
Ahead of the Women’s Euros 2025 kicking off in Switzerland on 2 July, the Guardian has announced that football icon Emma Hayes has joined the Guardian’s award-winning reporting team bringing the latest action and analysis from every game of the tournament.
One of the most successful football managers in history, Emma is head coach of the US Women’s national team, Olympic gold-winners in Paris last year, and is the former manager of Chelsea Women, where she won seven league titles, five FA Cups and two League Cups.
Emma will be bringing her unrivalled analysis in a series of columns for the Guardian and in a Q&A with readers. Emma’s first column will appear online over the weekend of 28-29 June and in a special 32-page guide to the tournament in the Guardian on Saturday 28 June.
Emma Hayes says:
“I’m very happy to be part of sharing insights around an unbelievable tournament, with a newspaper I love reading. This is a great opportunity, and not just for me to look at longer-term potential World Cup opponents and get to size that up with you, but also to see the development of football in Europe.”
Will Woodward, head of sport at the Guardian, says:
“We are delighted that Emma is joining us for the tournament and we can’t wait to see what she has to say. We are well-placed to deliver the richest and deepest coverage of the Women’s Euros in another huge summer for women’s sport. We also have big plans for the Women’s Rugby World Cup – watch this space.”
Emma joins our powerhouse team of writers and experts for the tournament, led by Suzanne Wrack, twice named women’s sports journalist of the year by the Sports Journalism Awards. Suzanne will be reporting on all the action, alongside women’s football writer Tom Garry, sports writer Jonathan Liew, football writer Louise Taylor, European sports correspondent Nick Ames and regular contributor Sophie Downey from the Girls on the Ball website.
The Guardian is also publishing a brilliant interactive guide to all 368 players at the Euros, and our experts’ network written by local reporters will forensically examine all 16 teams. The Women’s Football Weekly podcast, presented by Faye Carruthers with Suzanne Wrack, will be released three times a week during the tournament and our regular women’s football newsletter, Moving the Goalposts, will be out twice a week too.
The Guardian is the only UK newspaper with two dedicated women’s football writers. In 2023 we produced what we believe was the single biggest piece of content ever dedicated to women’s sport, an interactive guide to all 736 players at the Women’s World Cup.
If you wish to speak with a Guardian editor, journalist or columnist about the 2025 Euros, email your bid to media.enquiries@theguardian.com.
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Notes to editors
About Guardian Media Group
Guardian Media Group is amongst the world’s leading media organisations. Its core business is Guardian News & Media (GNM), publisher of theguardian.com, one of the largest English-speaking quality news websites in the world.
In the UK, Guardian Media Group publishes the Guardian newspaper six days a week, first published in 1821. Since launching its US and Australian digital editions in 2011 and 2013, respectively, traffic from outside of the UK now represents around two-thirds of the Guardian’s total digital audience. The Guardian also has an international digital edition and a new European edition that launched in 2023, with an expanded network of more than 20 European correspondents, editors and reporters.