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World Cup Rematch! Spain Beats Germany To Next Play England In Euro 2025 Final

World Cup Rematch! Spain Beats Germany To Next Play England In Euro 2025 Final

Fox News24-07-2025
Aitana Bonmatí scored in extra time to send Spain to its first-ever UEFA Women's Euro final with a 1-0 win over Germany on Wednesday, setting up a repeat of the 2023 World Cup title match.
A stubborn Germany performance had seen it take the world champions to extra time and Spain needed a superb strike from the two-time Ballon d'Or winner to secure a first-ever win over Germany.
"I feel so proud. We deserved this," Bonmatí said. "We have played a great tournament throughout. We had a hard fight tonight, of course, because we were playing Germany. First to beat Germany and then to advance to the final of the Euros. Who could ask for more?"
In the 113th minute, Athenea del Castillo threaded the ball through to Bonmatí, who got past Rebecca Knaak with a clever dummy and turn before squeezing home an audacious attempt from the tightest of angles.
"We had analyzed her with our analysts and our goalkeeping coach and knew that she would leave the near post unprotected, and that is what happened. I just slotted it home," Bonmatí said.
Spain moved closer to adding the Euro trophy to its collection after winning the World Cup and Nations League in the past two years.
Montse Tomé's team will face defending champion England on Sunday in a repeat of the World Cup final that Spain won 1-0 two years ago.
England also needed extra time to snatch a 2-1 win over Italy on Tuesday.
Germany was bidding for a record-extending ninth European title but it was up against the world champion and pre-tournament favorite.
It almost surprised Spain early on when Klara Bühl ran onto a long ball from goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger but her angled drive went narrowly past the right post.
Germany managed to stifle Spain's stellar attack, which didn't have a real sight of goal until the 21st minute.
Berger had been the hero of Germany's dramatic quarterfinal against France and she pulled off another fantastic save to tip a shot over the bar from the tournament's top goalscorer Esther González.
Giovanna Hoffmann should have given Germany the lead in the 29th minute but she completely missed the ball right in front of goal, with a fresh air shot, after excellent play by Jule Brand.
Spain ended the half strongly, however, and went closest to breaking the deadlock shortly before the interval when Irene Paredes headed a corner off the post and González's attempt at the spectacular, with an overhead kick, was blocked.
Berger also had to make two smart saves in stoppage time, to deny first Gotham FC teammate González and then Clàudia Pina.
Germany had managed to keep Spain star Bonmatí quiet but she almost broke the deadlock in the 58th minute, carving out some space for herself and curling in shot but Sophia Kleinherne slid in and stuck out a leg to put it out.
Cata Coll had had little to do all night but the Spain goalkeeper kept her team in the tournament with a superb double save right at the end of normal time, first to parry from Bühl and then to deny Carlotta Wamser.
Reporting by The Associated Press.
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Slaying the e.l.f.ing Game: e.l.f. Teams Up with Four NWSL Players
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Slaying the e.l.f.ing Game: e.l.f. Teams Up with Four NWSL Players

OAKLAND, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--e.l.f. Cosmetics, a brand from e.l.f. Beauty (NYSE:ELF), signed four powerhouse athletes from the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL), reinforcing its commitment to Empowering. Legendary. Females. on and off the field. e.l.f. Cosmetics signs four National Women's Soccer League athletes, Melanie Barcenas, Abby Dahlkemper, Lo'eau LaBonta and Jaedyn Shaw, reinforcing its commitment to Empowering. Legendary. Females. Share e.l.f. has a multi-year partnership with the league, sharing the goal to level the playing field for the over 400 women who are elevating professional women's soccer in the U.S. - and for the next generation to have the role models to take their own ambitions to the next level. Melanie Barcenas, Abby Dahlkemper, Lo'eau LaBonta and Jaedyn Shaw are the newest bold disruptors to join e.l.f.'s talent roster. Each one brings a powerful story of resilience, perseverance and passion to the pitch. 'Melanie, Abby, Lo'eau and Jaedyn are each powerhouse athletes—bold, fearless, and unapologetically themselves. Their stories reflect the kind of grit, grace and glow that define today's rising legends,' said Patrick O'Keefe, Chief Integrated Marketing Officer, e.l.f. Beauty. 'As part of our e.l.f.‑in‑sports movement, they embody our mission to champion the underrepresented and inspire the next generation of girls through unstoppable positivity, inclusivity and accessibility. They're not just shaking up the game—they're rewriting the rules of what it means to lead, to inspire, and to be legendary.' Meet the team of Barcenas, now 17, made history at just 15 as the youngest player to sign with the NWSL. She continues to balance school and professional soccer as a forward for San Diego Wave FC and represents the U.S. U-17 Women's Youth National Team. 'Balancing school, soccer, and being a teenager isn't easy - but e.l.f. reminds me to have fun with it. 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Back With New England, USMNT GK Turner Is Ready To Turn Heads Again
Back With New England, USMNT GK Turner Is Ready To Turn Heads Again

Forbes

time8 hours ago

  • Forbes

Back With New England, USMNT GK Turner Is Ready To Turn Heads Again

It's a lot closer than you think. The kickoff of the World Cup might be 10 months away, but August could wind up turning into a vital month for the U.S. men's national team. Yes, there are no international friendlies scheduled until the international friendly against the Korea Republic at Sports Illustrated Stadium on Saturday, Sept. 6. But there will be important news transpiring off the field: As where various key players will be competing as they begin their tune-up and find their form for the 2026 World Cup. Over the weekend, it was reported that forward Tim Weah will be loaned by Juventus, where he wasn't getting much playing time, to Olympique Marseille in France. As it turns out, it is the same French Ligue 1 team that his father, the great George Weah, starred for, from 1992-95. On Friday, the New England Revolution announced that it had signed acquired goalkeeper Matt Turner for the rest of his Major League Soccer season and through June 30, 2026, with the Revs having option to buy his contract. No doubt he needs to play regularly if the 25-year-old native wants to be the U.S.'s goalkeeper for the second consecutive World Cup. A mercurial rise After signing with the club as an undrafted free agent out of Fairfield University in 2016, Turner played the next seven seasons with the Revs. During that span, the 6-foot-3, 180-lb. keeper earned 2021 MLS Goalkeeper of the Year and MLS Best XI honors, secured the MLS All-Star Game MVP Award, and helped lead New England to its first Supporters' Shield title. Since venturing over to England to perform for Arsenal in 2022, Turner's playing time has been limited to a paltry 17 league matches. He bounced around to Nottingham Forest and then to Crystal Palace, making a handful of appearances, usually in cup competitions. He thought he finally found a team that he could call home when transferred to Lyon in France for $8 million. However, Lyon fell into financial trouble and the French Ligue 1 club and couldn't add Turner to its roster. So, he returned to New England. "My European adventure, it didn't go perfectly to plan but I did learn a lot along the way," he said during a Monday press conference. "So, I had some misfortunes. I had some opportunities that I didn't make the most of as well. It just didn't go perfectly to plan. However, like I said, I started my beautiful family over there, I have zero regrets about my time in England and I really loved it. I would never shut the door on a return either." Well, let's worry about the next year or so, please. Lyon not in the cards After thinking he finally found a home in Lyon, came the bad news that he could not play for the French side. 'It was a trying time, and it was difficult to be in limbo for a while," Turner said. "And thank you so much to my parents, and my wife's parents who are here today, because without them it would have been really difficult for our family. I mean, no one feels bad for a soccer player, right, because we make millions of dollars and it's all great and well and good, and your problems are insignificant." Turner said he was more concerned about his family, with finding the right schools for his two children and making sure his family had the proper health care insurance, regardless where they were. "Now, I turn to an extended family here in New England to take me in with open arms, and let me just focus on my work, and getting ready to achieve my ultimate goal, which we all know is to play in the 2026 World Cup here in the states,' he said. Not playing regularly wasn't the best way to prepare to play internationally, and especially for the USMNT. Unlike other positions on the soccer pitch, you can only use one goalie at a time. All the training sessions in the world can't make anyone into a world class goalkeeper. Games and vital decision-making under pressure when the game is on the line does. Playing for his country, not for his club Turner backstopped the USMNT for four games at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar and performed well. When he returned to Arsenal, the only action he saw was getting up and down from the bench. Observers, media and soccer aficionados feared he was going to lose that sharpness sooner or later. It came crashing down on him when Turner wasn't sharp enough to make a save against on what turned into the winning goal for Panama in a 2-1 win over the USA in the Concacaf Nations League as the three-time defending champions USA hit another devastating stumbling block as it continued to prepare itself for the World Cup. At the time, former USMNT goalkeeper and National Soccer Hall of Famer Tony Meola talked about the little nuances during the scoring sequence that was replayed for the audience. Cecilio Waterman, some 16 yards out on the right side of the penalty area, deposited the ball into the lower left corner just past the outstretched right hand of Turner. Meola felt that Turner should have taken another step from the goal to cut down the angle. "I look at the angle that Matt Turner took," he said on the Paramount+ postgame show. "I looked at the distance of the shot, where that shot was taken from. Okay, it was a little bit of pace. There's no doubt about that. I don't want to take anything away from the goal scorer, but in this moment … Matt Turner is a little bit tucked in near that in that near post. I had a perfect angle from my vantage point here. Just a little bit of a hop, just before he takes that. So, his feet aren't planted. He doesn't have some explosion to his right. "At the end of the day, in a moment like this, and I'm not I'm not blaming Matt Turner, but those are moments where you have to find a way. Just like a forward in the end, like [Patrick] Agyemang has to find a way to put the ball in the back of the net. Josh Sargent has to find a way. A goalkeeper on the other end of the field has to find a way to make a save." Sharpness matters, especially for a goalie. A wake-up call Turner received the ultimate slap in the face from USMNT Mauricio Pochettino, who anointed New York City FC keeper Matt Freese as the team's No. 1 for the Concacaf Gold Cup in June and July. Looking back at that time, Turner saw that as a wake-up call. Freese played in all six games as the Americans lost to Mexico in the final. 'Yeah, obviously I was frustrated," he said. "Anytime you're a competitor and you get the opportunity to play, you want to play. But I had multiple conversations throughout the summer with the gaffer there at the national team. Sometimes you're just in a cycle and you need somebody to help you snap out of it a little bit. I think it took [Pochettino] to sort of help me take a step back and look at things from a different perspective, because I obviously was not playing at my best leading into that. I think sometimes you just have to shake it up a little bit to help the player then launch forward and achieve what the coach knows that the player and the player knows that they can achieve. 'So, for me I know what I can achieve, and his support was massive. He helped me to create a new perspective, create new relationships with guys on the team that I might not have had the chance to, and in another sort of scenario where I was playing. And I think also just to look at things from a different side, and show my leadership through a different way. I was grateful for the opportunity that he gave me in that sense, and now I think I can sort of see, with this journey that I've been on, that being in New England was the right place for me to continue to hone those skills, to create new relationships, to play games, to find my happiness in the sport. And then in turn I can give my best to him and to the National Team as well. I think if you look back at some of my greatest national team games, obviously the World Cup was amazing, but some of my greatest National Team games happened when I was here playing in New England.' Turner hoped that history will repeat itself in time for the next World Cup. He is expected to get plenty of games with the Revolution, where he will replace regular keeper, Slovenian native Aljaz Ivacic. When asked if was going to make his MLS season debut against D.C. United on Saturday, Turner replied: 'I'll let the coach [Caleb Porter] make the decision at the end of the day. But, I'm eager to integrate myself with the squad, show my qualities to everybody, and earn my place on the field.' A game-changer Revolution sporting director Curt Onalfo had no doubt that Turner will make an impact immediately for a 6-11-7 team with 25 points that is mired in 11th place in the MLS Eastern Conference, 10 points out of ninth place and the final MLS Cup Playoffs wildcard berth. "Matt is a game-changer," he said. "He's one of these guys that can turn a shot that should be a goal into a save." Turner and Weah weren't the only USMNT players who were in limbo this summer. Several of their teammates need to find new homes as the start of the various European seasons is right around the corner, later this month. The list includes midfielder-forward Gio Reyna (Borussia Dortmund), whose potential transfer to Parma (Italy) came apart last week because his Bundesliga side felt the offer wasn't big enough, and forward Josh Sargent (Norwich City), who nixed a move from the English Championship to Wolfsburg because he didn't want to move to Germany, even though it would be high level of competition. If their teams or agents don't get things sorted out soon, it could be a long, frustrating season for those two players with the World Cup looming closer than you think. Michael Lewis can be followed on X at Soccerwriter and on BlueSky at Soccerwriter.

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