
Nobody cares about women's football? Try telling the Boxpark crowd
'I just can't look,' she explained. 'They put you through it don't they?'
She was right there. These Lionesses simply do not know how to do things the easy way. Mainlining jeopardy, they seem to require their backs pinned to the wall to respond. But my how they responded in Basel to retain their European crown. For the third game on the bounce they needed extra time to prevail, for the second time in this tournament they won a penalty shoot-out. And when Chloe Kelly – who else – stroked home the winning penalty, Molly was up and dancing with her friends in Wembley, as fireworks shot skywards from the stage. Moments later, as Leah Williamson lifted the trophy, she was in tears, overwhelmed by the collective delight.
Because this was delight all right. More than 1,500 people had packed into a barn of a place alongside Wembley Stadium, dancing themselves into a sweating frenzy. From mid-afternoon, there were groups of young women, festooned in the cross of St George, taking pouting selfies in front of the main steps of Wembley Stadium. Alongside them the official merchandise sales area for the Oasis residency had been built, less a stall more a hypermarket.
And there was a merger of the two events inside the Box Park, where many were wearing bucket hats, bought for the occasion. When an England team played in the first women's World Cup in Mexico in 1971, nobody back home knew they were in action. After all, if there was a man as well as a dog on the touchline for their matches in those days, they had a bumper crowd. How things have changed 45 years on. England's women are now at the centre of national pride. It was packed in the Box Park, and the crowd was overwhelmingly female. Not to suggest there was no male presence: there were a few boyfriends accompanying their other halves, dads of all ages with their daughters, a chap in an England women's shirt with his name on the back and number: Grandad 70.
Taeja Hoskins had come down from Birmingham, she said, 'for the atmosphere'. Her friend May Barnett had come from Shepherd's Bush, with her father Ben in tow. 'I wouldn't say I was dragged here, not at all,' he insisted. 'I'd be watching at home on my own otherwise.'
Round the edges of barn, the food outlets were providing constant refreshment. There was Cheesy Naan Melts, for instance, Ipanema Barbecue and the exotically named Yorkshire Burritos. And the bars were churning out the drinks.
Before kick-off, even as the atmosphere gradually built from school disco to full on roar, the excitement was tempered with realism. This was the World Cup winners against the European champions, a rerun of the Arsenal-Barcelona Champions League final: the world's best once again in contention. Nobody was expecting an easy ride.
Besides, as the game began it soon became evident the world champions would be no pushover. The surge of excitement that greeted Alessia Russo's and Lauren Hemp's early chances, were rare. There was a gathering fear as the Spanish women, their skill and composure as evident as their male counterparts, took control.
'No, no, no' boomed out one woman as another Spanish careful, considered advance was built. And when an Arsenal forward opened the scoring, nobody was surprised. Unfortunately Mariona Caldentey was wearing the red shirt of Spain. A thick pall of gloom descended as her smart finish hit the back of the England net. Silence hung. Heads were in hands everywhere. Except in the bar in the centre of the building, where morale reinforcing cocktails continued to be mixed.
'The wrong Arsenal player scored,' said Taeja at half time. 'But we'll be all right, you watch.'
With this England team, optimism is always a valid response. And when the Lionesses equalised, my, how they enjoyed that goal at the Boxpark. Everyone was on their feet bouncing the moment Kelly strolled down the wing and set up a perfect cross for Russo's expertly guided header. There were no plumes of beer as became the trademark during the men's World Cup in 2018. Everyone was too busy jumping up and down to chuck their drink around.
For sure, as the game progressed, as Spain's players kept hold of the ball, things grew tense. Tackles were cheered like goals, the goalkeeper Hannah Hampton punching away a cross was roared on, a hefty clearance greeted with a squeal of relief that must have worried dogs as far away as Harrow. Someone with a hooter started choreographing the chanting. 'Parp parp parp parp parp England' was the soundtrack to extra time, as if the players could hear the encouragement.
And then came the penalties. Well what else do we expect? It's always a marathon for the Lionesses and their supporters. But these wonderful women prevailed. And as the young devotees danced in triumph, they were probably already planning to name their first daughter Chloe, after the penalty queen, or Hannah, after the goalkeeper who saved two Spanish spot kicks. Or maybe Sarina, after Wiegman, the astonishing manager of this team, who has now won three Euros in succession. Any of them would be the best of role models. Because these are proper national heroes.
Hashtags

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

Leader Live
23 minutes ago
- Leader Live
Williamson believes England's 'vulnerability' aided Euro 2025 victory
The Lionesses came back from a goal down to draw 1-1 with world champions Spain at St. Jakob Park, before defeating them 3-1 on penalties. It saw Williamson lift her second European title as England captain, becoming the only senior England captain to do so on foreign soil. But while buzzwords like resilience and a never-say-die attitude have followed their tournament trajectory, the 28-year-old suggests it was the willingness of her side to open themselves up to a belief in their own ability that proved the real key to success. 'You can have all of those words, and sport has all of those words circulating all the time and then you have people that are brave and put that into action and decide that you're going to go for it,' Williamson explained. 'You leave yourself vulnerable and all of those things. If you really, really try hard and it's not quite enough, that's an awful feeling. 'To put yourself out there like that, the reward is so great and we were brave enough to do it. I think that's the key to the team. 'Sarina [Wiegman] believes in us so much, it's hard not to believe that yourself. She said the same thing as she said before, 'We don't have to win, we want to win, and we're capable of winning so it's up to you girls,' and we did it.' Unbreakable. ✊ England had made a habit of coming back from behind, closing a two-goal deficit against Sweden in the quarter-finals before coming back from 1-0 down against both Italy and Spain. But having lost their opening match against France, England had played must-win football all from the outset and while it may not always have been pretty, they became accustomed to getting the job done. 'It was a hard-fought tournament and after our first game we looked ourselves in the mirror, we knew what we had to do, and we did it, repeatedly,' said Williamson. 'And now we're back-to-back champions and that feels good. 'Thank you to those of you who stuck with us. We'll party for you tonight if you've got work tomorrow and if not, go and enjoy yourselves.' It was club team-mate Alessia Russo who had headed England level, after Mariona Caldentey gave Spain the lead after 25 minutes. A resolute defensive display from Williamson and co kept the scores level and as neither team could find a breakthrough, with Salma Paralluelo's profligacy in front of goal at times England's saving grace, it was to penalties once more. The Lionesses had found their route to success from a shootout against Sweden and would do so again, despite not having favoured penalty takers Russo or Georgia Stanway on the pitch. Instead captain Williamson was one of those to step up, and while she saw her penalty saved by Cata Coll, Chloe Kelly did the bidding to make England Euro 2025 champions. 'I said, 'Really?! I made the cut?'' said Williamson on being picked to take a penalty. 'I struggled the back end of the tournament with an injury and I was very grateful to get through the game. I didn't think it was going to carry me that far, and it did. 'I hit it a little bit too low, I would have gone higher if I could do it again. But on the way back, Chloe said to me, 'Don't worry about it.' If anybody is going to tell me that in a penalty shootout, I'll take it off her.'

South Wales Argus
23 minutes ago
- South Wales Argus
Williamson believes England's 'vulnerability' aided Euro 2025 victory
The Lionesses came back from a goal down to draw 1-1 with world champions Spain at St. Jakob Park, before defeating them 3-1 on penalties. It saw Williamson lift her second European title as England captain, becoming the only senior England captain to do so on foreign soil. But while buzzwords like resilience and a never-say-die attitude have followed their tournament trajectory, the 28-year-old suggests it was the willingness of her side to open themselves up to a belief in their own ability that proved the real key to success. 'You can have all of those words, and sport has all of those words circulating all the time and then you have people that are brave and put that into action and decide that you're going to go for it,' Williamson explained. 'You leave yourself vulnerable and all of those things. If you really, really try hard and it's not quite enough, that's an awful feeling. 'To put yourself out there like that, the reward is so great and we were brave enough to do it. I think that's the key to the team. 'Sarina [Wiegman] believes in us so much, it's hard not to believe that yourself. She said the same thing as she said before, 'We don't have to win, we want to win, and we're capable of winning so it's up to you girls,' and we did it.' England had made a habit of coming back from behind, closing a two-goal deficit against Sweden in the quarter-finals before coming back from 1-0 down against both Italy and Spain. But having lost their opening match against France, England had played must-win football all from the outset and while it may not always have been pretty, they became accustomed to getting the job done. 'It was a hard-fought tournament and after our first game we looked ourselves in the mirror, we knew what we had to do, and we did it, repeatedly,' said Williamson. 'And now we're back-to-back champions and that feels good. 'Thank you to those of you who stuck with us. We'll party for you tonight if you've got work tomorrow and if not, go and enjoy yourselves.' It was club team-mate Alessia Russo who had headed England level, after Mariona Caldentey gave Spain the lead after 25 minutes. A resolute defensive display from Williamson and co kept the scores level and as neither team could find a breakthrough, with Salma Paralluelo's profligacy in front of goal at times England's saving grace, it was to penalties once more. The Lionesses had found their route to success from a shootout against Sweden and would do so again, despite not having favoured penalty takers Russo or Georgia Stanway on the pitch. Instead captain Williamson was one of those to step up, and while she saw her penalty saved by Cata Coll, Chloe Kelly did the bidding to make England Euro 2025 champions. 'I said, 'Really?! I made the cut?'' said Williamson on being picked to take a penalty. 'I struggled the back end of the tournament with an injury and I was very grateful to get through the game. I didn't think it was going to carry me that far, and it did. 'I hit it a little bit too low, I would have gone higher if I could do it again. But on the way back, Chloe said to me, 'Don't worry about it.' If anybody is going to tell me that in a penalty shootout, I'll take it off her.'


Glasgow Times
24 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Williamson believes England's 'vulnerability' aided Euro 2025 victory
The Lionesses came back from a goal down to draw 1-1 with world champions Spain at St. Jakob Park, before defeating them 3-1 on penalties. It saw Williamson lift her second European title as England captain, becoming the only senior England captain to do so on foreign soil. But while buzzwords like resilience and a never-say-die attitude have followed their tournament trajectory, the 28-year-old suggests it was the willingness of her side to open themselves up to a belief in their own ability that proved the real key to success. 'You can have all of those words, and sport has all of those words circulating all the time and then you have people that are brave and put that into action and decide that you're going to go for it,' Williamson explained. 'You leave yourself vulnerable and all of those things. If you really, really try hard and it's not quite enough, that's an awful feeling. 'To put yourself out there like that, the reward is so great and we were brave enough to do it. I think that's the key to the team. 'Sarina [Wiegman] believes in us so much, it's hard not to believe that yourself. She said the same thing as she said before, 'We don't have to win, we want to win, and we're capable of winning so it's up to you girls,' and we did it.' England had made a habit of coming back from behind, closing a two-goal deficit against Sweden in the quarter-finals before coming back from 1-0 down against both Italy and Spain. But having lost their opening match against France, England had played must-win football all from the outset and while it may not always have been pretty, they became accustomed to getting the job done. 'It was a hard-fought tournament and after our first game we looked ourselves in the mirror, we knew what we had to do, and we did it, repeatedly,' said Williamson. 'And now we're back-to-back champions and that feels good. 'Thank you to those of you who stuck with us. We'll party for you tonight if you've got work tomorrow and if not, go and enjoy yourselves.' It was club team-mate Alessia Russo who had headed England level, after Mariona Caldentey gave Spain the lead after 25 minutes. A resolute defensive display from Williamson and co kept the scores level and as neither team could find a breakthrough, with Salma Paralluelo's profligacy in front of goal at times England's saving grace, it was to penalties once more. The Lionesses had found their route to success from a shootout against Sweden and would do so again, despite not having favoured penalty takers Russo or Georgia Stanway on the pitch. Instead captain Williamson was one of those to step up, and while she saw her penalty saved by Cata Coll, Chloe Kelly did the bidding to make England Euro 2025 champions. 'I said, 'Really?! I made the cut?'' said Williamson on being picked to take a penalty. 'I struggled the back end of the tournament with an injury and I was very grateful to get through the game. I didn't think it was going to carry me that far, and it did. 'I hit it a little bit too low, I would have gone higher if I could do it again. But on the way back, Chloe said to me, 'Don't worry about it.' If anybody is going to tell me that in a penalty shootout, I'll take it off her.'