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EA FC 25 Path to Glory tracker – live upgrades tracker and upgrade requirements

EA FC 25 Path to Glory tracker – live upgrades tracker and upgrade requirements

Daily Mirrora day ago

Here's an EA FC 25 Path to Glory upgrade tracker, keeping track of all upgrades for the Euro 2025 Path to Glory promo and how upgrades work
EA Sports is getting ready for Euro 2025 by releasing an EA FC 25 Euro 2025 Path to Glory squad in Ultimate Team. Here's an EA FC 25 Path to Glory tracker to stay up to date with all of the upgrades.
It's been quite some time since we received a live promo in EA FC 25 Ultimate Team, but for the first time since Fantasy FC 's release in February, EA Sports has released a new one, with the EA FC 25 Path to Glory promo now live. Featuring players from Women's Euro 2025, the EA FC 25 Euro 2025 Path to Glory players can earn live upgrades over the next few weeks based on how each nation performs in the competition.

With lots of players being released alongside all of the games being played in real life, it can sometimes be a bit difficult to stay on top of things and know what players have got what upgrades. To make it easier for you, we've created this EA FC 25 Path to Glory tracker to keep you up to date with all the latest Path to Glory upgrades from Euro 2025.

How EA FC 25 Path to Glory upgrades work
There are five upgrades available for each player to try and earn, with upgrades to overall rating, PlayStyle Plus', skill moves, weak foot and positions all on offer. Here are all the upgrades available to earn:
EA FC 25 Path to Glory upgrade tracker
Below is a tracker for every EA FC 25 Path to Glory player in Ultimate Team. The tracker includes the player, nation, base rating, and current rating.
Sections highlighted in green mean the player has completed this upgrade, and sections highlighted in red mean an upgrade is no longer possible. This tracker was last updated on Friday, June 27, 2025.
If you are viewing this on a mobile device, then we recommend you view this article in landscape mode to make sure you can view the entire tracker properly.
FINAL RATING
EA released a Path to Glory squad for the Men's Euro 2024 in EA FC 24, and it was a huge success, so hopefully the EA FC 25 Path to Glory promo is just as good. All upgrades will go live in-game once they are earned.

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How to get last-minute tickets for Euro 2025 in Switzerland
How to get last-minute tickets for Euro 2025 in Switzerland

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

How to get last-minute tickets for Euro 2025 in Switzerland

Euro 2025 will bring a summer of fierce competition and fantastic football. Sixteen teams are set to play across eight venues in Switzerland from 2 to 27 July. In the group stages, defending champions England take on Wales - who are playing in their first international are still available for a range of matches and there's a host of activities outside the games - including fan zones in Switzerland and the you fancy a last-minute trip or want to watch the games at home, here's a complete guide to all the action. Can I still get tickets? Yes, but secure your spot for high-demand matches go on sale daily at 10:00 BST via UEFA's ticketing site, with a limit of 10 tickets per person per game. Prices start at 25 CHF (about £22) and go up to 90 CHF (about £81) for the can access your tickets via the UEFA Mobile Tickets app, which can be downloaded for free by Android and iPhone users. There's also a resale platform where fans can safely resell any tickets purchased - but it's best not to rely on this for the big games. Where in Switzerland? The tournament will take place across eight Swiss cities: Basel, Bern, Geneva, Zurich, St Gallen, Lucerne, Sion, and Thun. The action kicks off in Thun on Wednesday 2 July at 17:00 BST. Expect a breathtaking backdrop of idyllic lakes and mountains. England matches in the group stages will be held across two cities - Zurich and St Gallen. The Lionesses take on France in Zurich on Saturday 5 July and the Netherlands in Zurich on Wednesday 9 we're off to St Gallen for the crunch England v Wales match on Sunday 13 first game will be in Lucerne against the Netherlands on Saturday 5 July, followed by their second game against France in St Gallen on Wednesday 9 July. How do I get there? Flights from London to Zurich start at around £50 to £70 for one person on a one-way ticket on 2 July. Tickets get more expensive over the weekend rising to about £150 plus for a direct one-way flight. From Manchester prices for the most direct flights on 5 July start at about £200. For Cardiff, the cost is even is the best destination for England and Wales fans heading to the games, because Lucerne and St Gallen are a short train ride away. There's also the option of going to Bern or Geneva and travelling on from the car, it's about an 11-hour drive from London to Zurich. The car ferry from Dover to Calais for two people starts at about £85 on 2 July and £100 on 5 July for a one-way trip. If you take the Eurotunnel from Folkestone to Calais, prices range from about £140 to £270 on 2 and 5 via Paris or Brussels cost about £310 to £530 and take between seven-and-a-half and 10 hours. Coaches are cheaper, with some routes starting at about £70. But the journey takes more than 20 hours.A very long bike ride from London to Zurich takes about 52 to 60 hours. It costs about £23 to £30 to take your bike on the ferry, not counting the toll it will take on your citizens can travel to Switzerland without a visa for up to 90 days in any 180-day period if the visit is for tourism and sporting events. But double check that the expiry date on your passport is dated at least three months after the day you plan to leave. Where do I stay? Switzerland is known for being a pricey holiday pick. But there's a range of accommodation options for different one of the tournament's main hubs, Zurich is in high demand. Hotel prices start around £210 to £300 per night for two people on key match nights like Saturday 5 July. If you're on a tighter budget, Airbnb prices start from £70 to £200 per night although lots of options involve staying in a room rather than renting a whole St Gallen, hotels for Sunday 13 July range from about £200 to £600. Lots of places are already booked up. The town also offers a variety of Airbnb accommodation, with prices ranging from £50 to £800 for the same dates. Accommodation is still available slightly outside the town, so it's worth checking these spots hotels and Airbnbs stretch your budget, camping is one alternative. Campsites near Zurich and St Gallen offer scenic views and you could look into renting a car or bike to get around. The average cost for an overnight stay at a Swiss campsite is about £20 - £35, though prices vary between locations. How do I get around? Switzerland has good public transport networks, with fast and reliable services between major cities. On match days, public transport is free for ticket holders. Every ticket will be valid on the match day for a second-class round trip between any Swiss locality and the stadium. Switzerland's vast network of trains offer an efficient and scenic way to travel. The SBB (Swiss Federal Railways) has a range of different tickets on their website. There's also Postbus, a bus service connecting rural areas to urban centres, which offers hundreds of journeys via several apps or you can purchase tickets from stations and drivers. If you're planning on staying for a longer break, a Swiss Travel Pass offers unlimited travel by train, bus and boat, and is available for three, four, six, eight or 15 consecutive you're feeling more adventurous, there are also plenty of iconic cycle routes across Switzerland. Where do I find fan zones? There will be city centre fan zones across the eight cities where Euro 2025 games are taking place. Organisers have planned a "packed schedule of activities for all ages" with live screenings of matches, concerts, workshops and child-friendly football Zurich, the ZüriFanzone will be right by the main station – with screenings of all the matches, concerts, and workshops. In St Gallen, Marktgasse in the old town will host the fan zone with lunchtime panel talks, street football and live music. In Lucerne, the fan zone is located at Europaplatz next to Lake Lucerne and will offer a range of music, concerts and football zones open on 2 July, the day of the first game. Double check their closing dates on the UEFA event guides. Anything else I should know? The Swiss Franc (CHF) is the official currency in Switzerland. For every pound, it's roughly 1.10 Swiss Francs. In most cases, you can also pay in Euros. A pound is worth roughly € has four official languages: German, French, Italian and Romansh. German is the most widely spoken but English is a common second language for many Swiss is not part of the EU so mobile roaming charges could differ from rates in European countries. Check with your network provider before you travel. One solution is buying a local eSIM to cover you for the tournament. Where to watch in the UK? For fans at home there are events taking place across England and will be watch parties of each England match in the group stages in Birmingham, London and Wales, there will also be lots of watch parties and concerts, including in Swansea, Newport and out for events on social media in your local area as the tournament goes on. How can I watch the games from home? Every match in the UK will be shown either on BBC or ITV, with the final available on both will be live coverage of 16 matches on BBC One, BBC Two and iPlayer with Gabby Logan, Alex Scott and Jeanette Kwakye presenting across the tournament. This includes Wales v Netherlands and England v Netherlands on BBC One. France v England, France v Wales and England v Wales will be on Radio, there will be 25 live match commentaries on Radio 5 Live, Radio 5 Sports Extra and BBC Sounds across the tournament. BBC Radio Wales and BBC Radio Cymru are covering Wales' games, providing commentary in English and BBC Sport website, app and social media will cover every moment with live match reports, clips, highlights, interviews and there are lots of podcasts to help you get your football fix including Football Daily, featuring interviews with players and managers, and Feast of Football, bringing you all the latest news from Euro 2025.

Women's Euro 2025 team guides: England
Women's Euro 2025 team guides: England

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Women's Euro 2025 team guides: England

This article is part of the Guardian's Euro 2025 Experts' Network, a cooperation between some of the best media organisations from the 16 countries who qualified. is running previews from two teams each day in the run-up to the tournament kicking off on 2 July. England travel to Switzerland with expectations as high as ever. However, they have had a tumultuous buildup to the tournament, where they will aim to defend their title from 2022. The retirement of the goalkeeper Mary Earps and midfielder Fran Kirby, followed by the withdrawal of centre-back Millie Bright, for very different reasons, put them at the centre of a storm of intrigue one month out. Where does that leave the team? Despite those absences England's squad is packed with potential. The return of Lauren Hemp, Alex Greenwood and Georgia Stanway following knee surgeries this year is a huge boost, despite their limited match action this season. Bright's absence means there is pressure on Greenwood to be at her best alongside Leah Williamson in central defence. Look down the squad list and the midfield looks somewhat light, with only five players named, including Stanway, who only played 60 minutes of football in 2024-25. 'We have to announce it as strikers, midfielders and defenders, but you can move players around into different positions,' said the head coach, Sarina Wiegman. 'So it looks like there's not much depth on paper, but in the team we have enough depth in midfield.' Williamson can play in midfield, as can Maya Le Tissier, or Lauren James, and the former head coach Phil Neville experimented with Lucy Bronze more centrally. However, any of these players being forced to shift positions would be a big departure from a desired starting XI and a test of their adaptability. Can England defend their title? They have a shot. However, having been drawn in the trickiest of groups, with matches against France, then the Netherlands and finally Wales, they will not be afforded time to grow into the tournament. Progressing to the knockout stages having beaten some big names, on the other hand, would benefit the group's momentum. Sarina Wiegman has a remarkable record in major tournaments, having reached four finals in a row, winning the Euros in 2017 with the Netherlands and five years later with England, while getting to two World Cup finals. She heads to Switzerland with a third successive European title in her sights but also perhaps under more pressure than ever. The retirements of Earps and Kirby and subsequent withdrawal of Bright left many asking if all remains sunny in the England camp. Having previously been applauded for her straight-talking style and the clarity it provides for players, her ruthlessness is now raising some concerns. However, if that approach leads England to victory again, the narrative will shift back into it being a positive. Leah Williamson oozes star quality and following the withdrawal of Bright, and Greenwood only recently returning from injury, there is more pressure on the Champions League winner to deliver from the back. The 28-year-old is as vital to England's forward play as she is to their defensive structure and solidity, her incisive passes from deep and driving runs critical to the way England play. Having missed out on the 2023 World Cup following an ACL rupture, the journey back to full fitness and peak performance hasn't been the smoothest. However, Arsenal's Champions League triumph showed the centre-back is back to her best and in the final there was no beating her. 'No one ever knows what's going on behind the scenes,' she said afterwards. 'I was only fully fit from illness or injury in November last year. I keep my head down, keep trying my best and keep working.' 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 Earps's retirement puts pressure on the Chelsea shot-stopper Hannah Hampton. The treble-winner has 15 caps for England and will start in goal for the holders as well as helping guide the uncapped Khiara Keating and Anna Moorehouse through it. Hampton was winning the battle to be England's No 1 anyway, with the 24-year-old's distribution a highlight, but Earp's presence on the global stage was considerable. Hampton has shown she can perform when it matters, having been preferred to Earps several times, including against Spain in the Arnold Clark Cup and Nations League. Euro 2025 will pose a greater challenge. The Women's Super League enters its next phase after one season under WSL Football, the body which took over the running of the top two tiers from the FA in August 2024. Rebranded and with new minimum standards to be introduced, including the Championship (now WSL2) aligning with the top flight in becoming a fully professional league, expectations of next season are high. A record five-year broadcast rights deal was signed with the BBC and Sky Sports in 2024 and is worth £65m plus production costs. Meanwhile growing attendances, spearheaded by Arsenal, and increasing club investments at the top end, such as Alexis Ohanian's £20m in Chelsea, have put playing in England on the wishlist of many top international players. The sky's the limit. However, England are in a difficult group. Escaping that will be a feat in itself but, while anything other than winning the tournament will feel disappointing, a semi-final exit would not be a disaster. Things cannot progress upwards in a straight line for ever.

Women's Euro 2025 team guides: Sweden
Women's Euro 2025 team guides: Sweden

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Women's Euro 2025 team guides: Sweden

This article is part of the Guardian's Euro 2025 Experts' Network, a cooperation between some of the best media organisations from the 16 countries who qualified. is running previews from two teams each day in the run-up to the tournament kicking off on 2 July. Sweden's journey to the Euros was both complicated and straightforward. The complicated bit came first and involved being drawn in the same group as England and France: Sweden ultimately finished third despite drawing twice with the European champions. That led to the simple bit: a playoff where Serbia were taken apart 8-0 on aggregate. After that came a mixed Nations League campaign. Denmark were beaten home and away, Sweden scoring eight goals over two matches. Wales proved a harder nut to crack, with Rhian Wilkinson's team coming away with two 1-1 draws. Given that every match was competitive the head coach, Peter Gerhardsson, could not afford to rotate his squad much. For example, going into the game against Norway on 26 June, there was only one goalkeeper available with international experience: Jennifer Falk. The two back-ups, Tove Enblom and Emma Holmgren, are yet to play at senior level. Gerhardsson, however, was unconcerned. 'I don't know if it really matters,' he said. 'If one of them had played and conceded a lot of goals, that selection might have backfired – and then you'd have to take that result with you into the Euros.' In general Sweden have been fortunate with injuries but during the final camp Arsenal's Rosa Kafaji withdrew with a foot injury and in the big win against Denmark in early June, the Barcelona star Fridolina Rolfö also suffered a foot injury. On 9 June Barça said the player had suffered ligament damage but Sweden's medical team are confident she will be fit for the opening fixture against Denmark on 4 July. The key midfielder is Real Madrid's Filippa Angeldahl, Gerhardsson's trusted general on the pitch, and she contributes with her fair share of goals. Nathalie Björn and Magdalena Eriksson are reliable choices at centre-back, while on the right, Hanna Lundkvist has become first-choice but she is now facing competition from the youngster Smilla Holmberg. Up front, the attacking trio of Rolfö, Stina Blackstenius and Johanna Rytting Kaneryd will once again lead the line, having proved their consistency for some time now. This is a special tournament for the head coach, Peter Gerhardsson, his last in charge. He will be replaced by the former Australia head coach, Tony Gustavsson, after Euro from Uppsala and a former top-flight player for Hammarby, Gerhardsson has been in charge since 2017. In nearly eight years he has led Sweden to two World Cup bronze medals, an Olympic silver and a European Championship semi-final. He also walked into a broom cupboard after a press conference at the 2023 World Cup, to everyone's amusement, a moment immortalised by the Guardian cartoonist David Squires. Gerhardsson was delighted: 'For me, who liked cartoons when I grew up, that was big. It can't be easy to feature in a Guardian cartoon. I managed that without even trying! I felt: 'Damn, that's fun.' The fact that they were poking fun at me I don't care about. I am who I am. I try to be honest to myself so here I am, that has pros and cons. You have to take that.' Johanna Rytting Kaneryd. Sweden have several high-profile players, such as Stina Blackstenius and Fridolina Rolfö, but Chelsea's Rytting Kaneryd was trusted by her club coach Sonia Bompastor during the 2024-25 season and was named Sweden's footballer of the year for 2024-25. She played a key role in Chelsea's domestic treble and was one of Sweden's most important players in both the Euro qualifiers and the Nations League. She is best known for her speed and fearless one-on-one play down the flank. As Magdalena Eriksson said: 'As a former left-back I can just say that she's a full-back's worst nightmare.' The 18-year-old full-back Smilla Holmberg is one of the most exciting and intriguing players in the squad. Holmberg and another youngster, her Hammarby teammate Ellen Wangerheim, both have huge potential. But while Wangerheim has been linked with several big clubs abroad it has been relatively quiet for Holmberg. That might be about to change. She made an impressive debut against Italy in the Nations League and if she continues on the same path most clubs will want her. A fearless full-back who is not afraid to attack, she is also remarkably composed in defence. 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 Damallsvenskan has historically had a high status. It produces talented players who frequently move on to top international leagues. However in recent years the Swedish league has lost some status globally – a challenge currently being addressed in Sweden to keep pace with the rapidly growing major leagues. The league is officially classed as professional but some aspects are more semi-professional. Many players have other jobs alongside their playing careers. There is a lot of talent coming through, including Häcken's Felicia Schröder, as well as the Hammarby duo Wangerheim and Holmberg. Sweden are traditionally a strong tournament team. They should advance from the group, though Germany will be a tough opponent. A potential quarter-final against England or France would be a major obstacle and it's reasonable to think that the journey will end there. The Sweden team guide was written by Ella Lindvall for Fotbollskanalen.

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