logo
France seeking end to years of hurt and internal conflicts at Euro 2025

France seeking end to years of hurt and internal conflicts at Euro 2025

The Guardian11 hours ago
'I want people to stop asking me: 'Why haven't France won anything when you're one of the best teams in the world?'' Marie-Antoinette Katoto, like all her teammates, has only one dream this summer: to win the Euros.
To do that, though, they have to come to terms with a history of tournament failures with the most recent one coming at the home Olympics last year, when they were knocked out by Brazil at the quarter-final stage. 'We have had opportunities and twice failed to win it at home in France. We have to have the humility to admit that,' admits Sakina Karchaoui, one of the team's vice-captains, referring also to the 2019 World Cup on home soil, when they lost to the USA in the quarter-finals.
The list of failures is so long that the word 'finally' is added to any question about Les Bleues' chances. France have only managed to reach the semi-finals of a major women's competition on three occasions: the 2011 World Cup, the 2012 Olympic Games and Euro 2021. Repeated disappointments have taken a toll.
'Since we prepare for tournaments a year or two years in advance, when you arrive at the competition and you get eliminated quickly, yes, at some point it also has an impact on the mind,' says Grace Geyoro. 'It can be exhausting, especially when you see the [quality in the] team we have.'
On Saturday, they start their latest mission at Euro 2025 against England in Zurich. It could not have been a tougher opening, the Lionesses having the last Euros in 2022 with a coach who also won the previous tournament, in 2019 with the Netherlands. The Dutch are also in France's group in Switzerland, together with Wales.
France have always had individual quality. As far as the 2000s there have been players such as Louisa Nécib Cadamuro, Camille Abily, Marie-Laure Delie, Sandrine Soubeyrand and Laura Georges, before the arrival of Eugénie Le Sommer and Wendie Renard. All of which begs the question: Why haven't France triumphed in a major tournament.
'If we knew why France weren't winning, I think we'd have put things right by now,' says Abily, the fifth-most capped player in Les Bleues history with 183 caps between 2001 and 2017. 'I think there's a tendency in France to see football as an individual sport, thinking more about oneself before thinking about the team. That's what's been a bit lacking in the French team.'
Grace Geyoro agrees: 'We've relied a lot on individuals, on the fact that one player can make the difference. Now we need to focus more on the collective, because we can only win together.'
The team has often been shaken by internal conflicts, whether it be disagreements with the coach Corinne Diacre or players clashing such as Kheira Hamraoui and Aminata Diallo in 2021.
Elise Bussaglia, who earned 192 caps between 2003 and 2019, says: 'The group hasn't always coped well, for various reasons. And it's true that at one point it could have had a detrimental effect on our results.' One of the areas of tension was the disconnect between the players from Lyon, who were professionals at the time, and those from Juvisy (later Paris FC) and Paris Saint-Germain, who were still semi-professional.
The current Chelsea head coach, Sonia Bompastor, touches on the subject in her book Une vie de foot, which was published this year, writing: 'We weren't on the same wavelength at all, and we didn't have the same conception of what it meant to be a footballer. For me, losing a match was the end of the world; not for them.'
Abily, who is Bompastor's assistant at Chelsea, insists that in her day, the team 'didn't realise' the quality it had. 'I remember that when we qualified for the semi-finals of the World Cup in 2011, we said to ourselves: 'Wow! That's great, we're here, we've qualified!'
Bussaglia, who finished fourth with France at the 2011 World Cup and the following year's Olympics, adds: 'There are times when the French team should have at least won a medal, if not the title, and it didn't happen. There needs to be a bit more of a winning culture. But it's not just the federation, it's everyone: the players, the staff, the fans, everyone. Around this French team, there's still not enough desire to win.'
Bompastor has also spoken about the lack of interest from the French FA in the women's team in the past. 'Nobody gave a damn about the French women's team,' she wrote in her book. 'We used to go and see Noël Le Graët, the president of the federation, to explain to him that the reason Lyon were European champions was because we'd put certain processes in place, and not because we'd gone off to summer camps with a singing coach [referring to Bruno Bini, Les Bleues coach from 2007 to 2013 who wrote songs for the players]. The only thing that mattered to him was our popularity rating and our good image.'
There was a feeling by some players that the French FA was using the women's team to restore its reputation after the catastrophic 2010 World Cup when the men's team went on strike and refused to train by staying on the team bus.
A lack of ambition is no longer true today, says Eric Blahic, who was assistant coach to Corinne Diacre and then Hervé Renard (2023-24) and was delighted to see the latter end the 'famous semi-final complex'. 'For years, the girls were told that they had to be in the sem-finals,' he says. 'That doesn't mean anything. Third or fourth is not the same thing. You have to say: the objective is the final.'
He also rejects the idea that France have failed to go all the way because of a mental block. 'In 1982, when the French men's team played in the semi-final in Seville, when we led 3-1 and ended up being eliminated, people were already saying that it was mental problems. If that's all it was, the federation would have taken action a long time ago.'
Laurent Bonadei was appointed as Renard's successor in August 2024 and since then a full-time mental performance coach, Thomas Sammut, has been part of the team 'to break this glass ceiling'. He has made other changes too, dropping three key players – Le Sommer, Renard and Kenza Dali – just before the Euros, saying that 'if it doesn't work you have to try something new'.
Bonadei will also have to deal with Les Bleues' misfortune when it comes to penalties in major tournaments. Bussaglia says of the Olympics semi-final defeat to Japan in 2012: 'At the Olympics, in the semi-final, we were 2-1 down and I missed the penalty to make it 2-2. I'd never missed a penalty in my life but I missed that one.' Blahic, meanwhile, recalls the shootout loss to Australia in the 2023 World Cup, when Kenza Dali missed her spot kick against club teammate Mackenzie Arnold not once but twice as it was retaken. 'All the girls had taken lots of penalties in training, in all different forms, against three different goalkeepers,' he explains.
Bonadei prefers to refer to France as 'outsiders' rather than favourites, despite having won their eight last games going into the tournament. 'Confidence is good for developing our game, but overconfidence is the trap that awaits us,' warns Bonadei.
In Switzerland there is unlikely to be overconfidence as France have to battle against not only their opponents, but their past too.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man Utd's new signing Diego Leon is athletic full-back who models himself on Marcelo and once scored amazing own goal
Man Utd's new signing Diego Leon is athletic full-back who models himself on Marcelo and once scored amazing own goal

The Sun

time15 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Man Utd's new signing Diego Leon is athletic full-back who models himself on Marcelo and once scored amazing own goal

ONE YEAR ago Diego Leon was barely a household name in his own home. He was a 17-year-old left back from Paraguay, making his way through the youth ranks of Cerro Porteno, one of the South American country's traditional big two clubs. 7 7 At the start of last August he was suddenly promoted to the first team. At the time Cerro were being coached by Manolo Jimenez, a Sevilla legend and a former left back for Spain. He checked out the club's academy, liked what he saw and put teenage Leon straight into the first team. And in his debut Leon scored the only goal of the game against Sport Ameliano. A star was born, and within a few short weeks the player was already being linked with Premier League giants. It seems that there was interest from Arsenal, but come the end of the year Manchester United had swooped. Leon had to stay in Paraguay until the summer transfer window- he only turned 18 in April - but now he is on his way across the Atlantic. So what are United getting? Manolo Jimenez recalled: 'I saw his strength and quality and threw him into the first team. 'Physically he's a prodigy. He has incredible potential, with a strong attacking game and the capacity to score goals.' 7 7 Most of his first team football has been played at left back, although - good news for United fans - he might be even happier operating as a left wing back. He can rumble forward effectively, curling dangerous crosses into the box, and can also cut in diagonally towards goal. Jimenez would be the first to admit that the defensive side of Leon's game needs plenty of work - perhaps unsurprising for a youngster who holds the adventurous former Real Madrid star Marcelo as his role model. Last year he scored one of the all time great own goals, lobbing his own keeper from twenty five yards to hand the three points to Sportivo Luqueno. But this can be written off as an occupational hazard, and also serves to show how well he can strike the ball. 7 7 How soon, then, before he can be expected to make an impact at Old Trafford? It might take a while, not least because the United coaching staff will need to improve his defending. It is also worth noting how young he is and how little football he has behind him - and also how, after Jimenez moved on, he slipped a little bit back down the pecking order. Argentine boss Diego Martinez selected Leon for most of Cerro Porteno's league games this year. But the main event for the club is the Copa Libertadores, South America's Champions League. Cerro Porteno have never won it. Neighbours and rivals Olimpia have three titles to their name. This hurts. Continental glory, then, is an obsession for Cerro. They fought their way through to this year's knock out rounds, which kick off in August. But Leon made little contribution. He played in one of the group games, and was an unused substitute for the other five. And he hardly featured in the two big derby games against Olimpia, coming off the bench for one and not getting on the field for the other. The implication is clear. Diego Leon was seen by Cerro Porteno as a highly promising work in progress, but not necessarily ready to be trusted in the matches that really matter. His next task, then, is a daunting one. The teenage Paraguayan has to make the leap between promise and reality while finding his feet under the microscope at the Theatre of Dreams.

Burns eyes legacy with Italy step away from T20 World Cup
Burns eyes legacy with Italy step away from T20 World Cup

BBC News

time18 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Burns eyes legacy with Italy step away from T20 World Cup

Joe Burns says Italy's cricketers have the chance to "create a legacy" as he attempts to guide the European nation to their first ever World batter Burns, 35, made four centuries in 23 Tests for Australia between 2014 and 2020 but made himself available to play for Italy last year, qualifying through his has since been appointed captain of Italy, who will battle it out with Guernsey, Jersey, Scotland and the Netherlands in a European regional qualifier for next year's 2026 T20 World Cup. The two teams who finish top of the round-robin tournament held in the Hague between 5 to 11 July will qualify for the event in India and Sri Lanka."We're very confident that if we play to our best, we'll be going to a World Cup," Burns told BBC Sport."It's not lost on us the magnitude of the impact we can have on Italian cricket. We talk a lot as a team about creating a legacy for the generations to come after us."To wear the Italian cap at a World Cup would make us a groundbreaking team. And we think we've got the team to get there."The first recorded game in Italy was played in Naples in 1793 by sailors from the fleet of Lord Nelson, and today there are more than 3,500 competitive players and in excess of 100 are currently 32nd in the International Cricket Council world rankings but do not have any proper turf squad have prepared for the tournament with a short training camp in Rome, some friendlies on grass in Horsham before warm-up games in the said there is a "huge opportunity" for cricket, and T20 in particular, to really grow in Italy and qualifying for the T20 World Cup could prove to be a major catalyst."I feel like Associate cricket is very much the grassroots of international cricket," Burns added."But I really think that in 30, 40 or 50 years from now, Italy could be a massive player in world cricket."Playing Tests for Australia it was about the history that you're honouring, and you're carrying on in the traditions of the past, but when you play for Italy, it's a blank canvas and you shape the future." 'Nonna would be very proud' Burns' desire to play for Italy has allowed him to connect with his grandfather was an Italian POW, who left the country with his wife in the years which followed the Second World hailed from a small town in the commune of Delianuova, in Calabria, in the 'toe' of southwest mother - Grazia - was born in Brisbane but Burns says he always "felt Italian" growing up with memories of attending church, following Serie A and special afternoon lunches on Sundays."I grew up with Italian traditions and that Italian connection," Burns said."So it's nice to, I guess, combine the two loves of family and cricket and be able to play on the world stage. I'm at in this stage of my career, it's really reinvigorating for the love of the game."Burns has quietly followed the cricket fortunes of Azzurri for a long time, and first made contact with the Federazione Cricket Italiana in grandfather passed away before he was born but his late grandmother did see him play international continued: "I remember my 'nonna' watching when I played for Australia, and she was always asking my mum what was going on and asking why I was hitting the ball in the air when I was nicking it to the slips! "I'm sure she's looking on very proudly now I'm playing for Italy. I hope the Italian cricket team is a bit of a beacon for Italians around the world."One of the main reasons Burns decided to play for Italy was in tribute to his brother, Dominic, who passed away last year."Really, it's my two life communities that are helping me and my family through a tough time," he said."I look at that Italian shirt and it gives me a lot of strength. And it's not just me, but as I said, there's 14 other guys that have very similar stories."

Tour de France 2025: stage one sets battle for yellow jersey around Lille
Tour de France 2025: stage one sets battle for yellow jersey around Lille

The Guardian

time26 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Tour de France 2025: stage one sets battle for yellow jersey around Lille

Update: Date: 2025-07-05T10:11:05.000Z Title: Preamble Content: Hello and welcome to the Guardian's live coverage of the Tour de France 2025, starting with stage one in Lille. Today, the peloton will roll out from the northern French city at 1.10pm CEST (12.10pm BST) and tackle 184.9km on a flat stage that will loop back into Lille for what will most likely end in a bunch sprint. So, all eyes will be on sprinters such as Jasper Philipsen, Jonathan Milan and Tim Merlier. I'd love to hear your predictions though, so please email them over. While we wait for the live TV coverage to kick off, here's some reading from our sports team who have been previewing this year's Tour: Tadej Pogačar v Jonas Vingegaard – The battle for the yellow jersey Who's who? Your stage-by-stage guide The Tour de France's version of VAR? Fifty years of finishes on Champs-Élysées

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