
'Result won't go down in history but occasion will'
Katie Sherwood, former Wales midfielder on BBC Match of the Day"It wasn't the fairytale we wanted was it? We knew coming into this game they would have to defy the odds to get something out of this game against the footballing giants."The moments we conceded, they're key moments of the game and ultimately they cost us. It's really difficult then to get back into the game when you concede in those moments."Regardless of the score, we need to be proud we're at our first major tournament. Yes, we know there are moments we can improve, but we are not a top-tier team yet - that's where we want to be."But this crowd and the family and friends that have travelled here is massive for the players."
Ellen White, former England striker on BBC Match of the Day"Wales defended really well - it was just that they gave Miedema that yard and she's a special, special player and scored a world-class goal. From a Wales perspective it's back to the drawing board - they've got two more games."The fans will be very proud of their intent and enthusiasm but ultimately they haven't got enough tournament experience - the Netherlands have a lot of tournament experience."There's a lot of positives to take from the game but there's obviously things that they need to improve and they've got two more games to hopefully be as successful as they can be in this group, because it's a tough one."
Nathan Blake, former Wales striker on BBC Match of the Day"You have to climb the mountain and maybe you haven't got to the top, but if you play against the best, you start to understand what it's really about."I think the positive for Wales is, this game you have seen what you are up against in these tournaments. I definitely think they will look at is as a positive. OK, 3-0 they've lost but look where you are, look where you've come from to where you are."At the end of the day they were up against a top-quality team. so you've got to give yourself some credit, not think to yourself 'we haven't performed to the best of our ability'."Maybe you have performed to the best of your ability but the team you're up against is just better."But for now you go back to the drawing board and what can we do to try and be better in the next game? You're always evolving, trying to get better and find ways to win."It's something where you have to sit down and watch this game and try and improve little things - energy levels, recovery is really important. Substitutions - it's important who you use and where you use them."There's lots of little nuances to improve on."
Wales must get over this quickly - Jones
Nia Jones, former Wales defender on BBC Radio Wales"This performance and result won't go down in history, but the occasion certainly will."The Dutch didn't miss their chances - they were so clinical and the timing of their goals, before half-time and just afterwards, knocked the wind out of the Welsh sails."Miedema had so much time and space on the edge of the box - they will be looking back and cringing at that in analysis this week. That was the catalyst for the Dutch to run away and they came out with a spark."The stars in their squad - Jill Roord, Vivianne Miedema, Danielle van de Donk – they really were in a class of their own. That's probably the one thing this Welsh squad is now lacking - world-class performers playing at the top level, week in week out for their clubs."There's no substitute for that coming into a tournament of this stature."I think upon reflection Wales will be lucky that it was only three. They will need to debrief and get over this emotionally and physically very, very quickly."Tactically they will have to look at a couple of things out of possession. The backline on occasion - especially in the second half - wasn't connected together."
Kath Morgan, former Wales captain on BBC Radio Wales"Firstly I'm very, very proud of these players. I don't think they got overawed by the occasion."Our structure, our defensive strategy, our discipline - you can only do that for so long against really good teams."I think our midfield struggled with the runs in behind their shoulders and they didn't track those runners and that made Josie Green and Rhiannon Roberts pull out of their defensive line, and we got punished."This has happened and they will learn from it."We've never been here before - all these other teams have been here multiple times so I'm not here to criticise the players."This is the level they need in order to compete consistently and it's been a hard evening - they will take positives from it."
Former Wales defender Danny Gabbidon, Radio 5 Live pundit"They're a quality outfit the Netherlands, they've got some quality players but I was a little bit disappointed with the manner of the goals conceded."I thought it was very difficult in that midfield for Angharad James and Hayley Ladd at times. I thought they were overrun and it was very difficult for them to get pressure on the opposition or protect that backline. They were caught in between two stools really."You can take heart from how we kept going - we always do, we never gave up. But we certainly can look at the game back and say that there are things we can do better and there are positives we can take from it as well."But we will reset and refocus and we won't let that result worry us too much - this group has been through so much, so many disappointments and negative things. They won't let a 3-0 loss in the first game worry them too much going into the next game."
Hashtags

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


Reuters
24 minutes ago
- Reuters
Iran defeat Jordan to complete line-up for Women's Asian Cup
July 20 (Reuters) - Iran handed Jordan a 2-1 defeat in Amman on Saturday to claim the final berth at next year's Women's Asian Cup finals, which will be held in Australia in March. Second-half goals from Sara Didar and Negin Zandi earned Marziyeh Jafari's team a win that secured top spot in Group A of the preliminaries ahead of the Jordanians due to their better head-to-head record. The Iranians are the last team to qualify for the finals after matches in Group A were postponed due to the recent Israel-Iran conflict. Australia will host the 12-team tournament in Sydney, Perth and Gold Coast from March 1 to 21 and Joe Montemurro's home side will be among the favourites to lift the trophy. Defending champions China, who have won the title a record nine times, will also be joined at the finals by South Korea, Japan, Bangladesh, India, Taiwan, Vietnam, Uzbekistan, the Philippines and North Korea. The draw will take place in Sydney on July 29. "There's a real energy building, not just here in Australia but across Asia, and this diverse, high-quality line-up shows just how far women's football has come," said Sarah Walsh, the event's chief organising officer. "With so much talent and so many great stories coming together, this is going to be a tournament to remember." The competition will also serve as Asia's qualifying tournament for the Women's World Cup in 2027 with six automatic berths available at the finals in Brazil. A further two nations will progress to a series of intercontinental playoffs.


The Guardian
24 minutes ago
- The Guardian
QPR's Julien Stéphan: ‘The Championship is probably the most difficult league in the world'
Julien Stéphan had been enjoying his break from football for about two months when his wife's patience finally gave in. 'She said to me: 'I hope you will manage again quickly – and very quickly – because I want to see you on the pitch and to see you back in your own environment,'' says the new Queens Park Rangers manager. Stéphan left Rennes for the second time last November and estimates that as well as spending precious time with his two children he watched 20 to 25 games a week as he waited for his next opportunity. That finally arrived last month when the Frenchman took over at Loftus Road from Martí Cifuentes, who has since joined Leicester. But the chance to take a breather after six years as a manager during which he guided Rennes to the Champions League for the first time and led Strasbourg to sixth in Ligue 1 – their highest position since 1980 – was most welcome. 'You need to take time for you and your family,' Stéphan says. 'It's important. But also you need to take time to watch different things, to analyse the game and different games in different leagues and analyse also what you did before and what you want to do after. It's important to start to imagine how you can see the future.' QPR supporters will be hoping that, after a decade largely marooned in the bottom half of the Championship, the club can bring back some glory days under Stéphan. The 44-year-old has heard the stories about QPR being London's best team during the first Premier League season, when a side with Les Ferdinand as their star striker finished fifth in 1993. But Stéphan insists they must live in the present to have a chance of escaping what he describes as 'probably the most difficult league in the world'. 'I know the history of QPR, but now we are in a different period,' he says. 'It's important to remember and to know the history, but it's also important to live in the present and to build for the future. There is work to do with everybody, with the players, of course, with the management, with the CEO, with the owners, and also with the legends of the club. It's the responsibility of everybody.' Stéphan adds: 'We know the expectations from the fans – we need to give everything on the pitch, and we need also to create a strong identity. It's very important, and after that it's football. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose, but you need to give everything.' Stéphan has been so busy since being appointed that he has not had time to move into his new flat near QPR's home ground, let alone explore Shepherd's Bush and the surrounding area. 'Only work, work, work and work,' he says. 'Just hotel and training ground and training sessions …' Stéphan is speaking from a pre-season camp in Girona that has allowed him and his staff, who include the former West Ham, Charlton and France midfielder Alou Diarra as an assistant, to get to know their players before their gruelling Championship season kicks off on 9 August. 'It's the beginning of the process and we need to build step by step all the ideas, the collective ideas and also the relationship between the players and the staff,' he says. Stéphan spent time as a player in Paris Saint-Germain's academy but never made a top-flight appearance for his various clubs before he retired at 27 to concentrate on coaching. By then he had taken charge of Rennes' under-19s for three years and been to university to study Staps (Sciences et Techniques des Activités Physiques et Sportives), the route usually taken by French people who want to become sports teachers. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion 'I just wanted to learn something that could help me with the ideas that I had about development,' says Stéphan, whose father, Guy Stéphan, was assistant to Didier Deschamps for France's World Cup triumph in 2018 and has managed Senegal. 'I didn't choose this job at the beginning to do the same thing as my father but because I wanted to work with young players. And to be honest, at the beginning, I thought that I could do that all my career with the young players. And it was just after 12 or 15 years that I imagined the future differently. Of course, we speak together and he can give me some advice sometimes, but I also need to live my own experience.' The Rennes academy's fabled production line in recent years includes Ousmane Dembélé, Eduardo Camavinga, Jérémy Doku and Desiré Doué – all of whom played under Stéphan, either for the youth sides or the first team, with whom he had two spells as manager, initially as an interim in 2018. He led Rennes to their first trophy for almost 50 years when they beat PSG in the French Cup final a few months later. He knows QPR will find it hard to replicate that kind of production line given that they are competing with so many London clubs for the best talent, but Stéphan thinks there is one advantage they may have. 'A strong point that we can say to families [of young players] is that it's probably easier at 18 or 19 years old to play in the Championship than in the Premier League,' he says. 'And the development of the player can also pass this way. So, yes, play in the Championship. After that, for the best of them, perhaps play in the Premier League. So we can develop this kind of thinking with the family. 'But it's difficult to compare the young players of the academy at QPR with these kinds of players: Ousmane Dembélé, Eduardo Camavinga, Desiré Doué. They're top, top, top, top, top players. Most important is to create the opportunity for the best of them in the academy to have the possibility to train with the professionals and for the best of them also to play in the first team.'


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Alderney FC hunting for players to live on island
A Channel Islands football team has put out a call for fresh talent to move over and play for their FC, who play in Guernsey's Jackson League and the Muratti Vase, have issued an appeal to find young male footballers who are willing to live and work on the island while playing for the at the club, which is the only one on the island of Alderney, said they needed to find a way of attracting new players to keep the side running in the Kirkland, chairman and coach of Alderney FC, said the club knew it would not be a move everyone wanted to make, but they hoped to attract a few players. Mr Kirkland said: "Maybe they'll come for six weeks, maybe they'll come for six months, maybe they'll come for six years, we just don't know."If we open enough opportunities, then hopefully we'll attract some players." 'Something unique' He said there were a number of work opportunities on the island which potential players could who moved to Alderney two years ago, added the club had a decent number of players for the next generation, but wanted to make sure they continued to grow."We know it's not going to be for every single person, we know there are challenges to living here," he said. "But we do think we are offering something unique and the community will fully support people moving across." Mr Kirkland said the club was the "beating heart" of the island community who come together to show their support when games are played at its home ground, The said the community was great to be part of and the club had a rich tradition and history - which included winning the Muratti in added while the club's prospects have dropped off in recent years, he felt it had a lot of potential."We certainly don't have a Hollywood backing or film crew to follow us around, but it's a Cinderella story."A few years ago, the first team were extremely competitive, but we've slightly dropped off that in the last two or three years."If we can attract three, four or five players of quality that want to reside here on the island, then there's absolutely no reason why we won't go into the next league of the Guernsey football pyramid."