Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Sarah Rendell, Tom Davies and Emillia Hawkins

Women’s Euro 2025: England and Wales reaction plus Norway v Finland buildup – as it happened

Sarina Wiegman (right) leads England training on the day after her side’s 2-1 defeat to France.
Sarina Wiegman (right) leads England training on the day after her side’s 2-1 defeat to France. Photograph: Nick Potts/PA

With that I shall point you in the direction of Emilia Hawkins who will take you through the first of the two games this evening. I will be back to take you through Switzerland v Iceland later tonight, that game has a kick-off of 8pm BST. See you then and enjoy the football in the meantime.

Some Norway v Finland team news updates for you. Only one change for each nation for their game tonight, which kicks off at 5pm BST. Norway’s Maren Mjelde drops to the bench for Mathilde Harviken, while Finland’s Oona Sevenius comes in for Sanni Franssi.

One question you may be asking yourself before the second round of group games get underway is who is the current top scorer? We have you covered below:

Norway v Finland kicks off in just under an hour’s time and for all the build-up, including the team news, head over to join Emilia Hawkins’ blog here (of course keep this one open too with updates until that game kicks off):

The England fans in Zurich have a new favourite song, replacing the word “Tequila!” with “Sarina!” It is a fun twist on a 1950s number from the Champs, written by the American saxophonist Chuck Rio. If the band’s name is fitting, for a few more days at least, for England’s status as defending champions, by full time at the Stadion Letzigrund against France the artist’s name was more in keeping with the mood among supporters, because Sarina Wiegman’s side are in genuine danger of being chucked out of Euro 2025.

The team news for the first of tonight’s two games will be dropping soon but here are two players you should keep an eye out this evening. Emma Koivisto is a key star for Finland and is an ever-present player in the team (I hope I have'n’t just put a commentator’s curse in her featuring tonight!). The other vital player to watch out for is Norway’s Caroline Graham Hansen. She is utterly magic with the ball at her feet. Have a look at their profiles here, the Guardian have profiled all 368 players so have a read through while you’re there too.

The Football Supporters’ Association’s Free Lionesses fan embassy team has expressed its concerns over restrictions on water bottles being brought into stadiums during the women’s Euros. Temperatures for the opening three days of the tournament soared to 35C at times and, although they have dipped a little, remained in the high 20sC for England’s defeat by France on Saturday evening.

In a statement, the Free Lionesses said: “We have reported our concerns regarding restrictions on water bottles in stadia to Football Supporters Europe, Uefa and the FA on behalf of supporters. We understand that the decisions around water bottles in the stadia are down to the local authorities. Uefa have asked for them to be allowed. The current decision is that temperatures have to be above 30 degrees for more bottles to be allowed.

“We will continue to express our concern, request updates and will share any with supporters if anything changes.”

Football Supporters Europe urged fans to share experiences of attending the game, including any problems encountered, to info@fanseurope.org.

Norway’s performance against Switzerland was not the greatest in their opening game and it took an own goal from Julia Stierli to give them the win but they will take it after their disastrous run at the last European Championships. They were dumped out at the 2022 group stage with 1-0 and 8-0 respective losses to Austria and England, though they did record a 4-1 win against Northern Ireland. They’ll be aiming to keep their campaign on track tonight against Finland.

The competition enters its second round of group stage matches today with Group A once again getting things rolling. So what are the permutations for today’s games? In the opening matches, Norway beat Switzerland 2-1 in a comeback win, while Finland beat Iceland 1-0. That means the group will not be decided today with both winners from the first game facing each other. Either Norway or Finland could put themselves in a prime position to qualify for the knockouts with a win, while Iceland or hosts Switzerland could give themselves a lot of work to do in the final group stage game if they come away with nothing.

So what does the loss mean for England’s Euros defence hopes? Well all is not lost but their game against the Netherlands now becomes all the more crucial. They must get something from the game, whether it be a draw or a win, to really keep trophy hopes going. If they lose to the Dutch and France beat Wales, then England’s flight home will be booked.

England opened their title defence against France last night but fell to a 2-1 defeat with questionable defence from the Lionesses the main talking point. Selection decisions have also been in the spotlight after manager Sarina Wiegman started the likes of Lauren James, who has not started a game since April. Here’s what the boss had to say about her starting team:

I make a lot of considerations before I make a starting line-up. Sometimes things go well, sometimes it doesn’t go well - but I don’t have regrets. We try to turn every stone before we make the line-up.

Arsenal are closing in on the signing of Viktor Gyökeres from Sporting after agreeing personal terms with the Sweden striker. Negotiations remain ongoing over a fee for the 27-year-old, with Arsenal hoping to strike a deal for less than the £68m asking price.

Gyökeres has made no secret of his desire for a new challenge having scored 54 goals for Sporting last season and is understood to have made clear he wants to join Arsenal despite interest from elsewhere in the Premier League, including Manchester United.

Thank you Emilia, she will be taking you through Norway v Finland which kicks-off at 5pm BST and I will flag the blog when it goes live. For the next few hours I will bring you any Euros updates and some little bits from men’s football too. You can email me about all things football or just your weekends plans, whatever takes your fancy I’d love to hear from you.

And with that, I’ll hand this live blog over to Sarah Rendell, who will keep the coverage coming until the 5pm fixture.

As we count down to kick-off in the first match of the day, be sure to check out our Norway and Finland team guides:

If you haven’t already, be sure to subscribe to our Moving the Goalposts newsletter for regular updates on women’s football. You’ll receive stories, features and interviews straight to your inbox twice a week. If there’s any time to sign up, it’s now!

Peter has messaged in with his take on Sarina Wiegman’s team selection yesterday:

“I think we should have started Toone instead of James, and Beever-Jones
instead of Russo. I hope Sarina starts them for the match against The
Netherlands.

“James needs more time to get back to full fitness. At half time, I would certainly have taken James off for Toone, and Russo off for Beever-Jones. When Wiegman made substitutions, I asked, why not Beever-Jones ?

“I would also have taken Stanway off at half time. Beever-Jones is the trump card. You’ve got to play her at some time.

“We have potentially the strongest squad we have ever had at a tournament
due to the inclusion of Beever-Jones. Then use her, please, soon.”

Vivianne Miedema scored her 100th goal for the Netherlands yesterday against Wales. In doing so, she became the third-youngest player in history to score 100 international goals. The Manchester City star (aged 27 years and 355 days) is third behind Mia Hamm (26 years, 185 days) and Julie Fleeting (26 years and 313 days).

Speaking of England, be sure to listen to the latest episode of our Women’s Football Weekly podcast as Faye Carruthers and Suzanne Wrack discuss yesterday’s defeat for the Lionesses and Wales’ 3-0 loss to the Netherlands.

England fans, feel free to get in touch with your thoughts on last night’s match. What went wrong? What needs to be changed? Do you fancy England’s chances against Netherlands on Wednesday? Let me know!

“England will point to Alessia Russo’s goal at 0-0 being ruled out for an offside that did not seem conclusive even from zoomed-in VAR images, yet the simple truth is this: if England do not improve markedly when they face the Netherlands on Wednesday, they will probably be out before they face Wales in their final group match.”

A reminder of the Euro 2025 games we’ve got to look forward to later on:

  • Norway v Finland

  • Switzerland v Iceland

The transfer rumours have been flying around this week. Here are some of the latest…

So, my Arsenal supporting friend, you’ll be wanting to know about Martín Zubimendi today, then. Lucky you.

England were back in training this morning following last night’s loss to France.

One positive that England can take from last night’s defeat to France is the impact that 19-year-old Michelle Agyemang made after coming off the bench in the 86th minute. The striker added a spark to the England attack, coming close to an equaliser in the final seconds. She could be a crucial asset to Sarina Wiegman in the next two games, both of which will be crucial.

Updated

Upon his arrival in north London, Martin Zubimendi said: “This is a huge moment in my career. It’s the move I was looking for and one I wanted to make. As soon as you set foot here, you realise how big this club and this team are.

“I set my sights on Arsenal because their style of play is a good fit for me. They have shown their potential recently and the best is yet to come.”

More on Zubimendi:

Arsenal sign Martin Zubimendi

Arsenal have announced the signing of Martin Zubimendi from Real Sociedad.

The hour mark was approaching when Sarina Wiegman rolled the dice or, perhaps more accurately, reached for the comfort blanket. A salvage operation of this scale had not been part of anyone’s masterplan, but at least Ella Toone and Chloe Kelly knew exactly how to move the dial at a European Championship. They were the history makers at Wembley in England’s most recent appearance on this stage; if it was going to be anyone, it surely had to be them…”

Thanks Tom!

So it wasn’t to be for the Lionesses last night. Here’s what Leah Williamson had to say at full-time: “When you’re losing the ball really cheaply, and then you’re in emergency defending, and when you’ve done four or five counterattacks in a row against quality like that, it is tough, but we hold ourselves to higher standards, in the individual battles.

“The positive is that I’ve not seen us like that, in terms of turning over the ball so much, for a while now, so yes [while it is] really frustrating, I think that’s how we’ll take today. Tomorrow, back on it.”

Right, time for me to hand over the reins to Emillia Hawkins. Enjoy the rest of your day, and tonight’s games.

Here’s more on Trent Alexander-Arnold’s tribute to Diogo Jota:

More on, inevitably, offside. “The problem isn’t the law,” harrumphs Tor Olav Lien, “it’s the ridiculous nitpicking and millimeter-measuring by VAR. The law clearly states that you are on side if you are level with the second player closest to the opponent’s goal. That part of the law has been rendered null and void by the silly notion that VAR is so accurate that you can measure a fraction of an inch. Everyone knows that two people can’t be 100% in line with each other, not even if they try so clearly the law isn’t as black and white as the VAR-high priests would like us to believe. Get rid now!”

Vivianne Miedema scored her 100th goal for the Netherlands yesterday – and what a goal it was. And she was understandably emotional about it, Reuters reports.

“It’s very special, this is something you don’t dare dream of as a little girl,” she said. “It was very unreal when the milestone was getting closer, and it is extra special that it is achieved at the European Championship. There were definitely emotions released. Tears? Yes, when we walked on the pitch, at the goal, and after the game. That shows how much this affects me.

“I think we all know how tough the past two and a half years have been for me and how hard I’ve worked to get here.” The Manchester City striker tore her cruciate ligament at the end of 2022 and was sidelined for 10 months. Shortly after her comeback, cartilage in her knee was damaged again, and she underwent another surgery last November.

“I saw your comment on Umpire’s call for VAR,” writes Ollie Major. “The problem with the idea is that cricket’s VAR is predictive, where football (and tennis) is based on what actually happened.

“There is an excellent video by Nasser Hussain which shows why you need Umpire’s call on a predictive system; the same isn’t true where the system can be definitive. Additionally, crickets challenge comes BEFORE the umpire has seen the imagery - it seeks to add evidence to a decision not challenge the decision the umpire has made. Changes to tolerances are a different issue, of course ...”

That’s a fair point, which puts the onus back on the lawmakers to perhaps have a more satisfactory definition of offside. And also, you know, VAR is still a horrible, passion-and-spontaneity-killing thing.

Latest from Bayern Munich is that they expect Jamal Musiala to be out for four months after that horrible injury he suffered against PSG in the Coppa Gianni, and one which made manager Vincent Kompany’s “blood boil”.

The Wales midfielder Charlie Estcourt says Wales’s aim remains to get out of the group as she reflected on their defeat to the Netherlands yesterday.

“Nerves are going to be there for our first ever game at a major tournament, everyone’s wanting to do the nation proud and their family proud but going into the next two games I think we’ll be able to manage a bit easier,” she tells Sky Sports News.

“We’ve got mixed emotions – there are positives. We did go toe to toe with them for large portions of the game but there’s no getting away from the things we need to do better and we’ll be reviewing the game today. We have high belief and confidence we can compete in those games and our aim is still to get out of the group.

“Small margins play such a big role – we concede two goals at not ideal times and if we go in at 0-0 the game becomes very different. There’s world class players here but we’ve palyed against them in Nations League and club games it’s not something new to us but you have to stay switched on and adapt to people who can produce these moments like Miedema does.”

She was full of praise for Wales’s travelling support. “It was absolutely unbelievable – around 4,000 fans and we heard them the whole game and before/ During our pre-game meeting they were outside the hotel singing the anthem. They made it so special for us.”

Sarina Wiegman insists she has “no regrets” over her formation and team selection in their Euros defeat by France, but should she, given her side lost the midfield battle and were overloaded on their left at times? Could there be a more prominent role for Michelle Agyemang and Grace Clinton, who both looked lively when they came on, against the Netherlands?

Talking of transfers, Max Rushden’s column has dropped, in which he pines for simpler times before “ITK” social media accounts where transfer news would come as a genuine shock.

At the top of the Premier League, though, with TV and radio shows hosted by professional transfer influencers, and with flight tracking of private jets, almost nothing is unknown. Either that or you just keep linking a player with every possible destination so that eventually you say the right thing. “My understanding is …” “I’ve just exchanged a message from someone close to the club.” “All my sources tell me the player is determined to push this through.” Maybe some people with more self-control manage to ignore this stuff and watch Chris Woakes moving it perfectly off a length for hours at Edgbaston without reaching for the second screen and typing “Eze Spurs”.

A few transfer nuggets to have caught the eye in the past day or so: the striker Igor Jesus has joined Nottingham Forest for £10m fresh from tearing it up at the Club World Cup with Botafogo; Brighton have snapped up the Club Brugge left-back Maxim De Cuyper for £17m; and Birmingham continue to splash the cash with the former Celtic striker Kyogo Furuhashi joining the Championship club from Rennes for £10m.

Track all the latest deals here:

Updated

Trent Alexander-Arnold has paid tribute to his former Liverpool teammate Diogo Jota, describing him as “someone who lit up a room”, PA Media reports.

Jota and his brother, Andre Silva, died following a car accident in Spain on Thursday. Alexander-Arnold, currently at the Club World Cup with Real Madrid, told DAZN: “Some things are bigger than the game. “It has been difficult but it’s been very emotional, very heartwarming to see the footballing world uniting and come together to show their love and support to him and his family, and obviously his brother as well.

“So although it’s been difficult, it’s also been a nice showing out from everyone, all clubs, all people, uniting and showing love and support for what must be a mind-blowingly hard time for the family.

“I’ve been in and around him and his brother, his family, his amazing wife, his parents, his amazing three children. It’s truly, truly heartbreaking to wake up to news like that. It’s something that you would never, ever expect.

“He was a very close friend, someone who lit up a room when he was in it. I shared the dressing room [with him] for five years [and have] amazing memories on and off the pitch with him. He will live long in all our memories for the amazing man and player he was.”

Sarina Wiegman has talked of England being “too sloppy” and playing too many short passes in the wrong areas, allowing France to press strongly. “Playing against France is totally different,” said the England head coach, “we had to be straight away at our very best or be punished and that’s what happened. At the same time we’ve got an opportunity to put it right.” Players have been equally frank. “We didn’t show up today,” said Jess Carter. “We’re all frustrated because we know we can give more. The only way is up …”

And we must I guess discuss the offside call that denied England the lead in the first half after Alesia Russo netted. “I’m unsure how that was given,” said Beth Mead, who was deemed fractionally offside after a VAR check. There really ought to be an “umpire’s call” style option for marginal decisions such as that.

Loth though I am to focus too much on the men’s Club World Cup, a quick recap on yesterday’s events, where Real Madrid held off Dortmund to win 3-2 in a crazy game that featured three injury-time goals, while PSG had two men sent off against Bayern Munich but still managed a 2-0 win over the German champions, who also lost Jamal Musiala to serious injury after a contentious challenge from Gianluigi Donnarumma.

PSG meet Real Madrid in the semis, while Chelsea face Fluminense in the other. Interestingly, Sky Sports News is reporting that tickets for the latter are going for a snip at $13 – pricing as it should be but an issue for those who bought tickets earlier at a higher rates. Partial compensation is being discussed.

Here’s your essential reading from yesterday’s action:

Suzy Wrack’s France v England report:

Nick Ames on what went wrong for the Lionesses:

And reaction from the players on 'the ‘cheap’ defending that cost them:

Here’s Louise Taylor on a fine Dutch display against Wales:

Preamble

Greetings everyone and welcome to matchday five of the Euros. England and Wales will be waking up with headaches this morning after chastening defeats in their tournament openers yesterday. In a match between two teams whose pre-tournament run-ins were dominated by talk of who wasn’t in their squads as much as who was, France unmistakably looked better equipped and slicker last night against an England side who stirred too late. Was starting with the still-recovering Lauren James too much of a gamble? What should Sarina Wiegman do for the Netherlands game? All thoughts welcome.

And the Dutch will be tough opponents, as they demonstrated in their 3-0 steamrollering of Wales, who fought hard on their tournament debut in front of magnificent support in the stands and who had their moments in the first half but were always second best.

Meanwhile, later today we return to Group A, with Norway meeting Finland in Sion. Both won their opening games, with Finland perhaps doing so more convincingly though the talent in Norway’s ranks makes them favourites today. Later on the hosts, Switzerland, take on Iceland having been a tad unlucky to lose their opener. Anyway, stay tuned for the latest news, previews and reaction.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.