
France 1 Germany 1 ( 5-6 on pens) – Gravity-defying saves, glass ceilings, another penalty shootout
A week ago, Germany suffered their worst defeat, falling 4-1 to Sweden (a team now out of the tournament after losing to England in penalties). Thirteen minutes into Saturday's quarter-final against France in Basel, Switzerland, Germany were down a defender due to a puzzling hair pull, depleting an already dismissed backline. On paper, they were at a disadvantage. But also on paper, goalkeepers can't fly.
Advertisement
Germany ripped up the script and defeated France in penalties to advance to the European Championship semifinals.
While they overcame their prophecy, France once again succumbed to theirs, unable to crack the quarter-final glass ceiling once again.
Germany defeated France in the last European Championship in the semi-final stage, the only time Les Bleus have made it that far. Since that 2022 matchup, France have gone out in the quarter-finals at the last two major tournaments (2023 World Cup and 2024 Olympics), adding to their nine failures prior.
'Albert Einstein said that madness was doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result,' said Laurent Bonadei in a press conference before France's Nations League fixtures in late May.
Bonadei, who took charge of the team from Hervé Renard last year, was referencing leaving out captain Wendie Renard, Eugenie Le Sommer and San Diego Wave's Kenza Dali from his Euros squad.
But what happens when the result is what keeps repeating despite the changes?
France's path to vanquish their demons seemed much clearer when centre-back Kathrin Hendrich pulled the hair of France captain Griedge Mbock inside the penalty area. By the end of the match, the moment felt like a different match.
In the 25th minute, five minutes after another defender, Sarai Linder, lef the match injured, Germany found their equaliser. Midfiedler Sjoeke Nusken powerfully headed a corner kick service past France's Pauline Peyraud-Magnin.
France winger Delphine Cascarino thought she had found the go-ahead goal before half-time when she finished an impressive team effort with a backheel-flick goal, but instead was ruled offside. It was the first of two ruled-off goals for France.
In the second half and into extra time, Germany continued to find their moments, but it was the effort of goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger that kept the score level.
Advertisement
In the 105th minute, the Gotham FC goalkeeper made one of the most acrobatic saves in the history of the game. With France attacking and Katrin-Berger away from her goal, Janina Minge aimed, looping a shot beyond the keeper. And yet with a physics-defying leap backward and an outstretched paw, the 34-year-old kept the ball out of the net with a scoop of her hand. She went down momentarily, nursing her shoulder but return to finish the match, including a converted penalty in the shootout.
Germany will play Spain in Wednesday's semi-final in Zurich. Megan Feringa, Michael Cox and Charlotte Harpur analyse the main talking points from the quarter-final.
Another quarter-final decided in penalties puts goalkeepers in the spotlight. However, the goalkeepers took the spotlight long before the players lined up at and this time it was the goalkeepers who took the spotlight.
Maybe the real treasure of Euro 2025 is all the penalties saved and missed along the way. So far, 14 of 27 penalties have failed to be converted. Perhaps it was asking too much for two to be converted in one match after Geyoro found the back of the net for France in the first-half.
France goalkeeper Pauline Peyraud-Magnin saved Sjoeke Nusken's penalty, injecting an already haywire match with more chaos. Payraud-Magnin could do little about Nusken's earlier bullet header to draw the game level.
But we must really talk about Ann-Katrin Berger. One, did you see the save? In the 105th-minute, arm extended as she's falling backwards. Gravity, physics, all of that should say, 'No'. But the 33-year-old Gotham FC goalkeeper said, 'Yes'. And she did all match. Berger was quick off her line, sharp in her saves, comfortable on the ball and regularly came out of her area to deal with balls over the top of her defence. She made nine saves, five from inside the box and five being what the BBC qualified as 'diving' (a word that doesn't feel appropriate enough to describe what happened on 105 minutes).
She then denied France's first penalty shooter, Amel Majri. The 32-year-old went left just as Berger had written on her Gatorade bottle, before scoring from the spot herself as Germany's fifth taker.
Feringa
What on earth was going through Kathrin Hendrich's head as the 33-year-old defender reached out to grab a chunk of Griedge Mbock's hair is beyond anyone's comprehension. The Chicago Stars player has 86 caps for her country and has played over 300 matches at club level.
Anyone is capable of suffering a moment of madness in such pressurised hot boxes such as this, but less than 15 minutes into a Euros quarter-final against an opponent like France? Germany's backline was already red-card ravaged going into this match, after right-back Carlotta Wamser was issued marching orders for saving the ball on the line against Sweden in their final group stage match.
Advertisement
Hendrich's decision forced Germany's defence into more tactical surgery: third-string right back Sarai Linder was replaced by Sophia Kleinherne while midfielder Janina Minge moved into a back four as Germany switched to a 4-4-1. Germany's defence remained ferociously resilient and organised throughout, all while managing to rip forward on the counter with numbers, much to France's enormous trouble at times. It made you wonder just how good Germany might have been with an additional body on the pitch…
Megan Feringa
Going into this game, the last thing you would have said about Germany was that they were solid. They offered attacking power in the group stage, but they left their backline exposed, and the defence was dragged across the pitch easily. Sweden took full advantage in their 4-1 win in Zurich.
Tonight, Germany got off to the worst possible start. They conceded a penalty and went down to ten players in the same incident. Their right-back Linder, only playing as Gwinn and Wamser were injured and suspended respectively, limped off shortly afterwards. The game seemed dead.
And yet somehow, the situation suited Germany.
That was true both mentally and tactically. Germany are, even when not a great side, famously hard to beat. They huddled together and agreed on a game plan. And, tactically, suddenly Germany looked quite suited to a counter-attacking task. Elisa Senss is a no-nonsense midfield general. Nusken is a tireless box-to-box midfielder. Jule Brand and Klara Buhl have been the best wing pairing in the competition and offered speed on the break. Up top, Giovanna Hoffman ran, battled, flicked the ball on, held it up, and won free-kicks to get Germany up the pitch.
And this actually made Germany look — for the first time in the competition — solid. The defenders haven't become world-class overnight. But they were screened well, they communicated well, they shepherded Germany out wide, and they defended their box well. France barely created anything, and but for Nusken's missed penalty midway through the second half, this German display would have gone down as one of the great performances when down to ten players.
Michael Cox
There seems to be a quarter-final curse looming over France. Barring Euro 2022, France have now not progressed beyond the last nine major tournaments and Olympics quarter-finals. Reach this stage of the competition and they are unable to smash the glass ceiling.
Nobody quite knows why. Some people say it is about mentality. If there was a game to test their mental resilience, this was it. France went from the highs of scoring a penalty and an extra player advantage to the lows of two disallowed goals and conceding an equaliser before being galvanised by Peyraud-Magnin's penalty save.
Advertisement
As the minutes dragged on and they failed to take advantage of having an extra player, it felt like it was just not meant to be. The cruel reality of penalties sealed their fate and in the end, they were simply not good enough on the night.
Charlotte Harpur
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
VIDEO: Mason Greenwood continues red-hot form with yet another pre-season goal for Marseille against Sevilla
Greenwood firing on all cylinders Scored the only goal for his team vs Sevilla Has six strikes to his name in pre-season fixtures Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱 WHAT HAPPENED? Greenwood has hit the ground running this pre-season, building serious momentum ahead of the new Ligue 1 season. He announced his return in spectacular fashion with a blistering 11-minute hat-trick against Dutch lower-league side Excelsior Maassluis, a performance that immediately reignited the buzz around him. THE BIGGER PICTURE Greenwood kept the goals coming with another strike in a draw against Belgian club OC Charleroi, showcasing sharpness and clinical finishing that made him such a highly-rated talent during his early Manchester United days. The goal against Sevilla marked Greenwood's sixth of the summer, as he continues to stake his claim as one of Europe's most dangerous attacking threats ahead of the 2025–26 campaign. Marseille fans were back in the stands just weeks after celebrating the club's return to the UEFA Champions League, and Greenwood ensured the optimism continued to grow. WATCH THE CLIP DID YOU KNOW? In another key moment from the friendly clash, Marseille supporters were treated to the return of a familiar face, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang. The former Arsenal striker, who rejoined the club earlier this week after a stint in Saudi Arabia, was introduced in the 70th minute to a warm reception. Despite his time away from top-tier European football, the 35-year-old forward wasted no time reminding fans of his blistering speed and attacking instincts. Aubameyang looked sharp during his cameo, making several threatening runs and linking up well with his new teammates, suggesting he could still be a vital cog in the squad. 7 WHAT NEXT? While Greenwood continues to focus on his performances, speculation regarding his future refuses to go away. The England international has reportedly attracted the attention of several high-profile clubs across Europe, and even some suitors from the ambitious Saudi Pro League. Despite the external noise, Marseille remain firm in their stance; the club has no intention of offloading their star forward. With Greenwood wearing the No.10 shirt and emerging as a talismanic figure at the Vélodrome, the club's management is keen to keep him central to their plans for the coming season.
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Amateur Lottie Woad secures LPGA card, finishes third at Amundi Evian
Lottie Woad needed a top-25 finish at the Amundi Evian Championship to earn her LPGA card, but apparently, that was too easy. The No. 1 amateur took the drama out of earning her card and ratcheted it up 10 notches: Could she become the first amateur in more than 50 years to win a major? Woad, who started out the day five back, went out in 30 to heat things up in France and held a share of the lead midway through her final round with world No. 2 Jeeno Thitikul, the best player in the game without a major title. 'It seems effortless to her,' said fellow Englishwoman Karen Stupples from the broadcast booth. A disappointing par on the closing par-5 18th put Woad at 13 under for the tournament and in possession of the clubhouse lead after a final-round 64. She ultimately, however, finished one back of getting into a playoff between Grace Kim and Thitikul. In reaching 20 points, Woad becomes the first player to graduate from the tour's new LPGA Elite Amateur Pathway (LEAP) program, which launched in the fall of 2024. Woad, who won the Irish Open last week by a stunning six shots, must turn professional to join the LPGA and accept membership for the remainder of the 2025 season. She'll have membership for 2026 as well. "I'm just going to take the next week and discuss it with my family and coaches and will make a decision after that," Woad told Golf Channel's Tom Abbott after the round. The 21-year-old Florida State senior is already in the field for the ISPS Handa Women's Scottish Open by virtue of her win in Ireland. She's also already in the field for the AIG Women's British Open thanks to her top-10 finish last year at St. Andrews. 'I just don't see a weakness,' said Golf Channel lead analyst Morgan Pressel of the hard-working Woad's complete game. Woad had longtime swing coach Luke Bone on the bag at Evian. Bone began working with Woad at Farnham Golf Club when she was 7 years old and the thirtysomething instructor has had to up his teaching game as Woad upped hers. A player who thrives in the spotlight and has a flair for the dramatic, Woad birdied three of the last four holes to win the 2024 Augusta National Women's Amateur. She first rose to No. 1 on the World Amateur Golf Ranking on June 12, 2004. In her junior season at FSU, Woad won twice and never finished outside the top three until the NCAA Championship, where she took a share of eighth place. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Amateur Lottie Woad secures LPGA card after closing 64 at Evian
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
From Montecarlo to Rome, LPGA players slayed their vacations, including three engagements
The LPGA had an off week between events in France and Scotland, giving players the rare chance to unplug from the tour grind and enjoy the sights. Lauren Coughlin, defending champion at this week's ISPS Handa Women's Scottish Open, went home to Sweden with Maja Stark to unwind before a two-week stretch in the United Kingdom that culminates with the season's final major in Wales. Last year, the two friends squared off against each other in a Solheim Cup singles match that was so tight they halved. "Had a lot of fun," said Coughlin of staying with Stark's family in the tiny town of Abbekas. "Played a couple rounds of golf in Sweden, and got to experience sailing and her kind of small village that she lives in, so it was very cool." Japan's Yuri Yoshida toured Belgium while the Jutanugarn sisters enjoyed the Swiss Alps with their mom. Several players even got engaged. Yealimi Noh, who began 2025 with her first career LPGA victory at the Founders Cup, will no doubt tee it up in this week's Scottish with a bright smile on her face after getting engaged to Jackson Suh. Noh wasn't alone in having a life-changing moment last week. Gigi Stoll proposed to her partner in stunning Lauterbrunnen, Switzerland. Former AIG Women's British Open winner Georgia Hall announced her engagement to Paul Dunne, a former winner on the DP World Tour who has caddied for her on the LPGA. The couple posted a photograph from Gleneagles. Meanwhile, Andrea Lee spent the week in Bordeaux after taking a share of fifth at Evian, her fourth career top-10 in a major. Cassie Porter stayed in France for a family vacation, taking an epic photo in front of the Eiffel Tower. Nanna Koerstz Madsen spent time in Rome, touring the Colosseum. Madelene Sagstrom went home to Sweden to spend time with her family doing her absolute favorite thing: picking mushrooms in the forest. Rookie Rio Takeda took in the sights in Paris and London. Former No. 1 Jin Young Ko turned 30 last week at Evian and then kept the good vibes going in Montecarlo. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: LPGA players live it up in Europe, including three wedding engagements