Women players hope Euros success will lift funding
The England women's team are due to play Spain in the Euros final in Basel at 17:00 BST.
Sophie Tinson, a forward for Hull City Ladies FC, said: "You haven't got many big clubs around here so hopefully it will bring more funding here."
Hull City Ladies compete in the FA Women's National League North, the third tier of the women's English football league.
Ms Tinson said her brother got her involved with football and she started off playing in a boys' team, before working her way up the system to Hull City Ladies.
She hoped the successful Lionesses Euros campaign would lead to more funding for women's clubs in the lower leagues.
"All the girls that are coming through in Hull and York… there's obviously got to be some talent out there somewhere, so hopefully it'll bring them through, and we can bring them through Hull City Ladies."
One of the team's defenders, Darcie Sugden-Brook, said the women's game had already improved for her generation.
"There's definitely going to be a lot more coverage of women's football, but I already think it's getting bigger in itself," she said.
The club's physio, Jamie Lee Robinson, said the team had seen an increase in the number of spectators, especially young girls.
"I think women's is just as important as men's", she said.
"It would be nice to see that progression of spectators and more people playing as well," she added.
Listen to highlights from Hull and East Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here.
Download the BBC News app from the App Store for iPhone and iPad or Google Play for Android devices
Hull City Ladies looking up ahead of new season
Hull City Ladies to kick off under new management
Related internet links
Hull City Ladies F.C.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Chloe Kelly delivers as England's clutch player again in latest Euro triumph
BASEL, Switzerland (AP) — Chloe Kelly has written her name in the history books. Or perhaps that should be rewritten. Kelly was England's hero again at the Women's European Championship on Sunday, setting up the equalizer in the final before coolly firing home the winning spot kick in the shootout to seal victory over World Cup winner Spain. The 27-year-old Kelly is establishing herself as one of the most clutch players around. 'I just came on to the pitch and wanted to make something happen,' Kelly said. 'I actually missed three penalties in training yesterday. 'I'm really proud to be English right now.' It was back-to-back European trophies for England and yet another final that Kelly had a huge impact on after coming on as a substitute during the Euro 2022 trophy match and scoring the winner against Germany in extra time to clinch a 2-1 victory. Kelly has also been one of England's super subs at Euro 2025. Against Sweden in the quarterfinals, Kelly was brought on in the 78th minute with England trailing 2-0 and had an immediate impact, whipping in two pinpoint crosses for Lucy Bronze and Michelle Agyemang to score and take the match to extra time — with England winning a penalty shootout. Then came Italy in the semifinals and another Kelly-inspired England fightback. Kelly scored the decisive goal in the 119th minute, shooting home the rebound only after Italy goalkeeper Laura Giuliani saved her penalty kick. 'I was adamant I was not missing two on the bounce,' Kelly said on Sunday. Hop, skip and thump It was a typically tense shootout, but Kelly showed nerves of steel with her hop, skip and thump penalty technique. 'It started when I was at Everton. It's something that just works for me. I take my time and take my breath and it just feels normal,' Kelly said. Kelly's performances during the tournament had some clamoring for her to start. However, she was again named on the bench for the final but became an emergency substitute rather than an impact substitute, coming on in the 41st minute after Lauren James was forced off with injury. And it was a trademark Kelly cross from the left for Alessia Russo to head in the equalizer in the 57th minute. 'She's an incredible player and it's nothing short of what she deserves as well,' England forward Lauren Hemp said. 'She's incredible and she's a great friend as well … she's always so inspiring, motivational to all of us. 'For her to come on and get them moments, it's so special for her and I hope she gets many more special moments in the future but she's someone we can count on and it's amazing to have that in your team.' 'Thank you everyone who wrote me off' The double joy of another European champion winner's medal as well as a Champions League one, won in May with Arsenal, has helped draw a line under a difficult period for Kelly. She was unwanted at Manchester City and lashed out at the club as her loan move was completed in January at the end of the transfer window. It was announced during Euro 2025 that Kelly had completed a permanent move to Arsenal after her contract with City expired. 'Thank you everyone who wrote me off, I'm grateful,' Kelly said with a relish on Sunday. Kelly also credited her family and England coach Sarina Wiegman for helping her get through the tough times. 'She gave me hope when i probably didn't have any,' Kelly said. 'There were a lot of tears at full time especially when I saw my family. Those are the people that got me through dark moments.' ___ AP soccer:


New York Times
4 minutes ago
- New York Times
Steelers camp: Juan Thornhill looks to prove Browns wrong, Broderick Jones injured
LATROBE, Pa. — Steelers safety Juan Thornhill was relaxing at home in Nashville, Tenn., about a month ago, taking care of his new baby and enjoying the final weeks of the offseason, when he got the jarring news: Pittsburgh had traded All-Pro safety Minkah Fitzpatrick to the Miami Dolphins. 'I thought it was a joke at first,' Thornhill said. Advertisement Initially, when the Steelers signed Thornhill, it appeared he'd be the third safety on the depth chart behind DeShon Elliott and Fitzpatrick. While the Steelers use three-safety 'big' nickel defenses regularly, Thornhill still would have been something of a role player, providing depth, experience and versatility. Not anymore. Essentially overnight, Thornhill was bumped up the depth chart to be the starting free safety in at least the nickel defense. Considering the Steelers are only in their base defense for about 20 percent of the snaps, that likely means Thornhill is now penciled in as the starter on 80 percent of the plays — or more. 'That's just me having to step up and play a little bit more,' Thornhill said. 'I think I'm very capable. I'm a great player. I can make a lot of plays.' Cleveland Browns fans might disagree. A second-round pick in the 2019 NFL Draft, Thornhill began his career as a meaningful contributor on two Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl winners. During his first four years, he intercepted eight passes, racked up 234 tackles and started six playoff games. In 2023, he parlayed that production into a three-year, $21 million contract with the Browns. The way Thornhill tells it, numerous injuries — and the desire to play through pain — resulted in some rough moments. The worst? In Week 11 last season in New Orleans, Saints quarterback Derek Carr connected with receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling. Browns fans saw Thornhill giving what they deemed to be less than 100 percent effort and nicknamed him 'Jog Thornhill.' Jog thornhill after being cut by the Steelers too🤣 — Dillion Gabriel over Social Media Sanders (@pfmrorl) May 6, 2025 'It did bother me,' Thornhill said. 'Because that's not me as a player. They saw that one clip of me, and they (thought of me) as a player that doesn't play hard for his team. But, yeah, it was one clip. I was exhausted.' The Browns cut the safety following his 2024 campaign. Now part of a Steelers defense full of Pro Bowlers, Thornhill is one of the players with the most to prove, making him a must-watch player in camp. Advertisement 'You can't read into what the media is saying about me,' Thornhill said. 'Because if you sit back and you watch the film of what I did in Cleveland, I had a lot of good plays. Some of the Cleveland people just tried to bash my name a little bit. If you sit there and really watch the film, I made a lot of plays and was very productive in that defense.' Through the first four days of camp, Thornhill has been running with the first-team defense consistently. In addition to playing almost all of the nickel snaps, he also took first-team reps in the base defense Saturday, when Darius Slay got a veteran day off and Jalen Ramsey shifted to outside corner. To this point, Thornhill has looked solid, showing good closing speed and instincts. During the Seven Shots drill to open practice on Sunday, DK Metcalf ran a corner route from the slot. Thornhill stayed in good position to break up the pass and let out a celebratory yell. While Thornhill has done his part to keep his starting job in the secondary, the safety position is becoming an area worth watching on a team with few true position battles. Even if Thornhill stays atop the depth chart, the Steelers will need to sort out who backs him up at free safety. To start camp, undrafted rookie Sebastian Castro was taking the second-team reps alongside strong safety Miles Killebrew. This week, the Steelers added another contender when they signed Chuck Clark. It remains to be seen if Clark is simply competition for Castro or if he could eventually push Thornhill for first-team reps in sub-packages. A seven-year veteran, Clark played his first six seasons in Baltimore, where he often played in the same secondary as Elliott. Clark endured an ACL injury in 2023 before joining the Jets last season. He started 12 games in 2024 and made 69 tackles. Going from a starter to fighting for a roster spot is a new experience. 'This is a first for me to come in this late, having to pick up the playbook,' Clark said. 'I know football, that's for sure. At the end of the day, it's just putting terminology to it in a different scheme, different concepts. But I know football.' Perhaps no player is facing more pressure to perform this season than 2023 first-round pick Broderick Jones. He came into camp about 20 pounds lighter than last season at 310 pounds, which should help him regain some of the mobility that's a staple of his game. However, on Sunday, he left practice with a lower-body soft-tissue injury that coach Mike Tomlin is classifying as day to day. After individual periods on Sunday, trainers wrapped Jones' groin/hamstring area. Time will tell if he's feeling healthy enough to compete on Tuesday, when the real hitting starts and we can really start evaluating the offensive line. Advertisement Given Jones' inconsistency throughout his first two seasons, the backup tackle job will be an important position on the roster. Dylan Cook stepped in for Jones, perhaps an indication that he's the front-runner to win the swing tackle job, at least for now. In other injury news from Sunday, undrafted fullback DJ Thomas-Jones sustained an apparent foot or ankle injury and left practice on a cart. Tomlin said it's a 'more significant' injury. Receiver Montana Lemonious-Craig is also day to day with soft tissue injury. Medical staff working on FB/ TE DJ Thomas-Jones' left foot/ ankle area. He's leaving practice on a cart. — Mike DeFabo (@MikeDeFabo) July 27, 2025 Tempers flared on Sunday when the Steelers practiced in helmets and shoulder pads. Backup center Ryan McCollum and inside linebacker Cole Holcomb got into a heated wrestling match. Both players eventually ended up with their helmets ripped off. Outside linebacker Nick Herbig was also involved in the scrum. There should be more of that next week when the Steelers start tackling ball carriers to the ground. We won't really know how the Steelers' new defensive linemen look until next week. But in the lower-contact settings, fifth-round pick Yahya Black has shown an ability to bat down passes at the line of scrimmage. During Sunday's practice alone, he deflected a pair of Mason Rudolph pass attempts. 'It's something that we really value culturally,' Tomlin said. 'Obviously, I think Cam (Heyward) probably led all the interior defensive linemen in the league last year. (Keeanu) Benton was also very high. We work at it. (Black) has an aptitude for it, and hopefully it continues.' For the second day in a row, the defense won the Seven Shots drills 4-3. Aaron Rodgers completed two of his four passes during the period. First, he found tight end Jonnu Smith on an out route to start the drill. Later, Rodgers connected with tight end Pat Freiermuth on an over-the-ball route. The two incompletions from Rodgers were the aforementioned pass breakup by Thornhill and a missed connection with Roman Wilson, with Elliott in good coverage.

Associated Press
4 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Chloe Kelly delivers as England's clutch player again in latest Euro triumph
BASEL, Switzerland (AP) — Chloe Kelly has written her name in the history books. Or perhaps that should be rewritten. Kelly was England's hero again at the Women's European Championship on Sunday, setting up the equalizer in the final before coolly firing home the winning spot kick in the shootout to seal victory over World Cup winner Spain. The 27-year-old Kelly is establishing herself as one of the most clutch players around. 'I just came on to the pitch and wanted to make something happen,' Kelly said. 'I actually missed three penalties in training yesterday. 'I'm really proud to be English right now.' It was back-to-back European trophies for England and yet another final that Kelly had a huge impact on after coming on as a substitute during the Euro 2022 trophy match and scoring the winner against Germany in extra time to clinch a 2-1 victory. Kelly has also been one of England's super subs at Euro 2025. Against Sweden in the quarterfinals, Kelly was brought on in the 78th minute with England trailing 2-0 and had an immediate impact, whipping in two pinpoint crosses for Lucy Bronze and Michelle Agyemang to score and take the match to extra time — with England winning a penalty shootout. Then came Italy in the semifinals and another Kelly-inspired England fightback. Kelly scored the decisive goal in the 119th minute, shooting home the rebound only after Italy goalkeeper Laura Giuliani saved her penalty kick. 'I was adamant I was not missing two on the bounce,' Kelly said on Sunday. Hop, skip and thump It was a typically tense shootout, but Kelly showed nerves of steel with her hop, skip and thump penalty technique. 'It started when I was at Everton. It's something that just works for me. I take my time and take my breath and it just feels normal,' Kelly said. Kelly's performances during the tournament had some clamoring for her to start. However, she was again named on the bench for the final but became an emergency substitute rather than an impact substitute, coming on in the 41st minute after Lauren James was forced off with injury. And it was a trademark Kelly cross from the left for Alessia Russo to head in the equalizer in the 57th minute. 'She's an incredible player and it's nothing short of what she deserves as well,' England forward Lauren Hemp said. 'She's incredible and she's a great friend as well … she's always so inspiring, motivational to all of us. 'For her to come on and get them moments, it's so special for her and I hope she gets many more special moments in the future but she's someone we can count on and it's amazing to have that in your team.' 'Thank you everyone who wrote me off' The double joy of another European champion winner's medal as well as a Champions League one, won in May with Arsenal, has helped draw a line under a difficult period for Kelly. She was unwanted at Manchester City and lashed out at the club as her loan move was completed in January at the end of the transfer window. It was announced during Euro 2025 that Kelly had completed a permanent move to Arsenal after her contract with City expired. 'Thank you everyone who wrote me off, I'm grateful,' Kelly said with a relish on Sunday. Kelly also credited her family and England coach Sarina Wiegman for helping her get through the tough times. 'She gave me hope when i probably didn't have any,' Kelly said. 'There were a lot of tears at full time especially when I saw my family. Those are the people that got me through dark moments.' ___ AP soccer: