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Daily Mail
6 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Dame Chloe Kelly? Keir Starmer hints England's Euro-winning Lionesses could be in line to receive official honours
Sir Keir Starmer has hinted that England's Lionesses could be in line to receive official honours after their Euros win. The Prime Minister said 'recognition is coming' for the two-time champions who he says have inspired a generation. He added that they personified England's greatest values - decency, fairness and respect following the team's success in Switzerland last week. The Lionesses have won the competition twice in a row and this year beat Spain in a nail-biting penalty shoot-out. And now players Chloe Kelly and Hannah Hampton could be on the the New Year's Eve Honours List. The Dutch manager Sarina Wiegman could also be in the running for recognition and may be made an Honorary Dame after leading the squad to glory once more. Sir Keir told the Sun on Sunday: 'What Sarina and our Lionesses have achieved is nothing short of remarkable. 'So recognition is coming - and it will be worthy of their historic success.' The Dutch manager Sarina Wiegman could also be in the running for recognition and may be made an Honorary Dame after leading the squad to glory once more The Prime Minister flew out to Basel to watch the Lionesses achieve victory at St Jacob-Park. During the tense final, Kelly scored the winning penalty for England with goalkeeper Hampton saving not one but two Spanish shots. The Cabinet Office oversees the honours but those on the list are a closely-guarded secret and will be officially announced later down the line. However there is a precedent with the team being honoured over their last Euros win three years ago. Captain Leah Williamson received an OBE, while Lucy Bronze, Beth Mead and Ellen White were made MBEs. Gareth Southgate was given a knighthood for his part in the men securing a spot in their second consecutive Euros final last year. The exciting news comes after England midfielder Ella Toone revealed the heartbreaking family tragedy she kept hidden during the Lionesses' dramatic Euro 2025 final victory. Posting on Instagram four days later, the Manchester United star shared that her grandmother, known affectionately as Nanna Maz, had died just hours before one of the biggest games of her career. Alongside nine photos of her nan, Toone wrote: 'Even in the highest of highs life can hit you with the lowest of lows. My Nana Maz took her last breath on the morning of our Euro final. I have comfort in knowing she got to watch from the best seat in the house with Dad, her favourite person. 'I'll miss you forever nan but I'll cherish the special memories we made, there isn't enough words I can possibly say to sum up the person you were, but I'm grateful you were my nanna. My football loving , crazy, funny Nan.'


Glasgow Times
8 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Too much ego, too much self-preservation – Russell Martin fumes at Rangers draw
Gers skipper James Tavernier headed in from a corner in the 14th minute but the Ibrox side failed to kick on and eventually succumbed in the 87th minute when Emmanuel Longelo drove in a deserved equaliser for a 1-1 draw. It is the third successive season that Rangers have failed to win their opening game, and on Sunday they could fall behind Old Firm rivals Celtic when the champions host St Mirren. In a spectacular post-match summation of his players, Martin, whose side progressed to the Champions League third qualifying round against Viktoria Plzen with a 3-1 aggregate win over Panathinaikos on Wednesday, said: 'I'm very disappointed and a bit hurt and a bit angry at a lot of stuff I saw. 'Motherwell were really good, credit to them. But I said to the players, the problems haven't been tactical, yet. They've been mentality, about energy, about courage, intensity, aggression, to play. 'We haven't started games well enough in the first half in the two European games and then showed a bit more willingness to trust the detail in each other and work. 'And then today, we go ahead and play some OK stuff. Every time we get in the final third, we turn the ball over and make crazy decisions. 'They're either selfish decisions or they're based on anxiety, so we need to get to the bottom of that. 'Because there was far too much stuff that we haven't worked on or haven't seen. 'It's not me digging them out. I take full responsibility for it. But that hurts me more than anything. 'The problem should be tactical, it shouldn't be mentality. So we have too many guys that slip into self-preservation mode. And I think it's been a fact of this club for the last few years for sure. 'So when it's going well, you're all-in, you want to run, you want the ball. It's nice, but when it's not going well, you don't want to run so much, you pick and choose when you want to run. 'You pick and choose when you want to compete and mark your player from a throw-in or a corner. 'You pick and choose when to run back, and it's unacceptable for this sort of club. And for us as a coaching staff, this is not acceptable. 'We're six weeks in, there will be issues. But the issue today is purely mentality. 'So too much ego, too much self-preservation, and you're either all-in all the time or you're not. And if you're not, you just won't play very much.' Motherwell's new boss Jens Berthel Askou, a former team-mate of Martin at Norwich who was taking charge of his first league game, was disappointed his side did not take all three points. 'I said to players, I was very disappointed on their behalf that they didn't get the win at the end because we did everything we could to get the win,' he said. 'But again, that's down to quality also in these small situations and we'll keep working on that and sharpen that up. 'I think they gave themselves the opportunity to win, and that's where it starts with the effort and with the desperation to go forward and to punish them on their transitions and to really work extremely hard throughout the entire game. 'I was very happy with that and I know that if we are able to put our performances like this over time, that there will be many other opportunities to win games.'


North Wales Chronicle
9 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Rangers held to draw at Motherwell after late Emmanuel Longelo leveller
Gers skipper James Tavernier headed in from a corner in the 14th minute but Russell Martin's side never really found any rhythm. The Light Blues survived Well pressure for large spells of the second half but only until the 87th minute when Emmanuel Longelo drove in the equaliser. Rangers reached the Champions League third qualifying round by completing a 3-1 aggregate win over Panathinaikos in Athens on Wednesday but carried a fair bit of luck over the two games. And after this unimpressive display in Lanarkshire, there is clearly and understandably still work to do for Martin's side, as they try to implement his possession-based philosophy. Motherwell's new boss Jens Berthel Askou, a former team-mate of Martin at Norwich taking charge of his first league game, will be pleased by the way his side kept going when it looked like it would not be their day. Rangers could quickly fall behind champions and Old Firm rivals Celtic, who host St Mirren on Sunday, following a game that took time to warm up. In the fourth minute Well keeper Calum Ward palmed a 25-yard free-kick from Tavernier around a post and Kieran Dowell headed Joe Rothwell's corner over the crossbar. Rangers were getting their aim in. Attacker Djeidi Gassama – who started in place of Findlay Curtis in the only change – curled a shot wide after taking a pass from Brazilian striker Danilo, who then clipped the bar with a shot from 25 yards. However, it seemed all to easy for Tavernier to head in a Rothwell delivery to the back post for his 131st Gers goal, after Well skipper Paul McGinn had shanked a clearance to concede a corner. While dangerous in attack, the visitors looked fragile in defence at times – this could be a feature of their play this season – and in the 24th minute keeper Jack Butland fumbled an effort from an unmarked Longelo then blocked the shot on the rebound from striker Apostolos Stamatelopoulos. Both sides were intent on playing out from the back and there were numerous turnovers but little in the way of goalmouth action, until Ward made a save from Gassama's header two minutes after the interval. Minutes later, Callum Slattery's whipped-in free-kick, after he had been fouled by Tavernier, found Elijah Just at the back post but he could not control his header and the ball went off target. Motherwell grew in confidence and Butland made a diving save from McGinn's low drive after the defender had burst into the Gers box, with John Souttar completing the clearance. Lyall Cameron and Cyriel Dessers replaced Mohamed Diomande and Danilo and debutant Cameron got booked immediately for a foul on Lukas Fadinger before he tested Ward with a 25-yard drive. At the other end, Stamatelopoulos headed over from just under the bar from a tantalising cross from Just. However, with three minutes remaining Longelo burst too easily into the Gers box and when the ball was repelled, Johnny Koutroumbis returned it into the area, Just chested it back and Longelo drilled it low past Butland for a well-deserved equaliser. And only a fine save from the Ibrox keeper in added time from substitute Tom Sparrow prevented a defeat.