logo
Euro 2025: Host Switzerland's Late Goals Secure 2-0 Win Over Iceland

Euro 2025: Host Switzerland's Late Goals Secure 2-0 Win Over Iceland

Al Arabiya12 hours ago
Host nation Switzerland put its Women's European Championship campaign back on track with a 2–0 win over Iceland on Sunday, eliminating its opponents in the process.
Géraldine Reuteler netted with 14 minutes remaining as the Stadion Wankdorf erupted in celebration in a sea of red, and Alayah Pilgrim sealed the result in the final minute. It will now be all to play for on Thursday when Switzerland meets Finland in their final group match, with a place in the quarterfinals at stake. Both teams are level on three points–three points behind Norway, which beat Finland 2–1 earlier and has now advanced to the knockout stage as Group A champion. Iceland has zero points and is out of the tournament regardless of what happens in its final match against Norway.
In contrast to when the teams played the opening matches last Wednesday, when Switzerland was engulfed by a heat wave, it was raining for most of the match in Bern. Iceland almost scored in the opening minute, but Ingibjörg Sigurdardóttir volleyed off the crossbar. Switzerland thought it had taken the lead on the half-hour mark. A corner was whipped in, and Svenja Fölmli's header was inadvertently nodded into the net by Glódís Perla Viggósdóttir. Swiss fans celebrated, but it was ruled out after a review on the pitchside monitor for a foul by Fölmli in the buildup.
Inside a packed stadium with a capacity crowd of nearly 30,000, the 2,000 Icelandic fans made themselves heard with their thunder claps, while the equally fervent home support yelled 'Hopp Schwiiz.' And almost all of them thought Switzerland had taken the lead in stunning fashion in first-half stoppage time, as Iman Beney's long-range attempt rippled the side netting. Iceland started the second half in almost exactly the same way it had started the first–by hitting the crossbar. This time, Karolína Lea Vilhjalmsdóttir's free kick skimmed the top of the woodwork.
Switzerland had barely had a shot on target until it broke the deadlock in the 76th minute. Sydney Schertenleib threaded an intelligent ball through for Reuteler to run onto and slot into the far bottom corner. And Switzerland wrapped up its first win in its home tournament when Pilgrim collected a pinpoint pass from another substitute, Leila Wandeler, and cut inside before curling into the back of the net.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Oscar Piastri says he'll fuel his F1 title charge with 'frustration' at race-deciding penalty
Oscar Piastri says he'll fuel his F1 title charge with 'frustration' at race-deciding penalty

Al Arabiya

time2 hours ago

  • Al Arabiya

Oscar Piastri says he'll fuel his F1 title charge with 'frustration' at race-deciding penalty

Oscar Piastri aims to use the frustration he feels at the penalty which cost him victory at the British Grand Prix as motivation to win more races as he chases the Formula 1 title. Piastri was reluctant to join in the celebrations for McLaren's fourth one–two finish of 2025 after a 10-second penalty imposed for sharp braking behind the safety car meant he finished behind teammate and title rival Lando Norris in Sunday's race. He leads Norris by eight points at the halfway point of the season. McLaren rejected Piastri's request over the radio for the team to cancel out the effect of the penalty by asking the drivers to swap places. It would have put the Australian driver back into the lead and potentially deprived Norris of an emotional first home win. 'Lando didn't do anything wrong, so I don't think it would have been particularly fair to have swapped, but I thought I'd at least ask,' Piastri said Sunday. 'It doesn't change much for the championship. I feel like I did a good job today. I did what I needed to. That's all I need and I will use the frustration to make sure I win some more races later.' McLaren's dilemma Piastri added that he knew what the answer was going to be before he messaged the team but was searching for a small glimmer of hope. McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said the only way that Piastri would have stayed in front on Sunday would have been if the safety car came out and both McLarens stopped for fresh tires. In that event, Norris would have waited behind Piastri. 'Oscar is a very fast, very strong, very determined driver. He proved that,' Stella added. 'It didn't lead to a win, but I'm sure it will lead to many more wins.' It isn't the first time McLaren has had to deal with an awkward radio situation. Piastri's first career win at the Hungarian Grand Prix last year came when the team ordered a swap with Norris because of pit strategy. Norris only obeyed after a lengthy wait. Inconsistent penalties Once again F1 is debating whether the rules are enforced consistently. Piastri argued that slowing up the field before a restart is well within the rules–a tactic he'd used earlier in the same race without incident. 'I don't really get it,' he said. The stewards ruled that slowing from more than 135 mph to 32 mph was erratic braking and it forced Red Bull's Max Verstappen, who was second behind Piastri at the time, to take evasive action. That left Red Bull team principal Christian Horner reviving his complaint that Mercedes' George Russell had deserved a penalty for slowing behind the safety car at the Canadian Grand Prix last month. On that occasion, Russell braked and Verstappen, who was second, briefly overtook as he was caught unawares. Russell went on to win with Verstappen finishing second. Red Bull's post-race protest interrupted Mercedes' victory celebrations and further strained the relationship between the teams. 'I wasn't surprised to see him get a penalty. That was what you would expect,' Horner said of Piastri's penalty. 'It was probably more surprising that George didn't get one in Montreal to be honest with you.' Piastri too suggested punishing one incident but not the other seemed inconsistent. 'Going back to Canada I think you had to evade more there than you did today,' Piastri said. 'So I'm a bit confused to say the least.'

Pamplona Holds Opening Bull Run During San Fermín Festival
Pamplona Holds Opening Bull Run During San Fermín Festival

Al Arabiya

time2 hours ago

  • Al Arabiya

Pamplona Holds Opening Bull Run During San Fermín Festival

Thousands of daredevils ran, skidded, and tumbled out of the way of six charging bulls at the opening run of the San Fermín festival Monday. It was the first of nine morning runs during the famous celebrations held in the northern Spanish city of Pamplona. The bulls pounded along the twisting cobblestone streets after being led by six steers. Up to 4,000 runners take part in each bull run, which takes place over 846 meters (2,775 feet) and can last three to four minutes. Most runners wear the traditional garb of white trousers and shirt with red sash and neckerchief. The expert Spanish runners try to sprint just in front of the bulls' horns for a few death-defying seconds while egging the animal on with a rolled newspaper. Thousands of spectators watch from balconies and wooden barricades along the course. Millions more follow the visceral spectacle on live television. While gorings are not rare, many more people are bruised and injured in falls and pileups with each other. Medics rush in to treat the injured and take the seriously hurt to a hospital. Unofficial records say at least 15 people have died in the bull runs over the past century. The deadliest day on record was July 13, 1980, when four runners were killed by two bulls. The last death was in 2009. The rest of each day is for eating, drinking, dancing, and cultural entertainment, including bullfights where the animals that run in the morning are slain in the bullring by professional matadors each afternoon. The festival was made internationally famous by Ernest Hemingway's classic 1926 novel 'The Sun Also Rises,' about American bohemians wasting away in Europe.

Alcaraz Resists Rublev to Reach Wimbledon Quarter-finals
Alcaraz Resists Rublev to Reach Wimbledon Quarter-finals

Asharq Al-Awsat

time3 hours ago

  • Asharq Al-Awsat

Alcaraz Resists Rublev to Reach Wimbledon Quarter-finals

Carlos Alcaraz came through a ferocious fourth-round firefight against a red-hot Andrey Rublev to win 6-7(5) 6-3 6-4 6-4 on Centre Court and keep his bid for a third successive Wimbledon title on track on Sunday. The Spanish second seed stuttered in his opening three rounds but found his best form to eventually subdue an inspired opponent who once again came up short against the very best, Reuters reported. Rublev rocked Alcaraz by roaring into a 4-1 lead only to be pegged back but the Russian produced some astonishing tennis to snatch the tiebreak and move ahead. Alcaraz never looked ruffled though and levelled the match after Rublev double-faulted on a break point. Rublev continued throwing everything in his arsenal at the champion in the third set but paid for not taking some early break points as Alcaraz found another gear. Alcaraz looked impregnable in the fourth set and a single break of serve was enough to seal a 22nd successive match win and set up a last-eight clash with Britain's Cameron Norrie. "Andrey is one of the most powerful players we have on Tour and is so aggressive with the ball. It's really difficult to face him, he forces you to the limit on each point," Alcaraz, bidding to become only the fourth man to win back-to-back French Open and Wimbledon titles multiple times, said on court. "Really happy with the way I moved and played intelligent and smart tactically. A really good match all round." With so many seeds having fallen early, this was the first match between top-20 players in the men's singles this year and it did not disappoint as the quality scaled rare heights. Rublev, 27, has barely been outside of the top 10 since 2022 but has never got close to winning a Grand Slam, losing all 10 quarter-finals that he has contested. The 14th seed must have sighed when he saw Alcaraz in his way in the fourth round, but he came out in positive fashion, off-loading rockets at the five-time Grand Slam champion. With the roof closed after earlier thunderstorms the noise of the ball striking strings sounded like rifle shots. Rublev hit harder, then harder still and at 5-5 in the opening set launched an outrageous backhand winner off a full-blooded Alcaraz forehand and then followed with a powerful forehand of his own to the baseline to move a set ahead. He barely did anything wrong after that but Alcaraz, finally clicking into gear after three scratchy wins, showed why taking the title off him will be such a tough task. The turning point came at 3-3 in the third set when Rublev, attempting to save a break point, sent Alcaraz sliding from side to side with a barrage of power only for the Spaniard to whip a forehand cross court winner, before cupping his ear to the crowd who rose as one to salute the moment of genius. Rublev stuck manfully to his task but he was powerless to prevent an 11th loss from 11 matches against top-five opponents at a Grand Slam.

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