Latest news with #EurosChampions


The Sun
a day ago
- Sport
- The Sun
It's been ugly at times but the beauty about our Lionesses is this isn't the end — they are never done
SCREAMS fill the air, tears flow and beer rains down to ecstatic chants of 'It's coming home' — and I couldn't be more proud. Our wonder women have done it again. 3 3 Euros champions for the second time in a row after defeating Spain and putting to bed our World Cup heartache from 2023. Football is called 'the beautiful game' — but this tournament has, at times, been anything but that for our brave Lionesses. Even the most die-hard fans will, at some point, have thought: 'We're surely done now . . .' But we have kept bouncing back. Whether it was a last-minute equaliser, an extra-time winner or heart-stopping penalty shootout. It's been a campaign of resilience, ugly at times, and we've had to fight. The Lionesses were the tournament's most passionate team and were rightly rewarded. Now they enter the history books as England's most successful football team and the nation will never forget the euphoria they have gifted us. There are moments I'll never forget — such as the Sweden shootout when Lucy Bronze fired a simply sublime penalty into the roof of the net in the 13th of 14 kicks. It made me think: 'They will always find a way.' Now they have brought football home yet again and the beauty is, this isn't the end. Now we want to complete the set with the 2027 World Cup. That's the wonderful thing about our Lionesses, they are never done.


The Sun
a day ago
- Politics
- The Sun
Our heroic Lionesses have brought football home AGAIN with their gutsy Euros victory
Roar talent THEY did it! Our heroic Lionesses have brought football home. Again. They put us through the emotional wringer, of course, but their task was never going to be easy. What a gutsy triumph it was against a much-fancied Spanish team and who else bu t Chloe Kelly to score the winning penalty? Gongs must surely follow for Sarina Wiegman and her team who have now been in three successive major tournament finals and won two of them. Back-to-back Euros Champions is an incredible achievement. The England men who, after all, didn't do too badly under Sir Gareth Southgate, can only look on in envy. On top of defending their Euros trophy, the Lionesses have also inspired the next generation of female footballers with their outstanding performances, grit, determination and skill. You wouldn't bet against them winning the World Cup in two years' time. Tackle the issue Exchequer Secretary James Murray is the latest to admit protesters are 'right to feel frustrated'. This after Sir Keir Starmer talked tough in May and Deputy PM Angela Rayner told Cabinet colleagues last week to address the public's 'real concerns'. Migrant hotel protesters take to the streets again as demonstrations spread across the country in weekend stand-off Starmer, of course, quickly U-turned on his 'island of strangers' comments and confessed he didn't agree with his scriptwriters' words. Do Rayner and Murray really mean it either? If they did, their Government would not have dismissed the only credible deterrent to the small boats. They are acknowledging the issue now because voter anger is worsening, with protests against migrant hotels spreading. The protesters, overwhelmingly, are not right-wing firebrands the Government can dismiss as racist extremists. These are ordinary householders worried about the threats to their communities and the safety of their children. Meanwhile, the useless Home Office is setting up a police unit to monitor social media for anti-migrant comments. The Government trying to police opinions instead of tackling the issue would be dangerously misguided. Losing bet IF the Chancellor thinks she can get away with milking Britain's gamblers for the money she needs to fill a financial black hole, the odds don't look good. Analysis shows a punitive tax on horserace betting would wipe £330million off the turf industry and put it into irreversible decline with nearly 3,000 jobs at risk. Bosses warn it is the 'gravest risk to horseracing the sport has ever seen'. The Government risks taking a punt where everyone loses.