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Jess Fishlock: Mural of Wales star unveiled in 'European first'
Jess Fishlock: Mural of Wales star unveiled in 'European first'

Sky News

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • Sky News

Jess Fishlock: Mural of Wales star unveiled in 'European first'

A mural of Wales star Jess Fishlock has been unveiled in what organisers say is a European first. The artwork in Splott, Cardiff, is believed to be the first five-a-side football pitch-sized mural of a female footballer in Europe, according to organisers. With 47 goals to her name, Fishlock is Wales 's all-time record goalscorer. The 38-year-old will be part of the team making history for the nation at the UEFA European Women's Championship in Switzerland. The upcoming competition marks the first time the women's team has qualified for a major tournament. The team will face off against reigning champions England, as well as 2017 winners The Netherlands and 2022 semi-finalists France. The squad of 23 chosen to represent their country was revealed at the summit of Yr Wyddfa (Snowdon) last week. 2:01 On Thursday, Fishlock's mural, which was designed by Regan Gilflin and created by Shawqi Hasson and Yusuf Ismail from the Unify project, was unveiled in front of community representatives and children from local schools. The footballer's sister, Francesca Fishlock, told Sky News that she was "super proud" of her older sibling and that it was "lovely" to have a mural dedicated to her on her first home ground. "She's tried her hardest to get to a major tournament with Wales, the whole group has, so to be able to go over there and just experience it with them is amazing," she said. "They've got nothing to lose and nothing to prove, so they're just going to go out there and give their all really and do the best that they can. Hopefully get out of the group, but if they don't, they're there, and that's what matters." Members of the local football team, Splott Albion FC, attended the launch event of the mural, which has been supported by funding from the Welsh Government and Wales Arts International. Lola, 15, said the women's team was "inspiring many younger girls to start playing" in Wales. Gracie, 14, added that the mural was "a good representation of women's football" and was confident of the team's chances, adding: "We're going to win". Lilly, 14, said the team were "someone to look up to" and are giving potential future Wales stars "an opportunity to see how far they can come". Aliyah, 14, whose cousin is also part of the Wales squad, said it was "really cool" to have a relative representing her country, and the advice she had given her was to "just smash it". One person who knows more than most what it's like to represent Wales is Professor Laura McAllister, who made 24 appearances for her country between 1994 and 1998. Professor McAllister told Sky News that it was a "fabulous opportunity" to see Wales represented on the world stage. "I was at the Men's Euros last year, and of course, Wales weren't there, and that was quite painful. So this time I'm really excited about being there when my own nation is represented on the global stage," she said. The women's game in Wales has "come a long way" since she was representing her country, Professor McAllister's added. "We didn't have everything we needed to perform at the highest level, and there's still a journey to go" "Let's not get carried away, we don't have full equality between men's and women's football or the same opportunities for girls as we have for boys. "So we're very mindful that there's more work ahead, but for now, let's celebrate the important steps we've made on the journey."

How a mountain changed Wales' mindset as they seek Euro highs
How a mountain changed Wales' mindset as they seek Euro highs

BBC News

time19-06-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

How a mountain changed Wales' mindset as they seek Euro highs

It took Rhian Wilkinson the length of a game to climb Yr Wyddfa on Thursday at 06:00 BST – texting Football Association of Wales (FAW) staff to let them know she would not be joining them on the train to Wales' highest peak – she took some time for herself at the top 90 minutes was the sixth time she had scaled the 3,500-foot mountain since being named Wales head coach little more than a year ago, but her attachment to the spectacular summit stretches a lot parents – dad Keith and Welsh mother Shan - took their honeymoon in the Eryri national park. When the family returned from Canada for a year when Wilkinson was a schoolgirl, they would regularly holiday in an area they loved to her father died, six months before she took the Wales job, it felt the fitting place tor the family to hold a ceremony to remember him."It feels quite full circle," Wilkinson said, back on the mountain as she named her Wales squad for a summer where they will attempt to scale new heights in their first appearance at a major also felt fitting. Whether fate or coincidence, the FAW had no idea of Wilkinson's bond with the breathtaking landscape when they decided there was no better spot to show how their side – not even officially recognised until 1993 – now deserves to be high on a platform of its own for everyone to the 43-year-old former Canada international had also used the mountain, also known as Snowden, to help change a mindset."This place is what we based our journey on," said defender Rhiannon Roberts, who could not resist a trip to the summit for the announcement, having seen images of it throughout the qualifiers. "From the start of the campaign, we'd have our badge and all the fixtures going up the mountain and then our goal, our summit, at the top."Each game, we'd climb up the mountain, ticking them off one by one. And here we are."As well as the PowerPoint to start international weeks, posters were dotted around the team's breakfast and meeting rooms."We got on board with every camp as we moved up and onto the next fixture," said goalkeeper Olivia Clark. "And then we reached the top with qualifying, but we're going again because we're at the tournament with a new mountain."One that perhaps represents a bigger challenge, hence the inclusion of the influential and experienced Sophie Ingle in the 23-player squad for Switzerland - where Wales face the Netherlands, France and England - represented such a timely boost after nine months 33 and having won 141 caps, has been on this journey longer than most, one that Wilkinson admitted some players and staff openly wondered if they would ever accomplish given the number of near misses to suspected a mental block, so brought in a mental performance coach to try and place past baggage behind them, and returned to the mountain."It was used as a theme because it was always going to be an uphill battle, with setbacks," Wilkinson said. "The challenge of steeper parts, the flattening off, all these parallels."And as we move towards the Euros, we've started talking about the Everest part of it, that something is impossible until it isn't. And we're there."Getting 'there' is new for Wales, but not for Wilkinson. She won two bronze medals from three Olympics and appeared at four World Cups during her 181-cap career with Canada, being inducted into their hall of fame and recognised as one of their greatest players."They were huge moments for me, realising a dream to be an Olympian, but helping this team create a moment for themselves is very special," she aim is for more moments."We will surprise people," promised Wilkinson, who added that she also expects some of the lower-profile players in the squad, beyond the likes of Ingle and the iconic Jess Fishlock, to catch the eye now the platform is she put it: "These names should be known."They might well be if the lowest-ranked side at the Euros do cause the surprise she of the fixtures against three of the European game's heavyweights - holders, past winners, and former semi-finalists - was put into suitable climbing context, with the audience told things would be taken step by step in the two and a half weeks before the opener against the Dutch in obvious questions on England came, but were not the focus. No-one thought to ask whether the Wyddfa legend of a slain giant being entombed at the summit was another metaphor Wilkinson was about to lean a Portugal training camp is next for the squad – plus three as-yet unnamed training players – and a hectic schedule before the first game on 5 to come, but a longer-term future was also on Wilkinson's mind as she took her walk up the the interviews and photos at the summit, where only the haze of the sunshine prevented the view reaching Pembrokeshire 96 miles to the south, Wilkinson joined the media and officials on the train for the trip back down the mountain and a reminder that the impact of this side has stretched just as historic trip, even for a railtrack in operation for 129 years, as a local team welcomed Wilkinson in front of a giant Wales shirt – dubbed Ein Crys Cymru/Our Wales shirt - about to set off on a tour of the country to engage with the next generation. Participation figures are thought to be close to a 2026 target of 20,000 girls, if not already passed ahead of the some of those numbers smiled for one last photo, Yr Wyddfa stared back at Wilkinson, the mountain that has motivated her team and the 23 heading to so a new journey – and a new summit – awaits.

'Shattered' family of two sisters who drowned in Snowdonia mountain pool call for clarity over 'conflicting' accounts of their deaths
'Shattered' family of two sisters who drowned in Snowdonia mountain pool call for clarity over 'conflicting' accounts of their deaths

Daily Mail​

time19-06-2025

  • Daily Mail​

'Shattered' family of two sisters who drowned in Snowdonia mountain pool call for clarity over 'conflicting' accounts of their deaths

A family 'shattered' by the deaths of two sisters who drowned at a mountain pool have called for clarity over the 'conflicting' accounts of their deaths. Mother-of-two Hajra Zahid, 29, and younger sister Haleema Zahid, 25, were pulled from the water after a 'challenging' rescue attempt on a notorious path up Snowdon. The pair had travelled 70 miles to the mountain range to visit the waterfall pools with university friends before the tragedy struck, an inquest opening heard. The sisters had only moved to the UK four months ago to begin masters degrees in International Business at the University of Chester and had been living in Rotherham, South Yorkshire. Their family have been left heartbroken amid claims they have received 'conflicting' accounts over how the women came to their deaths, reports from Pakistan said. The account given that one sister died trying to save the other does not add up with where the bodies of the two women were found - roughly 10 minutes apart - the family claimed. 'The family is shattered,' a relative told Geo News. 'The police says one sister drowned and the other drowned while trying to save her but the body of one sister was found floating on the surface and the other sister's body was found ten minutes away. 'The witnesses say both entered the water together. The police have not informed us of anything and are not helping the family.' The women's bodies have been repatriated back to Pakistan. Coroner Sarah Riley said the women had travelled to the pools at Snowdon's notorious Watkin Path with university friends. The hearing in Caernarfon was told pathologist Dr Zain Mehdi carried out post mortem examinations and has the provisional cause of death for both sisters as drowning. Ms Riley said: 'They have entered the water and sadly both died as a result of drowning.' She said Hajra was declared dead at 10.48pm and Haleema was declared dead at 10.49pm. 'Investigations continue into how they came by their deaths.' She added: 'I offer my sincere condolences to the family and friends and all who knew and loved them.' The sisters were originally from Rawalpindi in Pakistan but moved to the UK as students at the University of Chester's business school where they were taking on masters degrees in international business. Dr Bilal Saeed previously worked with Haleema at a telecommunications company in Islamabad, and said she was 'an exceptionally compassionate, hardworking and kind individual'. He said that she had 'touched the lives of many with her warmth, professionalism and unwavering dedication' before leaving her home country to pursue a masters degree in the UK. Another friend described her as an 'amazing lady, very lively and energetic, someone you would want in your life'. University vice chancellor Prof Eunice Simmons said: 'The University of Chester community is in mourning for the tragic loss. 'They touched the lives of many here at Chester - their friends, the cohort on their course and the staff who taught them - and they will be deeply missed.' Chair of Llanberis Mountain Rescue Team, Jurgen Dissmann said: 'On behalf of Llanberis Mountain Rescue Team, I extend our deepest sympathies to the families and friends of the two women who sadly lost their lives. 'This was a complex and difficult callout for the team.' Social media has been blamed for a surge of inexperienced walkers to Snowdonia after four out of five recent deaths in the recent fatalities were women. The pools where the Hajra and Haleema died had been rated one of the best places in Britain to inspire 'Insta envy' and awash with selfie-takers from miles away. Rescue teams have previously said a rise in call outs to the mountains known as 'Britain's most dangerous peaks' was down to 'trending social media posts' on Instagram and TikTok. And the latest tragedy means at least five young people have died in the Snowdonia mountain range this year. Social media influencer Maria Eftimova, 28, travelled from Greater Manchester to climb Tryfan but fell 65ft when she lost her grip on February 22. Dr Charlotte Crook, 30, of Birmingham slipped to her death on Glyder Fach on February 16. Medical student John Aravinth, 20 of Horsham, West Sussex, fell on Snowdon after getting lost on May 26. The Yr Wyddfa range has upwards of 750,000 visitors a year. It averages eight deaths annually - but five already this year. A BBC Countryfile guide said: 'While many choose to take the mountain railway most of the way, plenty choose to make the fairly substantial hike - many of whom may not be regular hikers and may not be armed with the right kit or sufficient food.' It was used by Sir Edmund Hillary and his team as a training ground for their successful Everest climb in 1953. Snowdon attracts more than 600,000 walkers, climbers and tourists each year with a series of walking trails and a train line leading to the 3,560ft summit. The eight-mile long Watkin Path, where the tragedy happened, is described as 'one of the steepest and more challenging routes up Snowdon'. It takes an estimated four to seven hours to complete - with a dip in the water a must-do for many walkers. However the route is said to pass along 'a series of crystal-blue waterfalls before it quickly ramps up in difficulty after passing Gladstone Rock. The pools have been described as 'quite possibly the most beautiful wild swimming spot in the whole National Park.' Detective Chief Inspector Andy Gibson of North Wales Police said: 'Our thoughts and sympathies remain with the families and friends of both women.

Rhian Wilkinson, Wales' highest mountain and a Euro 2025 squad announcement with a difference
Rhian Wilkinson, Wales' highest mountain and a Euro 2025 squad announcement with a difference

New York Times

time19-06-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Rhian Wilkinson, Wales' highest mountain and a Euro 2025 squad announcement with a difference

Rhian Wilkinson didn't tell anyone. The Wales Women's manager just woke up and left with the sunrise, bound for the top of Wales' highest peak, Yr Wyddfa. Wilkinson knows this mountain well (known as 'Snowdon' in English). She was born in Canada, but her family relocated to Cowbridge, Wales, where her mum, Shan, is originally from, for a year when she was eight — the same age she first went up Yr Wyddfa — before moving back to Canada permanently. The Wilkinsons would travel to Wales quite a lot after that. Advertisement The former Canada international's parents were married in the pub at the bottom of the mountain, with their honeymoon spent at the top. And just beneath the summit, overlooking the mountain's west side, is where Wilkinson held a ceremony for her father, Keith, the former head coach of Canada's national rugby team, after his passing six months before she was named Wales head coach at the end of February 2024. It's here where The Athletic runs into Wilkinson before the train of assembled media and Football Association of Wales (FAW) representatives arrive for Wales' Euro 2025 squad announcement. 'My dad used to make me visualise as a kid,' Wilkinson says as the wind whips across scrags of rock. 'He tried all the time (when I was) going to training, going to games, in the car. He'd be like, 'Can you picture yourself? Can you feel the grass?' I'm like, 'Oh God, shut up'. Even now, it drives me wild.' Wilkinson is smiling because, you know what, maybe the visualisation thing works. On her first national camp, Wilkinson showed the squad a photo of Yr Wyddfa with the Euro 2025 qualifying matches assembled in an upward trajectory to the summit imposed over the top. The Wales badge sat at the mountain's base. 'At first, we were like: 'What is this?'' says goalkeeper Olivia Clark, laughing. 'But then we began making it up the mountain. Now we have posters of it dotted around the food room, the training room. It's this metaphor.' And maybe it's the thinning oxygen at 1,085 meters (3,560 feet), but there lurks an irrepressible urge to make obvious poetry: this being Wales Women's final summit before their first major tournament summit. A manifestation of the team's grisly, uphill battle — first for recognition, then for funding, then for qualification for Euro 2025 — finally conquered. Today, Wilkinson and her squad stand atop their own history and can look out to the vastness beyond. To new mountains to be scaled. If you squint hard enough, you can even see Switzerland. That last part isn't true (you can see Bangor and, apparently, the coast of Ireland on a good day). And while the gloriously hot sunshine and baby blue skies feels like an omen — the FAW and weather gods somehow complicit in wishing the team good fortune — a mountain is also a good place to be reminded of one's size. Wales are the tournament's lowest-ranked squad (30), with a group consisting of the Netherlands (11th in rankings), France (10th) and England (fifth). Advertisement They are one of two major tournament debutants, alongside Poland. There is a nine per cent chance of Wales making it out of the group, according to Opta. But at 8:45am the boldness of the setting is dizzying; the sensation of feeling puny, in the ascent and, eventually, from the top, inescapable. 'I love heights,' says Wilkinson, who led Portland Thorns to the 2022 NWSL Championship in her first year in charge at the club. 'In Vancouver, I live on a mountain. I like the exertion of climbing, the fatigue. I beat everyone up here. They didn't even know they were racing me.' There's a temerity in forcing assembled media to the top of a mountain before 9am for a squad announcement, a boldness in preparing to defy the fickleness of Welsh weather in the summer and internet signal at 1,000ft above sea level, that is not readily synonymous with Wales. But the boldness is welcomed. The FAW is the third-oldest football association in the world. Yet a national women's football team was not formed until 1973, three years after the near 50-year ban of women's football in the nation was lifted. The FAW refused to formerly recognise the women's national team until 1993, a 20-year window in which the team suffered countless 'deaths' according to players from the time, the result of volunteer energy and benevolence running dry. Ten years after recognition was granted, funding for the senior women's team was cut for three years amid the men's team's Euro 2004 qualification campaign. But always by some divinity (or, let's call it by its real name, the stubbornness of women), the team resuscitated. 'It's the mentality of the why not,' Wilkinson says. 'People outside of Wales can think whatever you want, they can look at rankings. Our goal is to be really present and deliver to the best of our ability. 'People will be looking up Wales on a map soon.' dreamy — Megan Feringa (@megan_feringa) June 19, 2025 Wilkinson's squad is as strong as it can be. Sophie Ingle's inclusion is a boon, the former Chelsea midfielder having returned to fitness after tearing her anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in a pre-season friendly against Feyenoord last September. The remaining faces are familiar: Seattle Reign and Wales centurion Jess Fishlock, fellow Reign team-mate Angharad James-Turner, Leicester City forward Hannah Cain, Everton defender Hayley Ladd. And for any potential claims of big-headedness that might come with making assembled media scale a mountain (most actually took the train, though The Athletic did not) before 9am, there's a still a palpable humility. As Wilkinson waits at the top for the entourage to arrive, three members of the Swiss embassy to the UK stand near her. When they clock her Wales-branded trousers, one asks: 'You're the head coach?' Advertisement She nods. She obliges with a photograph, answers questions of her nerve. While walking to the top (accomplished in 'just under an hour and a half' she says with no air of bravado), she listened to The New York Times' Daily podcast, happy to have time to herself. 'I actually debated whether I listen to anything, and I decided I'm going to listen to something because I feel ready.' Goalkeepers: Olivia Clark (Leicester City), Safia Middleton-Patel (Manchester United), Poppy Soper (Unattached) Defenders: Charlie Estcourt (DC Power), Gemma Evans (Liverpool), Josie Green (Crystal Palace), Hayley Ladd (Everton), Esther Morgan (Sheffield United), Ella Powell (Bristol City), Rhiannon Roberts (Unattached), Lily Woodham (Seattle Reign) Midfielders: Jess Fishlock (Seattle Reign), Alice Griffiths (Unattached), Ceri Holland (Liverpool), Sophie Ingle (Unattached), Angharad James (Seattle Reign), Lois Joel (Newcastle United) Forwards: Rachel Rowe (Southampton), Kayleigh Barton (Unattached), Hannah Cain (Leicester City), Elise Hughes (Crystal Palace), Carrie Jones (IFK Norrköping), Ffion Morgan (Bristol City).

Ingle named in Wales squad for Euros despite no games since September
Ingle named in Wales squad for Euros despite no games since September

CNA

time19-06-2025

  • Sport
  • CNA

Ingle named in Wales squad for Euros despite no games since September

MANCHESTER, England :Former Chelsea midfielder Sophie Ingle was named on Thursday in Wales' 23-player squad for next month's Women's European Championship, despite being sidelined with an anterior cruciate ligament injury since September. "We needed to make sure that Sophie Ingle was in a good place, she's still on her path to full fitness but she's in a position now where she can contribute," Wales manager Rhian Wilkinson said. The 33-year-old, who has been released by Chelsea, tore her ACL in a pre-season friendly against Feyenoord last September, but Wilkinson said the former Wales skipper who has 141 caps showed enough in training to merit a place in the squad. "I don't want to get into (what role Ingle will play) specifically because Sophie's pushing, she's looking really good in training. She made me look foolish yesterday, I should never jump into training anymore, it's not good for my ego." Wales will be making their first appearance at a major tournament at the Euros in Switzerland and they marked the occasion by announcing the squad from the summit of Snowdon, the country's highest peak. Angharad James will captain a squad that includes her Seattle Reign midfield teammate Jess Fishlock, who is 38 and Wales' most-capped player with 161 appearances and 47 goals. "Jess is going to be the face, the name of Wales. She knows that," Wilkinson said. "But equally there is a group of senior players who have come through the whole thing, they have seen it all, been through it all and fought the fights. "To get the team over the line at what may be the end of their careers... it's one of those things as a coach you are really proud of, to help deliver that." Wales are the lowest-ranked squad in the tournament that kicks off on July 3, and were drawn into a difficult group with defending champions England, France and the Netherlands. Wales face the Dutch in their opening game on July 5. Defenders: Charlie Estcourt, Gemma Evans, Hayley Ladd, Esther Morgan, Ella Powell, Rhiannon Roberts; Midfielders: Josie Green, Lily Woodham, Jess Fishlock, Alice Griffiths, Sophie Ingle, Angharad James, Lois Joel, Rachel Rowe;

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