
Tour de France 2025: Valentin Paret-Peintre conquers Mont Ventoux to win stage 16
Date: 2025-07-22T15:32:45.000Z
Title: Here's the report on a French victory on the most fearsome climb of all.
Content: The first French stage win of Le Tour came on the legendary peak as Tadej Pogacar stayed in full race control
John Brewin
Tue 22 Jul 2025 16.32 BST
First published on Tue 22 Jul 2025 10.30 BST
4.30pm BST
16:30
Updated
at 4.32pm BST
4.16pm BST
16:16
Vingegaard on that prang with a snapper: 'Some photographer just ran out in front of me straight after the finish line. I don't know what he was doing. I went down. People in the finish area should use their eyes a bit more.'
4.13pm BST
16:13
Geraint Thomas, the 2018 winner, was relieved to ride Ventoux for the last time: 'Super loud. Yeah, enjoyed it, yeah. Yeah, can't wait. No, I just keep trying, like, I just feeling in my age a bit, to be honest with the old jumping around. It's it's hard work. Lucky, I don't feel it at the minute. But no. Yeah, we just got to keep trying. We got a time in there at the end. And yeah, just stay active, like obviously tomorrow, sprint stage on paper, but I think other teams are going to try again. Every day has been full gas, so I don't see it being any different, really. think just the whole peloton is just better condition, you know, it's just so many more guys can keep riding out and keep attacking and just keep going. It's just the depth, the depth of the peloton is just that's the biggest, like difference.'
4.04pm BST
16:04
Ominously, Tadej Pogacar leads the polka on countback and in the green jersey standings, he's in with a big chance.
King of the Mountains
1. Tadej Pogacar (SLO) UAE Team Emirates - XRG 60
2. Lenny Martinez (FRA) Bahrain Victorious
3. Thymen Arensman (NED) INEOS Grenadiers 48
4. Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) Team Visma - Lease a Bike 45
5. Michael Woods (CAN) Israel - Premier Tech 38
Points leaders
1. Jonathan Milan (ITA) Lidl - Trek 251
2. Tadej Pogacar (SLO) UAE Team Emirates - XRG 240
3. Biniam Girmay (ERI) Intermarché - Wanty 169
4. Tim Merlier (BEL) Soudal Quick-Step 150
5. Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) Team Visma - Lease a Bike '
4.02pm BST
16:02
1. Tadej Pogacar (SLO) UAE Team Emirates - XRG 58:24:46
2. Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) Team Visma - Lease a Bike +4:15
3. Florian Lipowitz (GER) Red Bull - BORA - +9:03
4. Oscar Onley (GBR) Team Picnic PostNL +11:04
5. Primo* Roglic (SLO) Red Bull - BORA - +11:42
6. Kévin Vauquelin (FRA) Arkéa - B&B Hotels +13:20
7. Felix Gall (AUT) Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale +14:50
8. Tobias Johannessen (NOR) Uno-X Mobility +17:01
9. Ben Healy (IRL) EF Education - EasyPost +17:52
10. Carlos Rodríguez (ESP) INEOS Grenadiers +20:45
4.00pm BST
16:00
Martin Lowe gets in touch: 'When was the last time two hirsute faces went one two in any cycling race? Marginal gains? Leading from the front?'
My colleague Beau Dure: 'Congratulations to Paret-Peintre for brilliantly .... letting Healy do all the work and then passing him at the end as if he actually did something.
(Yeah, I know -- easy for me to say. I probably couldn't walk up Mont Ventoux, let alone drag a bike up it.)'
Alistair in Lyon: 'I holidayed at Bédouin last summer, and contemplated doing the Ventoux. I have done it once, twenty years ago, with a mountain biking group. We took an unusual route, on forest tracks, which bring you to the road a bit above Chalet Renard. Most of the group took a right, to get a beer at the Chalet, and only three of us made it to the top.Last year, we drove up in the end...'
3.58pm BST
15:58
Adam Yates, teammate of Tadej Pogacar, speaks: 'Yeah, it's always a big mess. I think after the rest day everyone wants to try and win, so it was hard going from the beginning.
'You know how, he is, he wants to win every stage. He's, TT whatever, so that's his character, that's his personality. And that's why we work towards, you know, we work hard all year to try and win, so. Yeah, it didn't work out today but after tonight we got two more good days in the mountains and we'll give it a charge.
3.55pm BST
15:55
1. Valentin Paret-Peintre Soudal Quick-Step 4:03:19
(FRA)
2. Ben Healy (IRL) EF Education - EasyPost '
3. Santiago Buitrago (COL) Bahrain Victorious +4
4. Ilan Van Wilder (BEL) Soudal Quick-Step +14
5. Tadej Pogacar (SLO) UAE Team Emirates - XRG +43
6. Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) Team Visma - Lease a Bike +45
7. Enric Mas (ESP) Movistar Team +53
8. Julian Alaphilippe (FRA) Tudor Pro Cycling Team +1:17
9. Primoz Roglic (SLO) Red Bull - BORA - +1:51
10. Florian Lipowitz (GER) Red Bull - BORA - +1:53
3.53pm BST
15:53
Jonas Vingegaard speaks: 'I didn't gain any time today, but I take a lot of motivation today today Yeah, we wanted to have somebody in the break and the team did really amazing today. Everybody worked with everything they had. So, I couldn't. Yeah, it was really commitment from everyone, and everyone was doing super great, so thank you to all my team.
'I mean, he followed me every time I attacked, and I followed him when he attacked, so yeah, I don't know if I could see any weaknesses today now, but at least, yeah, it gives me some motivation, how good I saw today and as I said earlier, I will keep trying.'
He was not happy there, having crashed into a photographer who had got in the way after he cleared the finishing line.
3.46pm BST
15:46
Ireland's Healy denied, France and Soudal Quick-Step rider victorious. Roglic comes over the top, and he will displace Oscar Onley's in the GC.
Updated
at 3.47pm BST
3.43pm BST
15:43
And Pogacar comes over the line, leading Vingegaard home. Vismas tried their best to crack Pogacar, but a tad off form, they can cannot break him.
3.42pm BST
15:42
Pogacar and Vingegaard are within 45 seconds, and up at the front, Van Wilder, thought to be lost in the broken breakaway, joins a quartet who want this famous stage.
Healy goes, and leads round the hairpin but Paret-Peintre captures it for France. Healy had no answer.
Updated
at 3.45pm BST
3.38pm BST
15:38
1km to go: The terrain is desert-like, like Alderaan, as Healy and Paret-Peintre attempt to be tactical. Mas comes back, and now Buitrago is back, like a thief in the night. He couldn't, could he? Four men have their chance. Pogacar meanwhile, goes away, only for Vingegaard to catch him and then counter.
Updated
at 4.00pm BST
3.33pm BST
15:33
2km to go: Paret-Peintre and Healy realise they must race. Mas' great effort is lost. Both the leading duo have had a go at the shaking the other off.
3.32pm BST
15:32
3km to go: Healy and Paret-Peintre pass Mas with ease. No Mas, as Roberto Duran had it. The gap to the yellow jersey is two minutes and it's between the Irishman and the Frenchman. But no, Mas gets back up as the other two quarrel.
Vingegaard takes on Pogacar, who stays in his saddle. The champion is asked to take his turn at the front.
3.28pm BST
15:28
4km to go: The gap between Mas and Healy, followed by Paret-Peintre, has now closed to nine seconds. Mas is surely done. They can see him up the road.
Updated
at 3.28pm BST
3.26pm BST
15:26
5km to go: Chalet Reynard, and no shelter from the sun. Nowhere to hide for Vingegaard and Pogacar. Mas' chasers are arguing over whose turn it is. The gap to Mas tumbles to three minutes. Victor Campenaerts is up the hill, and waiting, and is here to help Vingegaard and Visma.
3.23pm BST
15:23
6km to go: Visma try their best to crash Pogacar as Oscar Onley has to fight off contenders for GC. Vingegaard goes again, but cannot shake off Pogacar.
3.21pm BST
15:21
7km to go: Here goes Vingegaard, and this is it. This is the moment when Vingegaard looks to crack Pogacar. Roglic is able to stay with them. It took 30 seconds from group in front. Tiesj Benoot, up the hill, is there to lead Vingo. Pogacar's lieutenant, Soler, was up the hill but burned up.
Updated
at 4.00pm BST
3.17pm BST
15:17
8km to go: We approach the section where the hills no longer provide shade. Simon Yates has been dropped from the group to support Vingegaard. Le Chalet Reynard awaits.
3.15pm BST
15:15
9km to go: Sivakov, a vital domestique for Pogacar, has dropped off as soon as he is asked to carry Pogacar. Arensman drops Alaphilippe and the Healy group catches them.
3.10pm BST
15:10
10km to go: Mas has a great victory within his grasp, as his chasers are 30 seconds down, gap that goes to almost 50 seconds. The real quiz is now down the hill. Pogacar has Yates and Wellens for company. Kuss is leading Vingegaard along though Visma have lost Simon Yates, who doesn't look at his best.
Updated
at 3.59pm BST
3.04pm BST
15:04
12km to go: Back in the peloton, UAE and Visma – the teams of Pogacar and Vingegaard – are cooking something, plotting against each other. Both have riders up ahead. Oscar Onley is up there, too, with Warren Barguil, a great lost talent, as his domestique.
3.01pm BST
15:01
13km to go: Uh oh, the peloton is motoring up this hill like Hells Angels in the Peaks. They are gobbling up time. Can Mas et al hold them off? Mas has won a stage at the Vuelta. Arensman and Alaphilippe are dropped. Movistar are looking to end their drought. Their last winner was Nairo Quintana in 2019.
2.57pm BST
14:57
14km to go: How will the peloton fit on these crowded roads? Geraint Thomas is one of those being spat out the back. The yellow jersey group is way behind but that doesn't preclude fireworks between them towards the summit. Enric Mas has a dig for victory, trying to shell Alaphilippe and Arsensman.
2.54pm BST
14:54
15km to go: The crowds are huge as the climb begins. Mas, Arensman and Alaphilippe are the leaders. The peloton starts to kick on and the field in thinning out on the 'Bald Mountain'. Incredible scenes, shades of Froome in 2016.
2.50pm BST
14:50
16km to go: Arensman, Alaphilippe, Mas, Velasco and Abrahamsen, a group splintered, with Trentin's big haul coming to its end. Martinez has been kicked down the field, with a mechanical fault not helping. His polka is in danger should Pogacar actually attack.
2.48pm BST
14:48
18km to go: Alaphilippe – radio on – decides he's having a go. No French stage winner this day. Arensman, a winner in the Pyrenees, is struggling. Abrahamsen wants to have a go, too.
2.46pm BST
14:46
21km to go: Here is Bédoin, and that means we are now climbing climbing climbing until the end of the day. The gap is 6' 50', does this mean UAE and Pogacar have decided the break is clear? Will the winner come from the two lead groups? Alaphilippe, Martinez and Healy all with chances.
2.37pm BST
14:37
25km to go: The breakaway brotherhood are beginning to climb out of their saddles. The Ventoux climb begins around 21km out, with 4.5km of relatively gentle climbing followed by 16.5km of sheer hell. Time to take on food and water, and hope the legs are working well. Behind, Team UAE loom, ready to go when the moment comes.
Neil Broderick is here: 'Michael Forbes: 'Just wondering about your thoughts on Vingegaard this year: is he physically finished, or is all the drama with his wife and the team responsible for his poor showing? '
'This is a sad commentary on modern sport when being the second best cyclist in the world is equivalent to being 'physically finished'. Vingegaard is still minutes ahead of everyone else which is a major achievement.'
He's still just 28, which used to be the time when riders were considered ripe to win the race.
Updated
at 2.39pm BST
2.28pm BST
14:28
30km to go: The foothills are here. Pogacar is 6' 30' back. He's given himself plenty to do. Though it still feels as if UAE are in control. The renegades at the front will surely be gobbled up.
2.22pm BST
14:22
35km to go: John Westwell gets in touch: 'Although Gary Naylor makes a valid point about Pogacar being a true patron and allowing a break to contest today's stage, I don't think he's that sort of rider.
'As someone who encourages the comparison with Eddy Merckxx, Pogacar is only too aware that Merckxx won atop Ventoux in 1970. I'd be amazed if he doesn't want to do the same today. And his team seems to be riding to keep three riders out front with a small gap which can be pulled back on or before the final climb.'
William Preston: 'Although I mainly agree with Gary Naylor: Pogacar could refrain from getting a stomp on and leave the thrilling heroics to others; a philosopher once said 'there are no gifts on the Ventoux'. I genuinely look forward to seeing some brilliant climbing across the peloton, and a super party atmosphere.'
Nick Wayne: 'As Pog said he's paid (handsomely) to race. Wouldn't put it past UAE to give him a humongous bonus for all three jerseys. But I'm hoping Lenny det polka and Milan stays in green.'
David Alderton: 'Campenaerts has had a stellar two weeks. A workhorse of a man. Ventoux is probably my favourite mountain after the Armstrong and Pantani duel many years ago. Such epic days have been witnessed here.'
Michael Forbes: 'Just wondering about your thoughts on Vingegaard this year: is he physically finished, or is all the drama with his wife and the team responsible for his poor showing? '
Yes, shades of Mrs Froome's involvement a few years back though I'd say Vingo is a) against a peaking Pog and b) still hungover from last year's amazing effort after his Basque crash.
2.18pm BST
14:18
40km to go: Fred Wright (Bahrain Victorious), Thymen Arensman (Ineos Grenadiers), Julian Alaphilippe and Matteo Trentin (Tudor Pro Cycling), Enric Mas (Movistar), Simone Velasco (Astana) and Jonas Abrahamsen (Uno-X Mobility) are the group leading Healy but nobody is really busting a gut. Bedoin, not so far up the road, awaits. And that's when it begins.
2.08pm BST
14:08
50km to go: The games continue, and a crosswind approaches. Ben Healy is in a group a minute off the leaders. It's time to work out who has a chance can stay away on Ventoux. The answer, most probably, is nobody.
1.57pm BST
13:57
59km to go: Here comes that sprint, and the points do not go to Milan. His team have dropped the ball here. Girmay is nowhere near, either. Jonas Abrahamsen of Uno-X Mobility takes it, with few interested chasers. Simone Velasco of Astana has a half-hearted go.
Updated
at 2.06pm BST
1.46pm BST
13:46
65 km to go: Apologies for the use of X, but here's the personnel in the breakaway. It's splitting in half now, too.
🏁 80 km
3️⃣5️⃣ 🚴♂️ < 42"2️⃣🚴♂️ < 2'47" < 🚴♂️🚴♂️🚴♂️🚴♂️🚗
Breakaway of the day / L'échappée du jour ⬇️
🇮🇪 Ben Healy
🇳🇱 @ThymenArensman
🇪🇸 @EnricMasNicolau
🇦🇹 Gregor Mühlberger
🇧🇪 Xandro Meurisse
🇧🇪 Ilan Van Wilder
🇧🇪 Victor Campenaerts
🇪🇸 @raul_gass
🇪🇸 @solermarc93
🇳🇱 @PascalEenkhoorn
🇮🇹… pic.twitter.com/sPKKEC4u8G
1.42pm BST
13:42
70km to go: The sprint draws clear, as they speed through beautiful countryside and then some more suburban scenery. The sprint is at Châteauneuf-du-Pape, who all you winos will recognise the name. Not cheap, usually.
Wiki: 'literally translates to 'The Pope's new castle' and, indeed, the history of this appellation is firmly entwined with papal history. In 1309, Pope Clement V, former Archbishop of Bordeaux, relocated the papacy to the town of Avignon. Clement V and subsequent 'Avignon Popes' were said to be great lovers of Burgundy wines and did much to promote them during the 70-year Avignon Papacy.'
Does this mean they go sur le pont d'Avignon?
1.35pm BST
13:35
80km to go: A downhill section – welcome, no doubt – and Jonathan Milan's team has missed the break, and that could damage his chances of the green jersey. He's 2' 25' off the front of the course. In a group ahead, Biniam Girmay is looking to take points off the green holder. Soler and Sivakov of Team UAE are in the break, to do that police work.
1.24pm BST
13:24
90km to go: Here comes what Jim Davidson would call a big break. But it's too big to stay away in truth. Healy, Ireland's hero, is involved. Here's Alaphilippe, the 'winner' of Sunday's stage. This is chaotic stuff, really. There's 30 riders or so up there, and the gap is a minute or so. Food and bottles are taken on in the peloton.
1.13pm BST
13:13
100 km to go: The sprint is 40km to go, and the break is being closed down. Feels like a phoney war for much of the day then blast off as the Ventoux beckons. Lots of trepidation for a climb that holds such portents of doom. As the 100km clock is reached, the break is closed by mostly Visma riders from Vingegaard's team. Wout van Aert is on manoeuvres.
1.01pm BST
13:01
110 km to go: Comfort breaks are taken, but not in the breakaway who open up the gap. Such a long way to go for them. Anyone winning from that trio would be borderline miraculous. They are 1' 45' clear. But not for long, as Schmid and Plapp set of for Team Jayco.
Joseph gets in touch: 'We're following your live commentary sat in Bedoin at the foot of Ventoux. The whole town is buzzing.'
Presume not buzzing at my plodding prose, instead the key stage of Le Tour 2025.
Updated
at 1.47pm BST
12.43pm BST
12:43
120 km to go: Sally Ledger gets in touch: 'Morning John, I'm in exactly the same position as Huw Morgan (without the 3pm board meeting) and am also a Pogacar superfan. I know where Huw's coming from but, unlike John [Huw?], I want Pogacar to absolutely crush it today. I know most want a close fought tussle but I just love watching him take flight. I'm actually quite nervous on his behalf. Go Pogi!'
Gary Naylor makes a fine point: 'I believe that Pogacar is growing into an old school patron and, as such, it's his responsibility to ensure that the race bestows its gifts generously. So I hope he just marks Visma today and lets a break go. The race needs a climber and a sprinter in the jerseys on Sunday and only he can ensure that.'
The trio breakaway stay away but within easy reach.
12.33pm BST
12:33
125km to go: Much chicanery, though the escapees will be allowed to stay away for now. Nils Pollitt, the domestique for UAE and Pogacar, is doing a policing job on the front, making sure nobody joins the trio 45 seconds clear, though the clock soon reverts to 33 seconds. UAE want this for their man. Milan wants to be up the front for his green jersey point. The sprint isn't until 59km left in the stage.
Updated
at 12.37pm BST
12.30pm BST
12:30
140 km to go: They're rattling along at 60 km/h and the break loses its advantage. It looks like breaks will come and go until that final fateful climb.
11.59am BST
11:59
155km to go: Here go three men good and true in another attempt to establish a break. The gap is eight seconds but climbs to 25. Meurrise, Haller and Hirschi are those up in the vanguard. Marc Hirschi won on stage 11 in 2020, a hilly stage ending in Sarran.
11.44am BST
11:44
165km to go: Lenny Martinez is up the front, and will fancy another breakaway to land his polka points. The breaks aren't snagging just yet. Montpellier is left behind as the Med coast appears in view. It looks ridiculously beautiful.
Huw Morgan gets in touch: 'Work web filtering means I'm on the live updates only. My colleague Libby has wisely chosen to WFH so she can watch it. I'm not so lucky with a board meeting to attend at 3pm. I've been following cycling for 3 years now and I've never seen a stage like this. Flat, flat, flat, BANG. Absolutely buzzing to watch it with my wife when I get home from work! We're Pogacar super fans but hoping for a real tussle on Ventoux with Pog losing some time.'
11.39am BST
11:39
171.2 km to go: Christian Prudhomme waves them away, and off goes an immediate breakaway, with Wout van Aert among them. Ivan Romeo is there, too, as is Jonathan Milan, still fighting off Pogacar.
Updated
at 11.50am BST
11.38am BST
11:38
Strava's read on the Ventoux climb.
Any segment where Tadej Pogačar is No1 on the leaderboard is going to hurt – his time of exactly 1 hour for this 13.4 mile / 21.5km climb during the 2021 Tour is almost unfathomable. But put that time to one side and concentrate on the road in front of you, as this climb is known as the 'Beast of Provence' for a reason: the last 3.7 miles / 6km are painful, and mentally you should prepare yourself.
The views up to that point are largely forest-based, but once you exit the trees you're in a dusty, rock-strewn lunar landscape, exposed to potentially strong winds, low temperatures and hovering clouds. Look out for Tom Simpson's memorial, as that means you have just 1km left to the summit where your legs can rest.
11.30am BST
11:30
The Dutchman has been diagnosed with pneumonia and will not start Stage 16 on Tuesday, having been a leading light and worn yellow in Le Tour's opening week.
'Mathieu had been experiencing symptoms of a common cold over the past few days. Yesterday afternoon, his condition began to worsen significantly.' his Alpecin-Deceuninck team said in a statement. He was third in the points classification for the green jersey at the time of his withdrawal, behind Jonathan Milan and Tadej Pogacar.
11.22am BST
11:22
There's 8km to go until the départ réel, when the attacks are expected from the get-go.
11.19am BST
11:19
11.14am BST
11:14
Nick Wayne gets in touch: 'I suppose it's a sign of maturity if he saves his energy for the Alps. It would also make for a cracking stage win if he blasts out of the pedals a few K before the line. '
Pogacar has sat up the last two stages, allowed the breakaway to go.
10.30am BST
10:30
Is the race for the yellow jersey over? Not according to Jonas Vingegaard, the two-time winner promising to go for broke.
'We have to try to do something,' he said, and insisted that he was willing to risk everything to win. 'There needs to be a weakness somewhere on Tadej's part. For now, we haven't found it, but we'll keep trying. I'm willing to sacrifice second place to go for first.'
10.30am BST
10:30
William Fotheringham on the legend of Ventoux.
Tempora mutantur, but not the Ventoux. That, partly, reflects one of the key features of the Tour; the way it constantly revisits and rewrites its past in places that have barely changed since the first visit. Go round the partly banked corner at Saint-Estève and on to the virtually straight haul through the oak-wooded lower slopes, and it's essentially the same brutal experience that the stars of the 50s, 60s and 70s might have undergone, perhaps with better tarmac as you go up with barely a hairpin to break the gradient until the final haul across the scree slopes to the top.
10.30am BST
10:30
Here then, is the Alpine stage that rivals only Alpe d'Huez for its place in folklore of Le Tour. And unlike L'Alpe, visits are far rarer. As the riders head towards the summit finish, they will visit terrain that bears closes resemblance to the surface of the Moon rather than the sweeping greenery of le belle campagne. It was last the finish of a stage in 2016, won by Thomas de Gendt, but memorable for Chris Froome running up that hill. The man in the frame today is Tadej Pogacar, and he seeks to emulate the greats in winning on Ventoux, which he climbed up – and twice – in 2021, smashing the field as he did. Poulidor, Merckx and Pantani all raised their arms in victory in that rarified air so can he?
The neutralised start is 11.10 UK time. Join us.
Updated
at 10.37am BST
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- BBC News
Pogacar to skip Vuelta to focus on Worlds defence
Tour de France winner Tadej Pogacar will not race in next month's Vuelta a Espana as he takes a break before focusing on the World won his fourth Tour de France last week to further establish himself as the dominant force in modern 26-year-old won road race gold at the World Championships last year with an epic attack from 100km out and is aiming to defend his crown in Rwanda in late UAE Team Emirates-XRG rider will return to racing at the Canadian one-day races in Quebec and Montreal in mid-September."I'm excited to go back to Canada; the races are tough but beautiful, and they fit my style well," Pogacar said."I'll be aiming to be back racing well again for that part of the season and for the World Championships especially."The Vuelta is the only one of the three Grand Tours Pogacar has not won, having finished third during his only appearance in 2025 World Championships will be the first to take place in Africa and will be held in the Rwandan capital Kigali from 21-28 September.


The Guardian
7 hours ago
- The Guardian
It's staying home: England's road to Euro 2025 glory
Over little more than three weeks in July, from Zurich via St Gallen, and Lancy to Basel, Guardian writers have followed every step of England's journey across Switzerland during Women's Euro 2025. Under Sarina Wiegman, the Lionesses became the first England team to win a trophy on foreign soil. Here are our favourite pictures coupled with excerpts from our match reports and blogs. GAME 1: GROUP D 5 JULY, STADION LETZIGRUND France 2 (Katoto 36, Baltimore 39) England 1 (Walsh 87) England's goalkeeper Hannah Hampton, right, fails to save a shot by France's Sandy Baltimore as England stumbled in their opening game of the tournament. Photograph above: Michael Buholzer/AP. Click on the images below to reveal further captions. The hour mark was approaching when Sarina Wiegman rolled the dice or, perhaps more accurately, reached for the comfort blanket. A salvage operation of this scale had not been part of anyone's masterplan, but at least Ella Toone and Chloe Kelly knew exactly how to move the dial at a European Championship. They were the history makers at Wembley in England's most recent appearance on this stage; if it was going to be anyone, it surely had to be them. There were to be no heroics this time, even if Selma Bacha's late clearance was ultimately all that came between Wiegman's players and a draw. That statement is, in itself, illusory because the manager must face questions about her selection here. She had plumped for Lauren James's explosive gifts in the No 10 position, sticking to the claim that the Chelsea forward was ready to ramp up her recovery from injury, but the call backfired badly. England were misshapen and leggy where it mattered; the game simply got away from them and so, with another ill-conceived step against the Netherlands, could their Euro 2025 campaign. A positive reading might be that England were sharpened up here: given the jolt reigning champions sometimes Ames GAME 2: GROUP D 9 JULY, STADION LETZIGRUND England 4 (James 22 60, Stanway 45, Toone 67) Netherlands 0 England's Georgia Stanway celebrates scoring their second goal with Ella Toone in a resounding performance against fellow heavyweights the Netherlands. Photograph above: Annegret Hilse/Reuters. Click on the images below to reveal further captions. From shambolic to sublime, England brushed off fears of a group-stage exit with a thrilling and clinical defeat of the Netherlands. England know how to win knockout matches and that was the territory they had entered a little earlier than planned. They also know how to shake off a defeat against top-level teams, their 2-1 Nations League loss to France in May 2024 followed by a 2-1 win over the same opposition in Saint-Étienne four days later. They also knew they had lost opening games and gone far at the World Cup in 2015 and the Euros in 2009. Messages came in from former Lionesses to remind them of those things, the Euro 2022 group chat still active. The difference between the sloppy and slightly shellshocked play against France and the focused and aggressive football played against the Netherlands in a sunny Stadion Letzigrund was night and day. The threat of an exit had sharpened the minds and the passing significantly, and Keira Walsh, Georgia Stanway and Ella Toone dictated play from the middle and increased the potency of Lauren Hemp and Lauren James out wide as Andries Jonker's side got narrower and narrower. England's title defence is well and truly alive, but they will be cautious. Suzanne Wrack GAME 3: GROUP D 13 JULY, ARENA ST GALLEN England 6 (Stanway 13pen, Toone 22, Hemp 30, Russo 44, Mead 72, Beever-Jones 89 Wales 1 Cain 76 Ella Toone scores England's second goal against Wales in a widely-expected demolition job that sealed their place in the knock-out stages. Photograph above: Annegret Hilse/Reuters. Click on the images below to reveal further captions. Sarina Wiegman said her Lionesses side found a sense of 'urgency' to book their place in the quarter-finals of the European Championship with a comfortable 6-1 victory over Wales. 'This urgency comes [after the France defeat],' the England head coach said. 'You could see the togetherness of our team. We knew today would be a different game because we knew we would have the ball a lot. I'm very happy with the performance. We knew that Wales really wanted to fight and we tried to stay out of it. I think in most of the moments we did but in the beginning we were sloppy.' A key part of England's improved form during a tough Group D was a shift in gameplan from Wiegman and the coaching staff . One change has been the introduction of Ella Toone back into the No 10 role against the Netherlands with the ever-creative Lauren James moving out to the right. Keira Walsh, the Uefa player of the match, credited Toone for England's change in fortunes. 'She's come in and done an incredible job,' she said. 'People speak about her off ensively, but the defensive work she does for me and Georgia [Stanway] when she's in [the No 10 role] is incredible. She covers a lot of spaces that we can't.' Sophie Downey GAME 4: QUARTER-FINAL 17 JULY, STADION LETZIGRUND Sweden 2 (Asllani 2, Blackstenius 25) England 2 (Bronze 79, Agyemang 81) AET England won 3-2 on penalties England's Lucy Bronze scores a penalty past Sweden goalkeeper Jennifer Falk during the shootout after an epic comeback from two goals down. Photograph above: Martin Meissner/AP. Click on the images below to reveal further captions. The Letzigrund looks gorgeous under a pale pastel evening sun. The noise washes over the athletics track where Carl Lewis and Asafa Powell once broke the world record, and where Sweden are now flying out of the blocks and leaving England trailing in their dust. We do not yet know that in many ways this is simply the prologue, that this devastating early two-goal flurry is actually relatively benign in comparison with the carnage that will follow. We do not yet know that Lauren James will end up playing almost an hour in a double pivot. We do not yet know that Lucy Bronze will end up wearing the captain's armband on her wrist and kicking a giant credit card advert. Hannah Hampton, nose still unbloodied, has not the faintest inkling that this will end up being the greatest night of her career. But they all know something. Even if they're not entirely conscious of it. Even as an utterly shambolic England trail Sweden 2-0 and the obituaries for their campaign are being scribbled, there is a little knot of refusal there, a team with an entirely unwarranted calmness at its core, a team that against all the available visual evidence still trusts that everything is going to work out. Perhaps the hallmark of certain great teams is in sensing almost subconsciously when they are allowed to play badly and when they are not, when the level needs to be raised, when the stakes are at their sharpest. Jonathan Liew GAME 5: SEMI-FINAL 22 JULY, STADE DE GENÈVE England 2 (Agyemang 90+5, Kelly 120) Italy 1 (Bonansea 33) England won in extra time Chloe Kelly celebrates with Michelle Agyemang after scoring the winning goal late in extra-time. Photograph above: Jose Breton/NurPhoto/Shutterstock. Click on the images below to reveal further captions. Chloe Kelly said England's saviour Michelle Agyemang has the 'world at her feet' after the 19-year-old striker's late leveller rescued the defending champions in their nerve-jangling semi-final victory against Italy. England's remarkably late comeback, with Agyemang scoring in the sixth minute of second-half stoppage time before Kelly's winner in the penultimate minute of extra time, booked the Lionesses a place in their third consecutive major tournament final. 'Big Mich at it again!' Kelly said to ITV Sport, discussing Agyemang's third goal in four senior international games since her April debut. 'She's unbelievable and she should have scored again: that one that hit the crossbar. She's an unbelievable player and she's got the world at her feet, a young player with a bright future and I'm absolutely buzzing for her.' The match was played two days after Jess Carter revealed she had received what the England team described as poisonous racist abuse on social media. The Lionesses said they were not going to take the knee before the game. Instead, the substitutes stood arm in arm on the touchline before kick-off, including Kelly, who said: 'I'm so proud to stand side by side with the girls in this team; Jess Carter and every single player in this team.' Tom Garry GAME 6: FINAL 27 JULY, ST JAKOB-PARK England 1 (Russo 57) Spain 1 (Caldentey 25) AET England won 3-1 on penalties Click on the images below to reveal further captions. Penalties: England 2-1 Spain (in the shootout). Now the pressure is on Spain and who else but Aitana Bonmatí? She steps up but Hannah Hampton saves!! Penalties: England 2-1 Spain. Now the pressure really is on Spain but England cannot afford to slip up here. For England it's Leah Williamson. The captain misses. Penalties: England 2-1 Spain. So Spain have a chance to level it again here. It's Salma Paralluelo and she misses. Penalties: England 3-1 Spain. Oh my word. These shootouts. If England score here they win the tournament. It's Chloe Kelly. Huge pressure on her shoulders and she scores. ENGLAND HAVE WON THE EUROS ON PENALTIES Wow. Oh my word. What have we just watched? Kelly clutch. Hannah Hampton unbelievable. Niamh Charles coming on in that second half of extra time and scoring a cracking penalty. The whole team able to stay present after saves from both goalkeepers. Sarina Wiegman has been an international manager for three Euros. She has won every single one. Sarah Rendell