
The Lionesses make it cool to be English
The football world underestimated Chloe Kelly. In January, the snappy 27-year-old winger was dropped from the Lionesses, having been sidelined by Manchester City. But after finishing her season on an auspicious loan to Arsenal, Kelly found herself back in the Lionesses squad: the outcome of England's Euros campaign would likely have ended quite differently without her. Stepping up to the box as the final Lioness in the edgy penalty shoot-out against Spain, with her signature gazelle-like run up, Kelly netted her shot: England are European champions once again. In an interview following her victory, Kelly told the BBC: 'I'm so grateful to wear the badge…I'm so proud to be English'.
This is a rare statement. Englishness and all that it represents has, for a long time, become polarised: associated with thuggery, violence and in some instances, racism. In 2014, when Emily Thornberry, then a cabinet minister under Ed Miliband, posted a photo on Twitter of a house adorned with Saint George's flags with the caption 'Image from #Rochester', she lost her job.
Ten years on, and the popularity of the Lionesses – and Kelly's own public pride in her own national identity – has shifted something. The team and their successive victories have made way for a new, softer form of Englishness. Women's football games are often frequented by young children and their parents (both boys and girls), who find the whole atmosphere of the game more fulfilling and less frightening. Fans support shirts with 'Bronze', 'Russo' or 'Williamson' emblazoned across their shoulders. The Lionesses have used their influence to call for equal access to football in schools for young girls and, as many women's players are openly gay or bisexual, the team has ushered in a new, more inclusive space where England fans can embrace their identity without fear of aggression or judgement. (There is only one openly gay player in the Three Lions squad).
This arrives at a tense moment for wider conversations around English identity. Figures like the podcaster Konstantin Kisin or academic Matt Goodwin argue for the existence of 'ethnic Englishness'. The Lionesses victory and its reception proves how far from the country's sense of feeling this assessment is. Arsenal's Michelle Agyemang was by far one of the most popular players with fans and pundits. The 19-year-old forward won Young Player of the Tournament. Agyemang is of Ghanaian descent, but she was born in Essex and started playing for The Gunners aged six. There is no doubt that Lioness fans would see her anything other than English; even the suggestion would likely have never even crossed their minds.
Last night, England's pubs were full of young people with red crosses painted across their cheeks, draped in red and white flags and proudly sporting the Three Lions badge. This is the England Gareth Southgate wanted: calm, inclusive, proud. That it has arrived via the success of a Dutch-led (the Lionesses' head coach is former Netherland's player Sarina Wiegman) women's team is perhaps the way it had to happen. This is the Lionesses English vibe-shift: it's cool to say you're proud to be English.
[See more: The landlord stranglehold]
Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe
Related
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Metro
8 minutes ago
- Metro
Arsenal respond as two Premier League clubs make offers for £27m signing
Leandro Trossard is 'increasingly likely' to leave Arsenal after two Premier League clubs made 'concrete offers' for the Gunners winger. Trossard, who joined Arsenal in a £27m deal from Brighton in 2023, has been repeatedly linked with a move away from Arsenal this summer. The Gunners spent over £50m to sign England winger Noni Madueke and remain interested in signing a new left-winger as well as Crystal Palace attacking midfielder Eberechi Eze. Trossard was linked with Bayern Munich in the summer but the Bundesliga champions have bolstered Vincent Kompany's attacking options with the £65.5m signing of Luis Diaz from Liverpool. Belgium international Trossard has attracted interest from Bayern's Bundesliga rivals Borussia Dortmund, who are 'monitoring' his situation at the Emirates Stadium, according to Sky Germany's Florian Plettenberg. Wake up to find news on your club in your inbox every morning with Metro's Football Newsletter. Sign up to our newsletter and then select your team in the link we'll send you so we can get football news tailored to you. Trossard has two years left on his current Arsenal contract but looks set for a summer switch as he has also received 'concrete offers' from two unnamed Premier League clubs. It is easy to see the appeal of signing Trossard; the 30-year-old has scored 27 goals over the past two seasons and was a key player for Brighton before his move to north London. While Arsenal are yet to formally respond to any offer for Trossard, The Times say they are 'increasingly likely' to cash in and are hopeful of starting a bidding war between interested parties. Trossard's sale would boost Arsenal's transfer kitty after some expensive signings and help fund moves for other targets, potentially including Eze. INCOMINGS Viktor GyokeresCristhian MosqueraNoni MaduekeChristian NorgaardMartin Zubimendi Kepa Arrizabalaga OUTGOINGS JorginhoNathan Butler-OyedejiElian Quesada-ThornKieran TierneyRaheem SterlingNetoNuno TavaresMarquinhos Takehiro Tomiyasu While Arsenal are open to a summer sale, Trossard has also began to consider his next move and is aware that if he stays put, he will face even more competition for game-time next season. As well as signing Madueke this summer, Arsenal have strengthened Arteta's squad with the additions of Viktor Gyokeres, Martin Zubimendi, Christian Norgaard, Cristhian Mosquera and Kepa Arrizabalaga. Asked about the club's transfer plans after the pre-season friendly win over Newcastle United on Sunday, Arteta said: 'Let's see what happens. More Trending 'The market is still going on and we'll have to balance that out with the squad as well. I think we'll be open to see what happens.' The likes of Jorginho, Thomas Partey, Kieran Tierney, Nuno Tavares and Takehiro Tomiyasu have left the Premier League runners-up and Champions League semi-finalists this summer. Arsenal are also in talks to sell £35m signing Fabio Vieira to Premier League rivals West Ham, while Gabriel Jesus, Gabriel Martinelli, Jakub Kiwior and Oleksandr Zinchenko could yet leave. Arteta's side continue their pre-season schedule on Thursday with a clash against north London rivals Tottenham. Their first Premier League game is on August 17 against Manchester United. For more stories like this, check our sport page. Follow Metro Sport for the latest news on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. MORE: Bryan Mbeumo endorses Man Utd's transfer move for £60m former Arsenal target MORE: Crystal Palace boss reveals transfer concern amid Eberechi Eze speculation MORE: Viktor Gyokeres has already set a new Arsenal club record before debut


Channel 4
8 minutes ago
- Channel 4
Lionesses parade through London crowds after Euros victory
Tens of thousands of England fans turned out in central London this afternoon to cheer on the Lionesses who celebrated their Euro 2025 victory with an open top bus parade. Jubilant supporters cheered and waved England flags as the team drove past on their way to a ceremony in front of Buckingham Palace. Captain Leah Williamson declared their story was 'not done yet'. Producer: Ed Gove Editor: Einab Leshetz
.jpg%3Fwidth%3D1200%26auto%3Dwebp%26quality%3D75%26crop%3D3%3A2%2Csmart%26trim%3D&w=3840&q=100)

Scotsman
8 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Rangers facing unforeseen pressure in Athens as reward of success and cost of failure laid bare
Panathinaikos tie remains in balance but two-goal advantage puts onus on Rangers to qualify Sign up to our Football newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Rangers find themselves unexpectedly burdened by expectation on their travels to Athens this midweek. Manager Russell Martin had previously tried to temper optimism ahead of the first leg of this Champions League second qualifying round tie by insisting it wouldn't be 'season-defining', regardless of the scoreline. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Still in the early stages of a substantial squad refurbishment job, Martin had instead placed the emphasis on the longer term, giving plenty of indication that this work-in-progress he has inherited was not yet ready for a competitive challenge of this nature, even if it has been a while since Panathinaikos belonged among the upper echelons of the European elite. Rangers head coach Russell Martin during a training session ahead of the flight to Greece on Tuesday. (Photo by Rob Casey / SNS Group) | SNS Group Had this unsettled Rangers side struggled at Ibrox in the first leg before collapsing in the red-hot furnace of the Olympic Stadium in the return to bow out of the Champions League at the first hurdle, frustration would likely have been fleeting. Rangers have not appeared in the group stage of the competition since 2022 and only the most impatient or blinkered of their supporters would have expected this current crop to have the wherewithal to make it through three demanding qualifying rounds to end that absence. An aggregate defeat to Panathinaikos would allow the Light Blues to drop back to their natural habitat of the Europa League qualifiers and give further ammunition to Martin in his ongoing quest to shake more funds out of the club's new ownership to improve the product on the pitch. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Instead, an exit at this juncture will now be considered far more ignominious than would have been the case when the draw was made. Rangers did toil in the first half of their opening competitive match of the campaign, having cause to thank goalkeeper Jack Butland for shutting out Panathinaikos when the concession of at least one goal looked almost inevitable given the steady flow of traffic towards the Rangers goal. Fortified by that show of resistance and the red card flashed to the visitors' Giorgos Vagiannidis, Rangers belatedly presented themselves as an attacking force and goals from Findlay Curtis and Djeidi Gassama delivered a two-goal victory that few would have predicted at the half-time recess. It has changed the dynamic of the tie and placed unforeseen pressure on Rangers to match their defensive fortitude – and good fortune – of the opening period at Ibrox if they are to withstand what will almost certainly be a full-scale Panathinaikos assault in stiflingly hot and uncomfortable conditions. From left: Mohamed Diomande, Nicolas Raskin, Cyriel Dessers and James Tavernier arrive for a Rangers training session on Tuesday. (Photo by Rob Casey / SNS Group) | SNS Group Conceding three goals without reply will now be viewed as a capitulation rather than just a one-sided defeat and could also damage morale ahead of the start of the league season and a tricky-looking opener for Rangers away to Motherwell on Saturday evening. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad This odyssey to Athens will also place Martin's tactical preference for a possession-based style further under the microscope. A commitment to playing out from the back can work well in a well-drilled team accustomed to playing in such a fashion against a high press but it proved problematic for this Rangers team, still evolving under new management, in the first half last week. Were it not for poor finishing and stellar goalkeeping, it would have proven to be a costly approach. Rangers can expect to find themselves retreating even more in this second leg as Panathinaikos look to rescue the situation and chase the three goals they really ought to have scored in Scotland. Will Martin stick to his guns or adapt to the demands of the occasion? It will be fascinating to find out. Winnable tie awaits Should Rangers survive the inevitable onslaught coming their way to make it through to the third qualifying round, then suddenly the prospect of advancing to the Champions League groups won't seem that unrealistic after all. Assuming Servette can avoid defeat at home to Viktoria Plzen after a narrow win in the Czech Republic in the first leg last week, then Rangers will find themselves with a winnable tie against the Swiss side they defeated at the same stage two years ago. Win that one and they are a play-off tie away from returning to European football's top table for the first time in three years. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Even a loss in the third qualifying round will guarantee a berth in the Europa League group stage which ought to have been the realistic target from the very start. Danilo is likely to lead the Rangers attack again in Athens on Wednesday night. (Photo by Rob Casey / SNS Group) | SNS Group It says much about the fluid nature of Continental football in the modern era that the challenge that awaits Rangers should they lose to Panathinaikos looks tougher than what awaits them in the top-tier competition. Neither Besiktas nor Shakhtar Donetsk (who won 4-2 in Turkey last week) in the Europa League third qualifying round will be straightforward, with a defeat at that point dropping Rangers into the Conference League play-off round and a third attempt at trying to nail down group stage football in some shape or form. Avoiding a heavy defeat in Athens, then, seems the easiest way to fulfil that ambition and the expectation is that Martin will rely on many of the same players who eked out that victory at Ibrox a week ago. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Few of the squad's fringe players did enough in the friendly draw with Middlesbrough on Saturday to push themselves into contention, meaning Martin's selection dilemmas will centre on the fitness of individuals such as Hamza Igamane and Thelo Aasgaard who both missed training again on Tuesday morning due to injury.