
England begin European title defence with defeat to France
Instead Marie-Antoinette Katoto fired in a 36th-minute opener before Chelsea's Sandy Baltimore doubled France's lead three minutes later.
Defeat in our #WEURO2025 opener.
Our focus quickly turns to Wednesday and matchday two. pic.twitter.com/FLeTWvoXMV
— Lionesses (@Lionesses) July 5, 2025
Late substitutions sparked the Lionesses into life in the closing stages and Walsh gave them hope, halving the deficit in the 87th minute, but they could not salvage a point.
With England men's boss Thomas Tuchel watching on from the stands, James got herself involved inside the first minute, latching on to the ball inside France's penalty area before firing a left-footed effort aimed at the top corner off-target.
Three minutes later the Chelsea forward was skipping around the edge of the area, sending in a cross that just evaded several England heads.
Goalkeeper Hannah Hampton got her first taste of major-tournament action when she came out to collect Selma Bacha's free-kick, earning an appreciative round of applause from the England delegation stationed behind her.
Russo thought she had scored after pouncing on the rebound from Lauren Hemp's saved effort, but a VAR check determined Beth Mead had been marginally offside in the build-up to Hemp's initial attempt and the goal was ruled out.
Alessia Russo's celebrations were cut short (Nick Potts/PA).
Momentum shifted in France's favour, their efforts inching ever closer as Hampton was forced into a good save, sticking out a leg to deny Elisa De Almeida.
And it was the Paris St Germain defender whose initial midfield interception was the catalyst for the opener, finding Delphine Cascarino with a well-weighted pass.
San Diego Wave forward Cascarino then sent the ball across the face of goal, where Katoto obligingly tapped in.
Baltimore doubled their advantage three minutes later, Leah Williamson and her Chelsea team-mate Lucy Bronze unable to contain the in-form Blues star before she rifled into the top right corner.
VAR ruled – much to Wiegman's visible chagrin – that Russo had not been fouled in the build-up.
The second half got off to a lively start for France, with Hampton denying Grace Geyoro but fumbling her save and having to scramble back just in time to prevent more damage.
James' evening ended after 60 minutes as part of a triple-change for Wiegman.
The Lionesses looked to be running out of time and chances by the 77th minute when Grace Clinton made her major tournament debut, followed by Michelle Agyemang's minutes later.
But England were suddenly sparked to life, substitute Ella Toone nearly halving the deficit with a deflected effort.
Walsh finally clawed one back after France could not fully clear an England corner, the Chelsea midfielder taking advantage, guiding a shot past Pauline Peyraud-Magnin from the edge of the area to give the Lionesses a fighting chance.
But, while they finally looked a threat, five minutes of added time were not enough to salvage a draw.

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