logo
English grit beats Spanish skill to secure Euro glory

English grit beats Spanish skill to secure Euro glory

Khaleej Times5 days ago
England were on the ropes often at the Women's Euros, and they always found a knockout blow, before beating Spain in a final penalty shootout to show that skill may be a way to dominate games, but it takes the heart of a lioness to win them.
Chloe Kelly was the hero, firing in the spot-kick to ensure the defending champions retained their crown, but every English player had to dig deep to thwart a Spanish side who were best everywhere except on the final scoreboard.
Down 2-0 at the break, England's tournament almost ended in the quarter-finals as Sweden looked set to cruise through, but Kelly and Michelle Agyemang dragged the champions back into the game with late goals before they won the penalty shootout despite having four kicks saved.
They made heavy weather of Italy in the semis and again Kelly came to the rescue, scoring a 119th-minute winner to send them into the final despite another flawed performance.
In contrast, Spain cruised, purring like the engine of one of the many sports cars that can be seen zipping along city streets in the more affluent parts of Switzerland. They beat the host nation, and eased past Germany in the semis to make the final.
They met England in the 2023 World Cup final when a first-half goal set Spain on course for victory and their first major title. The story was almost a carbon copy on Sunday as they took the lead through Mariona Caldentey in the 25th minute.
Led by playmaker Aitan Bonmati, the Spaniards sensed a weakness on England's left flank and probed it relentlessly until Ona Batlle came up with the cross for Caldentey to score.
The introduction of Kelly before the break for the injured Lauren James strengthened that wing, and when Kelly set Russo up for the equaliser the tide did not exactly turn, but the belief of the English players certainly grew.
Battered by a number of crunching tackles, fullbacks Lucy Bronze and Alex Greenwood continued to throw themselves into every challenge, while captain Leah Williamson made a lung-bursting run to create a late chance that hinted at reserves of energy not even she knew she had.
Having been to the brink so many times, England believed.
When the game finished 1-1 and the penalty shootout awaited, the English players seemed relaxed and confident, with their Spanish counterparts looking slightly more on edge.
The Spaniards had the game in the palms of their hands for 120 minutes, but it began slipping away as Hannah Hamton started to save their spot-kicks, first from Caldentey and then from Bonmati, before Paralluelo fired her effort wide.
Kelly made no mistake, lashing the ball into the net as the English fans in the stadium erupted in joy.
"This is England, I think this is our moment, we've dug in for the 120 minutes, we've done what we needed to do to keep Spain out. It was just one kick and that was it and so we did that this time," Hampton said.
For all their dominance, this is a final that Spain will feel got away from them. Despite all their success in recent years, they lacked the cutting edge they needed to get the job done, and when it really mattered,
England had it in spades.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Krishna and Siraj rock England in Test series finale
Krishna and Siraj rock England in Test series finale

Gulf Today

time10 hours ago

  • Gulf Today

Krishna and Siraj rock England in Test series finale

Guyer Prasidh Krishna and Mohammed Siraj took four wickets each as India fought back in the fifth and deciding Test against England at the Oval on Friday. England were 129-1 in reply to India's 224 all out as they threatened to build a substantial first-innings lead. But they were eventually dismissed for 247, just 23 runs ahead. The recalled Krishna had figures of 4-62 in 16 overs and fellow paceman Siraj 4-86 in 16.2 in a match India must win to end one of the most enthralling series in England since the 2005 Ashes level at 2-2. India were 75-2 in their second innings, a lead of 52 runs, when bad light ended play on the second day, with England a bowler down in the absence of the injured Chris Woakes. Yashasvi Jaiswal was 51 not out after being dropped twice. The left-handed opener was reprieved on 20 when Harry Brook floored a tough catch at second slip following a loose drive off Gus Atkinson. And he was missed again on 40 when Liam Dawson failed to sight a catch in the deep and was hit in the face. Jaiswal cashed in with a 44-ball fifty completed when he guided Jamie Overton over the slips for six. India opener KL Rahul was caught by first slip Joe Root off Josh Tongue before Sai Sudharsan, dropped on seven, was lbw to Atkinson for 11. Earlier, Crawley and Ben Duckett shared a blistering first-wicket stand of 92 in just 13 overs after Atkinson marked his return to Test cricket with a five-wicket haul. Both openers fell either side of lunch, however, before stand-in England captain Ollie Pope, leading the side in place of the injured Ben Stokes, was lbw to Siraj for 22. Crawley and Duckett dominated India's attack, with left-hander Duckett telling Akash Deep 'you can't get me out'. Deep, however, had Duckett caught behind for 43 off an attempted scoop, then put his arm round the unimpressed batsman's shoulder and appeared to say a few words as he walked off. This incident came after India captain Shubman Gill accused England of ignoring the 'spirit of cricket' by time-wasting in the third Test at Lord's. England were then angered by the India's decision to bat on in the fourth Test at Old Trafford rather than agree a draw as soon as possible. Siraj stars: Ater Duckett's exit, Crawley holed out off a miscued pull against Krishna for 64, with 56 of those runs coming in boundaries. The usually mild-mannered Root, second in the all-time list of Test match run scorers, found himself exchanging words with Krishna before the umpires intervened, and was lbw to Siraj for 29. Jamie Smith's edged drive off Krishna well caught by Rahul at second slip and four balls later Overton was lbw for a duck. Brook struck an extraordinary 'falling' sweep for six off Siraj during a 57-ball fifty. But Siraj bowled him for 53, with Brook the last man out as Woakes was unable to bat. England paceman Woakes was effectively ruled out of the rest of the match before play on Friday after suffering a shoulder injury when diving in an attempt to prevent a boundary on Thursday. But Atkinson responded with a superb return of 5-33 in 21.4 in an innings where he also ran out the in-form Gill. The 27-year-old's fourth five-wicket haul in just 13 Tests was all the more creditable as this was Atkinson's first senior match since being sidelined with hamstring trouble following a one-off Test against Zimbabwe in May. India, who resumed on 204-6, lost their last four wickets for just 20 more runs in 5.4 overs on Friday. Agence France-Presse

India hit back against England on another remarkable day in 5th Test
India hit back against England on another remarkable day in 5th Test

Khaleej Times

time14 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

India hit back against England on another remarkable day in 5th Test

India roared back into contention on an exhilarating day two of the final Test on Friday as their seamers restricted England to a 23-run lead after the hosts had threatened to run away with a match that the tourists need to win to square the series. After mopping up India's brittle tail in less than 30 minutes in the morning, openers Zac Crawley and Ben Duckett raced to 92-0 in 12 overs in a blistering return of Bazball. However, continuing the back and forth theme of the entire series, India responded as their bowlers ran in relentlessly to peg England back to 247. Opener Yashasvi Jaiswal then scored quickly in a potentially awkward last 90 minutes, ending unbeaten on 51 with India closing on 75-2, 52 runs ahead to leave the pivotal match fascinatingly poised. Another fabulously undulating day began with India resuming at 204-6 but soon skittled for 224 as pace bowler Gus Atkinson took five wickets in his first Test since May. It was an all-too-familiar collapse by the tourists this summer as Karun Nair fell lbw for 57 and Washington Sundar was caught for 26. Atkinson then bowled Mohammed Siraj and had Prasidh Krishna caught behind, both for ducks, to finish with 5-33. England set about their reply in their usual, swashbuckling fashion, exemplified by Duckett's extraordinary "reverse hook" for six off Akash Deep. They reached 50 in seven overs - the fastest 50 opening partnership England have ever managed in a Test - but fell just short of the 100 as Duckett was caught behind reversing for 43. They were 109-1 at lunch and England looked poised to take command but India, as they have all summer, refused to buckle as Crawley (64) and Ollie Pope (22) quickly departed. Joe Root brought his usual calm to proceedings until Siraj nipped one back at him for an lbw on 29, with Jacob Bethell going the same way soon after. Krishna finished off the session in style by having Jamie Smith brilliantly caught in the slips for eight by KL Rahul then getting Jamie Overton lbw for nought and followed up with the wicket of Atkinson to finish with 4-62. Harry Brook had a late flurry either side of a rain delay before becoming Siraj's fourth victim when bowled for 53 as England, with injured Chris Woakes absent, were all out for 247. India's openers quickly erased that and pushed on well beyond, with Jaiswal looking particularly enterprising en route to a quickfire 51 — though he was badly dropped in the deep on 40. Rahul departed tamely for seven off Josh Tongue, and Sai Sudharsan followed, lbw to Atkinson for 11, leaving Deep not out four. With good weather forecast for Saturday another Oval full house will turn up in expectation of more fireworks and what has been one of the most entertaining series for years still in the balance.

Match in balance after bowlers stage India's fightback  ICC World Test Championship
Match in balance after bowlers stage India's fightback  ICC World Test Championship

Int'l Cricket Council

time15 hours ago

  • Int'l Cricket Council

Match in balance after bowlers stage India's fightback ICC World Test Championship

The see-saw battle in the England-India series continued as India ended Day 2 of The Oval Test with 52 runs ahead, after bowling out England for 247 in the first innings. Yashasvi Jaiswal (51*) and nightwatchman Akash Deep saw off England's attack after the hosts were succesful in grabbing two Indian wickets of KL Rahul and Sai Sudharsan before stumps even as they dropped Jaiswal when he was on 41. As many as 16 wickets fell on the second day of the decider as pacers dominated the proceedings leaving the Test perfectly poised for an exciting finish. With England openers Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley threatening to take the game away after India folded up early at the start, Mohammed Siraj and Prasidh Krishna staged India's comeback into the game, restricting England's lead to just 23 runs. Both Siraj and Krishna bowled better lines post lunch with Siraj breaking England's back as he picked four key wickets including that of the stand-in captain Ollie Pope (22), Joe Root (29), and Jacob Bethell during a fiery eight-over spell. Siraj's terrific comeback after a forgettable morning session, made him the highest wicket taker in the series after claiming Harry Brook (53) as his 18th scalp in the tournament. Siraj was ably supported by Krishna who started the proceedings after lunch by removing the sublime-looking Crawley (64), following up with the wickets of Jamie Smith, Jamie Overton and Gus Atkinson. Brook tried to hold one end with the tail and brought up his half-century in process before Siraj got better off him. England began Day 2 at The Oval with a player short and with extra responsibility falling on their pacers after Chris Woakes was ruled out of the final Test due to a shoulder injury. As India resumed at 204/6, the England bowlers led by Gus Atkinson made light work of the Indian tail after Josh Tongue trapped Karun Nair (57) plumb in front. The visitors lost their final four wickets for just six runs and collapsed within the first half an hour of day's play with Atkinson claiming his fourth five-wicket haul after he snapped the last three wickets. England continued to boss the first session as openers Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley got off to a flier, with a scoring rate of over seven runs per over notching up their 100 within 15 overs, losing Duckett (43) in the process. However the second session belonged to India as the pacers with four wickets each made sure India fought their way back into the game.

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