England fight back to down Italy in extra time and reach Euro 2025 final

England fight back to down Italy in extra time and reach Euro 2025 final
England’s Chloe Kelly, third from left, celebrates with her team after winning their Women’s Euro 2025 semifinals against Italy at Stade de Geneve in Geneva, Switzerland, Tuesday. (AP)
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Updated 23 July 2025

England fight back to down Italy in extra time and reach Euro 2025 final

England fight back to down Italy in extra time and reach Euro 2025 final
  • Kelly goal sends defending champions into final
  • Agyemang equalizes for England in 96th minute

GENEVA: Chloe Kelly fired home the rebound from her own penalty to net a 119th-minute winner as reigning champions England pulled off a stunning comeback to beat Italy 2-1 after extra time on Tuesday and reach the Women’s European Championship final.

England fell behind in the first half but hit back to level through Michelle Agyemang six minutes into second-half stoppage time and when Emma Severini pulled down Beth Mead in the box in extra time, Kelly grabbed the chance to decide the game.

Her first effort was saved but she was quick off the mark to rifle in the rebound and send England through to the final where they will face either Spain or Germany.

After a come-from-behind penalty shootout win over Sweden in the quarter-finals, England again flirted with disaster, but their late surge floored Italy, whose hopes of reaching a first final since 1997 were crushed.

The win propelled England into a third successive major final after their Euro 2022 success and World Cup loss to Spain the following year.

With the Italians riding a wave of confidence after a last-minute winner against Norway in their quarter-final, they defended brilliantly and attacked incisively on the break.

Their persistence paid off in the 33rd minute of a gritty semifinal when a ball from the right found its way to Barbara Bonansea, who took a touch before lashing it into the roof of the net.

England then dominated possession and created a slew of chances as the Italians rode their luck, but too often the English attackers unleashed shots from distance that were easily dealt with or flew harmlessly over the bar.

With their hopes of defending their title slowly slipping away, 19-year-old substitute Agyemang snapped up a loose ball in the box and fired home to send the game to extra time.

Agyemang almost scored again with an effort deep into the second half of the extra period, out-sprinting and out-muscling the Italian defense only to see her deft lob toward goal bounce back off the crossbar.

Sensing that they could avoid a repeat of their quarter-final penalty shootout against Sweden, England poured forward and reaped their reward when Mead was fouled in the box, but there was one more twist in the tale.

Kelly took her usual prancing run-up, but Italy keeper Laura Giuliani kept her nerve and saved, only for the England winger to score from the follow-up and seal her side’s spot in Sunday’s final in Basel.

“I just tried my best for the team. It wasn’t supposed to go like that, that penalty, but (I was) ready for the rebound and ready for any opportunity given to me wearing an England badge,” a delighted Kelly said.

England defender Lucy Bronze said they had been forced to dig deep to reach the final.

“Yeah, we don’t know if it’s the easy way it seems this tournament, but we find a way to win,” she said.

“I think it was the 96th minute and then the 118th minute ... we just ... found a way to get the goals and get the ball (in) the last minute.”

For Italy, who had defended superbly until England’s equalizer, the loss was a devastating blow.

“Obviously, going out like this hurts a lot. Having stood up to the champions should give us a lot of confidence for the future. There are no words to describe the emotions we have experienced on this journey,” coach Andrea Soncin said.

“This evening, for as hard as the girls fought, we definitely deserved a different ending. Many difficult situations to comment on. It’s sad, but I am and we are very proud.”


PSG’s injuries mount but Luis Enrique unfazed before Barcelona game in Champions League

PSG’s injuries mount but Luis Enrique unfazed before Barcelona game in Champions League
Updated 3 min 54 sec ago

PSG’s injuries mount but Luis Enrique unfazed before Barcelona game in Champions League

PSG’s injuries mount but Luis Enrique unfazed before Barcelona game in Champions League
  • “You can either get results or make excuses. Whoever plays tomorrow is part of a real team,” Enrique said
  • “We are lucky to have very good players in every position and to have the finances to recruit very good players”

PARIS: Paris Saint-Germain coach Luis Enrique refused to complain about the mounting injuries affecting his team before Wednesday’s Champions League match at Barcelona.
Defending champion PSG will be without star winger Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, Ballon d’Or winner Ousmane Dembélé and forward Désiré Doué.
They are all out injured along with central defender Marquinhos, the club captain, while PSG have doubts over the fitness of key midfielders Vitinha and João Neves.
“You can either get results or make excuses. Whoever plays tomorrow is part of a real team,” Luis Enrique said Tuesday at a pre-match news conference. “We are lucky to have very good players in every position and to have the finances to recruit very good players. So, if there’s a coach who can’t complain, then it’s me.”
Luis Enrique is uncertain if he will pick Vitinha, who came off in the first half against Auxerre on Saturday, or Neves, who missed the past two Ligue 1 games with a thigh injury.
“We will see how the players feel when they wake up tomorrow. It is not a decisive game, so we are calm,” Luis Enrique said. “The decision will come more from the players than from me.”
PSG began the defense of their first Champions League title with a 4-0 rout of Atalanta two weeks ago.
But a Barcelona team featuring the inspired passing of midfielder Pedri, the mesmeric runs of winger Lamine Yamal, and the lethal finishing of veteran Robert Lewandowski — third all-time with 105 Champions League goals — appears a far harder proposition. Hansi Flick’s team was a Champions League semifinalist last season.
“Without doubt Pedri is like Harry Potter, I hope he doesn’t bring his magic wand tomorrow. We’ll do all we can to make sure he is the least involved possible,” said Luis Enrique, who won the Champions League as Barcelona coach in 2015 and played for the club as a standout midfielder.
“The two teams have the same philosophy and way of playing,” he added. “The key will be which team manages to keep the ball.”
Losing it exposes PSG to the counter-attacking of Yamal, who finished second behind Dembélé in the Ballon d’Or vote and caused havoc with his runs down the right flank in the competition last season.
PSG right back Achraf Hakimi said Yamal “will be playing against the best left back in the world” in Nuno Mendes.
“He is capable of stopping Lamine,” Hakimi said. “The important thing is not to leave (Yamal) one on one, so we will help (Mendes) out.”


Barca star Yamal must ‘work hard’ to reach top level, says Flick

Barca star Yamal must ‘work hard’ to reach top level, says Flick
Updated 30 September 2025

Barca star Yamal must ‘work hard’ to reach top level, says Flick

Barca star Yamal must ‘work hard’ to reach top level, says Flick
  • “(Calling him) super, super, super... I don’t like this... he’s 18 years old and for me he also has to focus on working hard,” Flick told reporters
  • “It’s not only about playing with the ball, it’s also defending”

BARCELONA: Barcelona coach Hansi Flick said Tuesday if teenage star Lamine Yamal is to improve he must focus on improving his work rate, ahead of the Champions League clash against Paris Saint-Germain.
The holders visit Barcelona on Wednesday and 18-year-old winger Yamal is keen to shine after finishing as runner-up at the Ballon d’Or gala last week, behind PSG’s Ousmane Dembele.
Yamal returned from a groin injury on Sunday against Real Sociedad in La Liga and provided an assist a minute after coming off the bench during a bright second-half cameo.
“(Calling him) super, super, super... I don’t like this... he’s 18 years old and for me he also has to focus on working hard,” Flick told reporters.
“It’s not always easy, with talent you can get to this point, but to reach the next level, one or two steps more — and I think he’s able to do that — he has to work hard.”
Last season Barcelona won a domestic treble of La Liga, the Copa del Rey and the Spanish Super Cup, but fell just short in the Champions League, beaten in the semifinals by Inter Milan despite two sensational displays by Yamal.
Against Luis Enrique’s attacking PSG side Flick demanded Yamal and his team-mates knuckle down when the French champions are in possession.
“It’s not only about playing with the ball, it’s also defending,” continued Flick.
“This is what we need from every player — even a great player with the ball like him — and this makes the difference.”
Flick said to beat PSG his team had to concentrate from “the first second to the end of the match” and play at their highest level.

- Rashford has ‘arrived’ -

The coach also praised Marcus Rashford, who has established himself on the left flank for Barca.
With Raphinha out injured, Rashford is set to start against PSG. The forward, on loan from Manchester United, netted twice in Barcelona’s opening Champions League win at Newcastle.
“Everyone can see it in the last games, the Newcastle match gives him a lot of confidence and now he’s here, he’s now arrived in Barcelona,” said Flick.
“This is not always easy, to come to La Liga... with different opponents, a different style of how we play football, he’s adapted (well).”
PSG will be without first-choice attackers Dembele, formerly a Barca player, Desire Doue and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, among other missing stars.
Barca midfielder Pedri said he considered his team favorites to win the game.
“PSG are one of the best teams in the world, and we are the best — or at least that’s how I see it,” he told reporters.
The French side beat Barca 4-1 the last time the teams met, in the 2024 quarter-finals, after Barca defender Ronald Araujo was sent off. PSG progressed 6-4 on aggregate.
“Every Barca fan knows that we were close to going through two seasons ago,” said Pedri.
“There’s always revenge in football and that’s what we want — it’s the kind of game that’s most enjoyable.”


Schlotterbeck returns to boost Dortmund backline against Bilbao

Schlotterbeck returns to boost Dortmund backline against Bilbao
Updated 30 September 2025

Schlotterbeck returns to boost Dortmund backline against Bilbao

Schlotterbeck returns to boost Dortmund backline against Bilbao
  • Schlotterbeck, who suffered a serious knee injury in April, has played in Dortmund’s last two Bundesliga matches
  • His return was also welcomed by Germany Julian Nagelsmann

DORTMUND: Borussia Dortmund defender Nico Schlotterbeck will make his Champions League return at home to Athletic Bilbao on Wednesday, with the German team determined to improve their defending.
Dortmund, seconds away from an upset win at Juventus two weeks ago, had to settle for a 4-4 draw after the Italians scored twice in stoppage time.
Schlotterbeck, who suffered a serious knee injury in April, has played in Dortmund’s last two Bundesliga matches.
His return was also welcomed by Germany Julian Nagelsmann who confirmed he would select the defender for next month’s World Cup qualifiers.
“The last two games were good,” Schlotterbeck told a press conference on Tuesday. “But I know I can play much better. I can add 10 or 20 percent and would be happy if I could do it.”
For Dortmund coach Niko Kovac, Schlotterbeck’s return is perfect timing.
“Turin, 4-4, but those last two goals...the team is determined to defend better,” Kovac said. “We wanted to work on this part of the game. We did it well in the last couple of matches.”
Dortmund are on a four-game winning run in the Bundesliga following their 2-0 victory at Mainz 05 on Saturday, with four clean sheets.
“We have done it well in the last few games. I see a development. Everyone is determined to do it better. If they don’t t do it will be hard for our team,” Kovac said.
Kovac will have top striker Serhou Guirassy back in the squad after the Guinea international missed the win over Mainz, following an injury during the warmup.
“Serhou completed the final training and it all went well,” Kovac said. “I don’t think there will be any surprise so it looks like he will be ready for tomorrow.”


Frenchman Beaumelle takes over as Angola coach

Frenchman Beaumelle takes over as Angola coach
Updated 30 September 2025

Frenchman Beaumelle takes over as Angola coach

Frenchman Beaumelle takes over as Angola coach
  • Beaumelle also served as head coach of Zambia and Ivory Coast
  • He took Algerian club Mouloudia Alger to the group phase of last season’s African Champions League

DUBAI: Angola have named Patrice Beaumelle as their coach, with the Frenchman taking over a week before their final set of 2026 World Cup qualifiers.
He replaces Pedro Goncalves, fired last week after Angola lost at home to Libya and fell out of the race for a place at the finals in North America next year.
The 47-year-old Beaumelle has been a long-standing fixture on the African coaching circuit, mostly as assistant to compatriot Herve Renard, including a stint with Angola between 2010-2012.
Beaumelle also served as head coach of Zambia and Ivory Coast, and took Algerian club Mouloudia Alger to the group phase of last season’s African Champions League.
He will start his job with World Cup qualifiers in Eswatini on October 8 and Cameroon on October 13 before taking charge of the Angolan side at the Africa Cup of Nations finals in Morocco at the end of the year.


Saliba signs new long-term deal at Arsenal

Saliba signs new long-term deal at Arsenal
Updated 30 September 2025

Saliba signs new long-term deal at Arsenal

Saliba signs new long-term deal at Arsenal
  • William Saliba has signed a new long-term contract with Arsenal, the Premier League club announced on Tuesday

LONDON: William Saliba has signed a new long-term contract with Arsenal, the Premier League club announced on Tuesday.
The France defender has reportedly put pen to paper on a five-year deal, which will keep him at the club until 2030. His previous contract had been due to run until 2027.
Saliba, 24, had been expected to extend his stay at the Emirates despite earlier reported interest from Real Madrid.
The center-back joined the Gunners in 2019 but had a number of loan spells before establishing himself as a regular in Mikel Arteta’s team during the 2022/23 season.
Since then Saliba has been at the heart of an Arsenal side that has finished second in each of the past three seasons in the Premier League.
“I feel at home. We have a good team, we have a good squad, we have good staff. The coach is perfect for me, so it’s the best place to be,” said Saliba.
“I enjoy every day when I have the chance to wear this shirt. I try to give everything, and now I’ll give even more to this club and to the fans.”
Manager Arteta said: “William is loved by all the players and staff, and that speaks volumes about his character, commitment and attitude every day.
“Since joining us, William has grown so much, embraced responsibility, and has created a strong connection with our supporters and everyone at the club.”
Arsenal are second in the Premier League, two points behind leaders Liverpool after six games of the season.