logo
Wales vs England Euro 2025

Wales vs England Euro 2025

Times19 hours ago
Kit Shepard was our man in St Gallen tonight, read his report here.
We're going to wrap up the live blog now – thanks for joining us and we'll do it all again on Thursday when England face Sweden in Zurich. Goodnight!
Here's how the last eight looks:
Norway v Italy (Wednesday, 8pm, Geneva)Sweden v England (Thursday, 8pm, Zurich)Spain v Switzerland (Friday, 8pm, Bern)France v Germany (Saturday, 8pm, Basel)
France have won group D thanks to a 5-2 win over the Netherlands in Basel — their final goal coming from the penalty spot through Karchaoui on 92 minutes. They will meet Germany next Saturday — also in Basel.
It was comfortable for England in St Gallen and really a complete mismatch as they stroll into a last-eight clash with Sweden in Zurich on Thursday — the team they beat in the semi-finals on the way to winning Euro 2022 (remember the Russo backheel goal?) Wales barely laid a glove on the Lionesses but that isn't a criticism of them — England were just ruthlessly clinical. Sweden will be a different prospect entirely.
Having set up Mead's goal, Beever-Jones heads in England's sixth and it really is a thing of beauty. A raking pass from Williamson is headed on to Mead, who chips a cross over to ABV (it's easier to type) and she heads down into the ground and past the beleaguered Clark.
Wales have a consolation and what a goal it was too. Jess Fishlock went on a barnstorming run through a non-existent England midfield and slotted a pass through for substitute Hannah Cain, who applied a great finish on the stretch. The ear-cupping celebration was a bit much, but each to their own.
Meanwhile England have brought on Niamh Charles for Lucy Bronze, and Wales have replaced Ffion Morgan with Elise Hughes.
Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager.
And that is five! Beever-Jones shows good feet to find Beth Mead inside the area and the substitute applies a simple finish. She goes over to the England bench to celebrate — the Arsenal player enjoyed that one.
Kit Shepard: Park nearly got England's fifth with a cushioned volley from Keira Walsh's brilliant diagonal, but Clark tipped it onto the post and Russo could not slide the rebound in.
The goals are raining in in Basel now! France retake the lead through Delphine Cascarino on 64 minutes and scores again three minutes later to make it 4-2. What a six minutes it's been for the French – they are going to play Germany in the last eight.
Let them eat cake! Marie-Antoinette Katoto has equalised for France in Basel, putting them back to the top of the group and moving England down to second — that puts them on course to face Sweden, the winners of group C.
As expected, Sarina Wiegman really making the most of this cushion to give her stars a break and give the substitutes some minutes. Chloe Kelly comes on for Lauren James and Aggie Beever-Jones for Alessia Russo.
Ella Toone has been having a great game so far but she goes off at half-time for Jess Park, while Beth Mead comes on for another of England's goalscorers, Lauren Hemp. For Waes, Josie Green is on for left back Lily Woodham. Second half under way.
It's 2-1 to the Netherlands now in Basel – they have turned it round, and it's a calamity for Selma Bacha, who puts through her own net after the ball squirts through to her from a low cross. They'd need two more goals to send the French out on goal difference but it currently means England would top the group.
That was brutal for Wales, and brilliant for England. The job is now damage limitation for the Welsh but Sarina Wiegman can look to use her bench and rest some of her key players with either Germany or Sweden awaiting them in the last eight.
Alessia Russo's first goal of this European Championship and it's probably England's best of this game. A threaded pass through by James to Toone, who cuts back for Russo and the Arsenal player had time to take a touch six yards out before slotting home. We saw a 6-0, 6-0 Wimbledon final yesterday — and this already has that feel about it too.
Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager.
Kit Shepard: Let's not bother with the caveats, England are heading through here. All eyes are now on France and the Netherlands' game. It is currently 1-1 but the Dutch would go through with a win by a three-goal margin, knocking out their opponents tonight. In that scenario England would top the group and play Germany in the quarter-finals. England are going through because, in the event of all three finishing on six points, it goes down to goal difference only from games involving two of the three teams (i.e. take the Wales results out). Only one (at most) of France and Netherlands can better England's goal difference.
If it stays level in Basel, France will finish first with at least a point, and in this situation England would face Sweden in the last eight.
The gulf in class is beginning to tell already — Lauren Hemp makes it 3-0 after half an hour. England's place in the last eight looks safe already.
Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager.
It's 1-1 in Basel — Real Madrid's Sandie Toletti put France ahead after 22 minutes but Victoria Pelova of Arsenal equalised with a fine strike from outside the area four minutes later.
Bit of a messy one but Ella Toone won't care — she converts at the second attempt after her initial shot was blocked on the line following Russo's toe-poked cut-back. Russo had seized on Welsh defensive uncertainty, a lot of that was down to her determination.
Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager.
After a VAR check the referee points to the spot – Georgia Stanway was tripped and initially a free kick was given, but the contact was inside. Stanway dusts herself off and tucks the penalty past Clarke, although the goalkeeper went the right way.
Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager.
We're underway in St Gallen! Leah Williamson already knocking Fishlock over, looks like it might be a physical one.
Kit Shepard writes: At every Euro 2025 game, the squads are read out over The Alan Parsons Project's Sirius, the music that was popularised by the Chicago Bulls, immortalised by Michael Jordan, and introduced to the younger generations through The Last Dance documentary.
It's a nice idea, but does not quite have the desired effect. Turns out the music does not sound quite as epic when it's Wales's back-up goalkeeper being introduced rather than Jordan's Bulls. Once everyone knows the squads, the DJ pivots to Yma o Hyd. That gets a much more rousing rendition from the red side of the stadium. The Wales fans know their tournament will surely end tonight, but they are going to enjoy their last hurrah regardless of the result.
Kit Shepard: White shirts in one end, red shirts and bucket hats in the other, Abba blaring out from the loudspeakers. This is very much 'Brits abroad' night in St Gallen. The Lionesses have never lost in ten meetings to Wales, winning nine of them. Tonight would be a really, really bad time for that streak to end.
Kit Shepard: The England team are greeted with loud cheers as they emerge for their warm-up in St Gallen. Lauren James is sporting a black eye, having picked up the knock while challenging for a header against the Netherlands. However, she and the rest of the squad appear in good spirits as they begin to limber up.
While you are assembling the snacks trolley and pouring drinks, may we run a little bit of pre-match reading under your nose — it's our guide to the Wales team, how you might go about beating them and how (if you're not careful) they could beat you. Read it and impress your friends and family.
Kit Shepard: Wales make three changes from the team that started the 4-1 defeat by France. Olivia Clark replaces Safia Middleton-Patel in goal, Rhiannon Roberts comes into the back line for Josie Green, and the midfielder Carrie Jones is in for Kayleigh Barton. The 38-year-old Jess Fishlock, Wales's record goalscorer and most capped player, starts what could well be her final international.
Wales (4-2-3-1): O Clark — E Morgan, R Roberts, G Evans, L Woodham — J Fishlock, A James — C Holland, C Jones, R Rowe — F Morgan. Subs: Middleton-Patel, Kelly, Ingle, Green, Barton, Cain, Ladd, Hughes, Estcourt, Joel, Powell, Griffiths.
Kit Shepard: England are unchanged from Wednesday's 4-0 win over the Netherlands. That means Lauren James stays on the right wing after struggling in the No 10 role against France, while Ella Toone retains her place. Presumably, Jess Carter will start at left centre back and Alex Greenwood at left back, as they did against the Dutch. The pair started the other way around in the France game and both played poorly, before swapping positions for the Netherlands match and delivering much-improved performances.
England (4-2-1-3): H Hampton — L Bronze, L Williamson, J Carter, A Greenwood — K Walsh, G Stanway — E Toone — L James, A Russo, L Hemp. Subs: N Charles, B Mead, M Le Tissier, A Moorhouse, G Clinton, E Morgan, M Agyemang, C Kelly, A Beever-Jones, J Park, K Keating, L Wubben-Moy.
Kit Shepard, women's football reporter
The picturesque university town of St Gallen has been full of England and Wales fans today. The city's cathedral and Abbey Library proved popular landmarks for supporters with plenty of wiggle room for sightseeing before the 9pm kick-off (local time). Arena St Gallen is about three miles out of the city, and the trains and buses were packed by 6pm. There's a lot of people to shift from city to stadium, but Switzerland's immaculate public transport appears more than ready for the challenge. Fans of each nation have mingled harmoniously, be it in the city, on the train or at the ground. There has been plenty of light-hearted banter, of course.
Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager.
First things first — let's remind ourselves how the Group D table looks. France are home and hosed, obviously — but need a point against the Netherlands to secure top spot. As for everyone else, England are through if they equal or better the Netherlands' result against France, unless both sides lose and Wales win by four or more goals against the Lionesses. The Dutch qualify if they better England's result — if they were tied on points then England go through as it then comes down to the result between the teams.
Hello and welcome to our live coverage of the final two games of the Euro 2025 group stage as we discover which of Netherlands, England and Wales will join France in the last eight. Admittedly Wales's chances are such a long shot that they make the David Beckham goal against Wimbledon seem like a tap-in, but we'll get to that if they suddenly find themselves 4-0 up against England, who have given themselves a great chance by thrashing the Dutch 4-0 in midweek. Kit Shepard is our man watching the Lionesses in St Gallen so will be your eyes and ears for analysis and the bits you might not have noticed from TV. On we go.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cole Palmer's Chelsea finally have the belief they are contenders for Premier League title
Cole Palmer's Chelsea finally have the belief they are contenders for Premier League title

The Guardian

time20 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Cole Palmer's Chelsea finally have the belief they are contenders for Premier League title

When Chelsea won the Conference League in May, a victory secured by the standard ice-cold Cole Palmer performance in a final, the reaction was restrained and there was no internal talk of an impending title challenge. The vibe is different now. It is hard not to dream when Chelsea perform as they did against Paris Saint-Germain in the final of the Club World Cup. Nobody is getting carried away. Chelsea know what the rest of us know, which is that they are not the best team in the world. They are not the finished article. They are young and still have much to learn. Yet there is a gold badge on the shirt for the next four years and if Chelsea woke up feeling $100m on Monday morning it will not only have been because of the prize money made during their month in the US. Where does this end? Chelsea have built priceless momentum and will head into next season with serious aspirations of winning the Premier League and going far in the Champions League. They are youthful, aggressive, motivated and extremely talented. They are champions of the world, an achievement that should not be downplayed. They were the second-youngest side at the Club World Cup and have benefited from treating it seriously. They have grown as a team, honing their tactical vision and hardening their mentality, and it has done wonders for Enzo Maresca's standing as head coach after a challenging first year. Maresca has seemed on dodgy ground at times. He wobbled during a difficult spell after Christmas and has not found it easy to convince match-going fans to embrace his patient, positional football. The players, though, are different. Maresca clearly has total buy-in from the squad. 'He is building something special,' Palmer said after leading the destruction of PSG with two goals and an assist for João Pedro before half-time. 'He's a top coach,' Malo Gusto said before the final. 'He's always watching his next opponent and doing analysis. That helps us.' Maresca's plan was perfect against PSG. Chelsea were coherent and disciplined. 'The first 10 minutes, the team was there to show that we were there to win,' Maresca said. Chelsea were physical from the start. They went direct, beating Luis Enrique's ferocious pressing system, and targeted PSG's left flank. 'That's where we tried to win the game,' Maresca added. 'But you can give the players a plan – in the end it's them who have to execute it.' Chelsea delivered, the collective combining to create conditions for Palmer's quality to shine. It should do wonders for their confidence. They are back in the Champions League after a two-year absence and will believe they can compete with the best after doing to PSG what the French club have been doing to everyone else in Europe during the past eight months. This is a project moving in the right direction. Palmer is the jewel in the crown – incredibly he was unwell last week but still left PSG feeling under the weather – but it is a team effort. The work conducted by the recruitment team of Paul Winstanley, Joe Shields, Laurence Stewart and Sam Jewell cannot be overlooked. They have faced external criticism but will earn more respect after this triumph. The question is whether Chelsea can push on. They were reluctant to say that they were challengers last season, even when two points off the top just before Christmas. But something shifted when they got over the line during the run-in and finished fourth. Champions League qualification gave them belief. Thumping PSG enhances it. 'I said at the start of this tournament that our plan is to win it and people looked at me as if I was crazy,' Levi Colwill said. 'I'm going to say the exact same thing now going into the Premier League and Champions League. I think we're ready.' Chelsea look stronger. João Pedro has transformed the attack in the space of two weeks, impressing with his pressing, mobility and link play. Maresca has options. He was able to bring Liam Delap on against PSG and use the striker's pace on the break. Chelsea have different modes of attack. They can counter with Pedro Neto's pace on the flanks. Jamie Gittens and Estêvão Willian are joining and will provide more depth on the flanks. Another positive from the tournament? Estêvão proving that he can take on English defences by scoring against Chelsea in his final game for Palmeiras. The unknown is whether Chelsea are going to be more adept at breaking down low blocks. There was space against PSG but other sides will not be as accommodating. Chelsea are going to come up against a lot of deep defences. It is partly why João Pedro has been signed; Maresca regards the Brazilian's versatility as a way to unlock tight games. Enzo Fernández's development as a box-crashing midfielder is another plus. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion There will be challenges, not least when it comes to dealing with the physical impact of the Club World Cup. Chelsea have three weeks off before returning for pre-season and host Crystal Palace in their opening Premier League game. It is hard to know how this plays out. They could use the positive vibes to hit the ground running but there may come a point when they crash. Or they may start slowly and find themselves in another battle for the top four. The additional demands of an expanded Champions League further complicates matters. Chelsea were able to rest their A-listers in the Conference League but that is not an option this time. It is acknowledged that Maresca needs cover for Marc Cucurella at left-back. But the squad does not need a lot of work. It is said that Robert Sánchez is not a title-winning goalkeeper but he was outstanding against PSG. There has been a lot of talk about a new centre-back but Chelsea gave away little against Ousmane Dembélé, Désiré Doué and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia. There is depth in a lot of other positions. Not that it will be quiet before the window shuts. Chelsea's bank balance has been boosted and they are nothing if not afraid to trade. Noni Madueke is going to Arsenal and another attacker could be targeted if Nicolas Jackson or Christopher Nkunku leaves. Tyrique George has a lot of wingers in front of him. Chelsea have been fined by Uefa for breaching financial fair play rules and must generate positive income if they are to register new players in their Champions League squad. The goalkeeper Djordje Petrovic is joining Bournemouth for £25m. Chelsea have outcasts to sell; plenty of ways to bring in money. Buyers must be found for Raheem Sterling, João Félix, Axel Disasi and many more. That element of the approach led by Clearlake Capital, the club's majority owner, leaves some observers cold. It is important that Chelsea embrace stability and keep the core group together. 'We've got the best players in our team, young players, and that's our plan: to win the biggest trophies for Chelsea,' Colwill said. 'No matter what, we've got to stick together.' He was on top of the world. Chelsea have no intention of crashing back to earth. They think this is just the beginning.

How big of a priority is a new goalkeeper?
How big of a priority is a new goalkeeper?

BBC News

time22 minutes ago

  • BBC News

How big of a priority is a new goalkeeper?

BBC Radio Manchester's Gaz Drinkwater will not be alone in thinking Manchester United need a new is two years since both Altay Bayindir and Andre Onana arrived in the summer of 2023 and after a catalogue of shaky performances, many think they need a goalkeeper is not the only position that requires new tell us, how big a priority is a new goalkeeper? Is it towards the top of the wishlist - or if not, which positions are the most important?Or indeed, are you happy with the current crop?Tell us here

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