her 'home' city on Sunday 6 July.
Buy your tickets now ⬇️ — Netball Super League (@NetballSL) June 22, 2025
'Finding that consistency across the season has been more of a challenge compared to previous years, with the new rules, the Super Shot.
'There has definitely been a journey of navigating to get consistent performances and making sure we stick to the gameplan in all of our fixtures.'
Lightning are targeting history this season and victory in the Grand Final at the O2 Arena on 6 July would make them the first team to win the Netball Super League three years in a row.
With an unprecedented hat-trick of titles within reach, Burgess hopes her side's know-how can come to the fore.
'We have got key players who can really draw on their experience from their journeys before coming here,' she said.
'They can share that with the rest of the squad and keep people focussed. We can look after each other and keep everybody focussed on the task in hand.'
Leading the way will be Nat Panagarry, who has captained Lightning to their past two Grand Final triumphs.
She is part of a core group alongside Beth Cobden, Hannah Joseph, and Ella Clark who have been present at Lightning for all three of the club's Super League titles.
'This season we have really tried to ignore the outside noise and trust our process,' said Panagarry.
'At the start of the season we knew it was going to be a bit of a gradual build; we had quite a few new players and only the midcourt stayed the same and had that familiarity.
'You are beginning to see the shooting circle click now with Sammy [Wallace-Joseph], Ella, and Berri [Neil].'
While Burgess spotlighted the defeats to Forest, Panagarry believes the early 77-51 defeat to Pulse in March was a seminal result in ensuring Lightning got back on the right track.
'We discussed at the start of the season that you have got to win when it matters,' she added.
Panagarry is part of a core squad that have been with Loughborough Lightning for several seasons. (Image: Ben Lumley)
'Sometimes those losses really give you a kick and a bit of an education. It makes you have honest chats about how you want to play and what the team looks like.
'The Pulse loss in that second game was huge, it shook a lot of us up. There are four or five of us that haven't lost by that sort of scoreline in a long, long time.
'That was definitely a reality check and what we needed. It is about peaking at the right time and winning the final when it matters.'
Victory against Thunder would book a rematch with Pulse in the first Grand Final to be held at the O2 Arena.
For Panagarry, reaching such an iconic venue would bring home just how far the sport has come since she started playing in the Netball Super League.
'There were points where I played Super League and there were 100 people in the crowd,' she recalled.
'To be going to some now that have 3-4,000 is a huge show. That doesn't go unnoticed, I appreciate every time I step out in these big moments.
'The O2 this season has been on everyone's minds, to say you have done it and been there for the first time. It is definitely a motivator for me. We would love to be there, we will give everything we can."
The NSL Grand Final will be held at The O2 on 6 July for the first time ever. Get your tickets to experience live elite netball
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The Guardian
37 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘I'm making hard decisions': Wiegman leaps Lionesses hurdles to stand on verge of glory
Sarina Wiegman sits down in the chair left for her in a ring of journalists looking remarkably relaxed, the intensity and energy seen during and in the immediate aftermath of the thrilling last-gasp quarter-final and semi-final wins over Sweden and Italy gone. This is her usual state, calm, and as England prepare for a third major tournament final, against Spain on Sunday, and Wiegman's fifth consecutive major final, it's what they need. Asked to look back on her own development during four whirlwind years in charge, she is reflective. 'As every person in this room develops, I develop too, with experiences,' she says. 'First my English has improved, so I understand a lot more, but also you learn more about the people you work with. You learn more again about yourself and how you respond to things and, while I'm always working on developing the team and developing or trying to help the development of people, I always try to keep developing myself. 'What I've really wanted to do over all these years is try to enjoy it all a little bit more. You have to be focused in this job, you have to be focused but you need to celebrate the moments that are good, it's really nice.' The midfielder Keira Walsh said the manager has been incredibly consistent during her time at the helm. 'She probably shows her excitement a little bit more after games than she used to do,' she said. 'When you see on the side she's dancing and singing and we didn't see that so much when she first came in. But, in terms of how she delivers tactics and how she manages, I think she is very, very similar. 'She's probably one of the best managers I've played for in terms of trying to make everyone feel loved. It's a really, really difficult job when you're in a tournament, and obviously people want to play, people aren't, but she really, really cares about the human side. Another thing that you notice when you play for her is how calm she is. It makes a massive difference in the 95th minute when you're losing 1-0, and you look to the side and she's very calm. That speaks volumes of her as a manager.' Wiegman smiles at the mention of her celebrations when Walsh's comments are relayed to her. 'That comes from these performances, of course. It's so intense. Of course I look very calm, but when the whistle goes and we score a goal and we change the game, when you have one minute left or 10 seconds left, of course that is emotional.' The manager has perhaps had more scrutiny in the buildup to this tournament than at any other point during her time with England. Performances have been questioned and the sudden retirements of Mary Earps and Fran Kirby plus the withdrawal of Millie Bright from selection, was cause for concern. 'In this environment you have challenges all the time,' says Wiegman. 'Before the World Cup, we had challenges with players who were injured. Of course, we prepare a lot and we know the players really well. We think of scenarios: 'Who is the first player to select? Who is the second?' You're prepared for challenges. The challenge ahead of the tournament is the same for an injured player or a player who is not available. You have to move on to what you want and who is ready to compete.' Wiegman's directness has at times rubbed players up the wrong way, particularly in the Netherlands, but she is pragmatic in her approach: if you add value to the team, you are in, if you don't or don't anymore, you are moved on. With time, wins and the authority that comes with them, players are more easily brought on board with her approach on and off the pitch. And, regardless of some former Dutch players having expressed frustrations in the past, there are many that will speak about the impact of that human approach. The former Netherlands and Ado den Haag player Rianne Schorel is one of them. Schorel has nothing but love for Wiegman, despite having lost contact with her former manager since she was forced from the game due to a head injury that took 10 years to recover from. Wiegman's attention to player welfare and her support for Schorel was hugely appreciated by the former player both at the time and still is today. The chief executive of the Football Association, Mark Bullingham, picked that characteristic out as a key reason as to why she is so special. Sign up to Moving the Goalposts No topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women's football after newsletter promotion 'Generally, her connection with everyone is so special,' he said. 'I would say that every single individual member of staff coming into this camp felt valued by her, knew exactly what their role was and how they could be part of an overall team. Really stressing that everyone's in it together is critical and I think she's really helped build a very, very strong culture, not just amongst players but the whole support team.' Often players refer to her as being like a mum. 'Yeah …', says an unsure Wiegman. 'Sometimes when people talk about 'the girls' I think: 'Do they mean my daughters or do they mean my team?' So, that's tricky, I'm kind of a caring person. I care about them but at the same time I'm the coach, I'm making hard decisions at the moment so sometimes you have to leave that caring and leave it up to them. They're grown-up women, but a mum should care.' Regardless of subjective opinions on England's run to the final, Wiegman's record speaks for itself and is an objective fact. 'She's just a very special coach and I think there are teams here that have got good players that haven't made it through to a final,' added Bullingham. 'We have got good players but so have some other countries. She's performed so well at the highest level, keeping that calm composure, keeping the connection with the players and managing the games really well.' Schorel, having gone to play college football in the US before returning to the Netherlands, remembers Wiegman talking to her about calming down, taking some intensity out of her game and not overworking. This is familiar to those that have covered England for some time because that is the same message she came into the job delivering. Leah Williamson most recently reflected on that time: 'The English are known for having a certain type of mentality – a fight about us. Historically we've maybe been quite a defensive team. I remember one of the first things she said was: 'Just slow down', she wanted us to focus on the football.' Though Wiegman and the Lionesses stand on the verge of more records and more history, the personal acclaim is something she is uncomfortable with. 'Yeah, I do find that awkward,' she says. 'Of course, I find it very special too, but I do believe that everyone plays his or her part in the success. What I'm trying to do is bring people together in the best possible way, players and staff, and the people around me are really, really good. If they perform at their highest level, then the chance of winning a game is the highest possible. That's what I'm trying to do. I think I'm pretty good at bringing people together, but without the quality, you're not going to win a tournament. 'So, you need very good players, the support staff, the environment we've created, how we can do recovery, how we can do the gym sessions with players, the pitch, which is perfect to train on. There's so many things that make us who we are now.'


The Guardian
37 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Spain may dominate final but England's name could be written on the trophy
England-Spain is the final everyone predicted before the tournament and it is a great match-up. An England victory would be an even bigger achievement than when they won Euro 2022, because this is a harder final than the one against Germany at Wembley. England should be the favourites purely because they are the holders and they have had the experience of winning it. Their belief that they can always get back into a game, no matter how indifferent they've been, is the one thing that stands out about England. Sometimes it pays to be lucky rather than good, but we shouldn't dismiss that or talk it down. Their resilience is their superpower, and although they haven't always been free-flowing, they've found ways to win, which is down to the character of the players and, most importantly, the 'finishers' from the bench demonstrating that England have a lot of quality and depth. That does not mean Sarina Wiegman should necessarily change her starting team because, as good as Michelle's Agyemang's impact has been with her three goals in four caps, it is another jump up to do it from the start. There is so much a starting centre-forward has to do other than score goals, including to set the press, and Alessia Russo knows that role inside out. I cannot see Sarina changing that, and the strategy of players coming from the bench is working, even if the time for them to make an impact is getting shorter and shorter. We sometimes say 'your name's written on something' when things go in your favour: a bounce of the ball, a referee's decision, that little rub of the green. England are scraping over the line and that may take them all the way, but this is their biggest test yet. Although Italy were good, they're not at Spain's level. Spain 2-1 England, 3 June 2025, Barcelona England were knocked out of the Nations League after going ahead through Alessia Russo in the 21st minute. In the second half, Spain's Clàudia Pina made an instant impact from the bench, scoring two minutes after coming on, then doubling her tally 10 minutes later as Spain secured victory. The Lionesses would have qualified for the semi-finals at Spain's expense with a win. England 1-0 Spain, 26 Feb 2025, London A Wembley crowd of 46,550 watched England defeat Spain in the teams' first meeting since the World Cup final, in Nations League A Group 3. Jess Park's 33rd-minute goal secured victory for the Lionesses. Lucía García's first-half attempt that rattled the crossbar and second-half chances for the winger Salma Paralluelo were the highlights of Spain's attacking play but England held on. Spain 1-0 England, 20 August 2023, Sydney Spain became world champions with a dominant performance. Lauren Hemp hit the bar from outside of the box early on but that was the pinnacle of England's first-half chances and Olga Carmona ensured Spain went into the break ahead with a clinical finish past Mary Earps. Earps produced a fantastic 70th-minute penalty save from Jenni Hermoso and made further stops to keep England in the game but Spain deserved their win. Eze Obasi Spain's route to the final has been relatively uneventful compared with England's. Spain have controlled the vast majority of possession. Teams do get big chances against them, though, because they commit such numbers going forward. They leave transition spaces behind them because of their playing style, and that's where their vulnerabilities are, down the sides of their centre-backs, as Germany's chances in their semi-final showed. Belgium scored twice against Spain and could have scored more, Italy scored against them and there's a vulnerability to Spain that did not exist a few years ago, so the opportunity to score against them is greater. Sunday's contest depends on who Spain start with, because when they play Clàudia Pina and Mariona Caldentey, they're not pacey players who are going to get in behind. Is Montse Tomé going to start with a team that will dominate the ball but won't stretch England in behind? Or will she start with the pace of a Salma Paralluelo? That is interesting, because Spain have often been kept at bay for quite a while – their knockout matches were both 0-0 at half-time – but when games become more stretched, their chances grow. There have been distinct differences watching Spain this year. I've never seen Aitana Bonmatí so wide, and that's because of having Alexia Putellas in the 10 position. But it means you get situations such as Bonmatí's winning goal in the semi-final, which was 100% a shot. Ann-Katrin Berger has demonstrated throughout the tournament she's a world-class goalkeeper, but she has a tendency to step forward and leave a small gap at the near post, and I don't think many players can score that goal. Aitana scores it because she's Aitana. That was genius play and crucial because Berger is the best goalkeeper in the world at saving penalties, so the smart money would have been on Germany in a shootout. In terms of Spain's threats, what I find fascinating is they are very good at set pieces. They're well rehearsed. We always talk about Spain's quality in possession but their quality out of possession is the best in the world. They're the best counter-pressers. Oh my God, they're unbelievable. And because they have a system and shape that puts bodies in such close proximity, it means if you can't break out of the sides of their press, they just swarm you again and again and again. They don't get the credit they deserve for the amount of defensive effort they put in. Their total team game is exceptional. And I've studied them, trust me. There has been up and down in England's results over the past 18 months but Sarina is a smart woman, a world-class manager who's been there before. The team's resilience is key. They were 90 seconds from going out against Italy and it looked as if the luck had run out, but it hadn't. Sign up to Moving the Goalposts No topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women's football after newsletter promotion I coached a Chelsea team that always had resilience so I've been in those situations thinking: 'How did we do that, how did we keep on winning?' You have to talk about the mentality of all the players, to be able to keep finding a way even when they haven't been at their best. In my last year when we shouldn't have won the title because Manchester City should have, you can sit there and say: 'Oh, is that because Man City blew it?' Well, we still had to go and win it. If you score one more goal than your opponent, you're the winner. This isn't a game of fairness and England simply scored more goals than Italy. Spain are prolific but I expect a close game. There may be moments for England and then complete Spanish dominance, but that doesn't mean Spain will win. Just because you're not the most dominant team doesn't mean you cannot win. England must use all their experience. Overall, this has been a tournament about goalkeepers and the rise of so many good ones. Berger, Italy's Laura Giuliani and England's Hannah Hampton have stood out. This has also been a tournament about the strength of teams' benches, because there has been much more quality from substitutes for so many teams. Now it is going to be a great final in Basel and a great showcase for the sport.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Spain ready to solve England puzzle in Euro final, says Putellas
LAUSANNE, Switzerland, July 25 (Reuters) - Spain are remaining tight-lipped about what they expect from England in Sunday's Euro 2025 final in Basel, but midfielder Alexia Putellas says her side are ready for whatever Sarina Wiegman and her squad come up with. "England is a team that can come up with many things -- they can be in a low block and move forward, or they can be a team that wants to do both things, (but) we are a team with a lot of resources," Putellas told reporters at the Spanish team's base in Lausanne on Thursday. "If they decide to be in the low block and move forward, we have been able to play (in the past) and score goals. We are well-balanced so that they do not move forward ... it's hard to get the ball off us, we are ready for anything." The showdown pits title holders England, who have flirted with elimination en route to the final, against world and Nations League champions Spain, who have started their games in Switzerland slowly before growing into them and taking over. Putellas said that her side would not be taking anything for granted. "I try not to think about what has happened, what we have done or what we haven't done. In the end, these are unique moments that we have to live and that we are very excited about," she said. The game is also a rematch of the 2023 World Cup final that Spain won 1-0, and the two sides have also met in the Nations League earlier this year, with England winning 1-0 in February and Spain grabbing a 2-1 victory in June. "We are very excited, very ambitious, excited to continue growing, to continue making history and I think that gives us a lot of energy, we get a lot of energy to achieve our goal," Putellas said.