
Athenea Del Castillo And Spain 'Full Of Hope' Ahead Of Germany Euro 2025 Semi-Final
Del Castillo replaced Mariona Caldentey and broke the deadlock four minutes later, setting Spain up for a 2-0 victory -- and surely giving coach Montse Tome a selection headache for the clash with Germany in Zurich.
"I have to just focus on the things that I can influence. Luckily I am managing to help the team whatever my role is, whether I am starting or not," Del Castillo told AFP at the Spanish team's base in Lausanne.
A win for Spain against Germany will keep them on track to add a first ever European crown to the World Cup they won in 2023, when they defeated England in the final.
"We are full of hope, we are so excited. We dream of being European champions but to do that we need to win on Wednesday so all our energy is going into that game," Del Castillo said.
"We know all about the potential in the Germany team. They are a great side who have been European champions eight times after all."
Spain still lean heavily on the players who won them the World Cup, notably Ballon d'Or Aitana Bonmati as well as her fellow Barcelona stars Alexia Putellas and Irene Paredes.
But Del Castillo, while not yet a guaranteed starter, has become a more important player than during that tournament in Australia and New Zealand.
Then, under previous coach Jorge Vilda, she started the team's first match before gradually disappearing from circulation.
She then featured in the side that participated in the 2024 Olympics and lost to Germany in the bronze medal match -- a defeat they will seek to avenge on Wednesday.
Infectious
"We have been through so much together and that has helped us mature as a team," she said on the margins of a training session by Lake Geneva.
"I still see myself as one of the youngsters even though there are players much younger than me like Vicky (Lopez) and Maite (Zubieta), and then there are older players like Irene and Alexia who have been around longer and been to so many more tournaments.
"We have that mix of youth and experience, of joy but also maturity."
Del Castillo is known for her glowing smile and infectious personality, and she has no intention of changing even as she becomes more and more recognisable thanks to her exploits with Spain and Real.
"I have not changed much. I still do the same things, I still try to enjoy life and luckily everything is going well at home, with my family and friends," said the native of Cantabria in northern Spain.
"I am very happy in Madrid -- I prefer the north but I like Madrid as a city. I love to go out for a wander, listen to music, be with my family.
"If I changed what I did off the pitch that would also change me on it and I don't like that because then I would lose my essence."
Despite still being at a relatively tender age, the player who idolised Cristiano Ronaldo growing up now has over 60 caps and is conscious of being a leader in the Spain squad.
"I know how to differentiate between moments when you have to work and times when you can give a little bit of joy," she said, before suggesting that the side has improved since losing to Germany at last year's Olympics.
"I think we have matured a lot since then. We are better at controlling games in different moments now. I think that will help us, but it will above all be about staying calm and focusing on our objective."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Mint
33 minutes ago
- Mint
Tennis legend Rafael Nadal and wife Mery welcome second child, baby Miquel
Spanish tennis star Rafael Nadal and his wife Mery Perelló have welcomed their second child, a baby boy named Miquel. The baby was born on August 7 at the Quirónsalud Palmaplanas Hospital in Palma, Mallorca. The couple, who already have a young son named Rafa, are said to be doing well. This new arrival brings joy to the Nadal family, especially as the baby's name carries a touching meaning. According to Europa Press, the name Miquel was chosen as a special tribute to Mery's late father, who sadly passed away in April 2023 at the age of 63. The gesture honours his memory and holds great personal significance for the family.


Hindustan Times
33 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Coaching an elite player is about getting conversation right first up
Mumbai: As cricket branched out to more formats and became equally competitive across genders, the scope for coaching grew manifold. Gone are the times when coaching the national or state team were the only avenues available to those with the aptitude and credentials. Abhishek Nayar. (BCCI) You could be coaching an IPL franchise in the summer, having brainstormed with an elite athlete discussing ODI tactics, then put in place a customised camp to help another India player prepare for an overseas Test assignment, work with a local team in a T20 state offshoot, shift focus to women's franchise cricket for their league and get back to do academy work for the mainstream men's franchise. This is pretty much Abhishek Nayar's coaching resume for 2025. His stint with the Indian cricket team was brief, but his problem-solving skills remain in high demand. Nayar, whose tenure as India assistant coach ended with the Australia tour early this year, was immediately welcomed back by Kolkata Knight Riders as assistant coach. The former India cricketer who has worked closely with Rohit Sharma, KL Rahul, Dinesh Karthik and others in an individual capacity, is also the head coach of UP Warriorz in the Women's Premier League. 'Good luck,' he says about his success in guiding elite batters. 'My style of coaching is very simple. It's understanding what a player needs. The inception to everything is understanding what the problem is, right? That's what everyone finds really hard. Why is a player not doing well? Why is a player not being able to score runs? What is stopping him? 'I sort of pride myself on figuring that out really early, whether it's a skill problem or a mental problem. To find out what's the first barrier I need to cross. Then it becomes slightly easier to win the trust of the player. Coaching an elite athlete is about getting the first 40 seconds of the conversation right. If you manage that, you hit the right nerve. You can then try and impact their career.' Some players saw mentoring skills in Nayar even when he was a player. Rohit had reached out to Nayar to shake off the disappointment of the 2011 ODI World Cup snub. How the two worked together through innovative ways on Rohit's fitness is well documented. 'What I've realised with top cricketers, a lot of the time it's identifying skill and the mind. In skill, it's identifying whether the problem is technical or tactical,' he says. 'When I worked with Rohit more recently, it was about tactically finding a way to get him to score in T20s. Get him to use certain tactics early in his batting to overcome certain bowlers. The plans and strategies you make change from time to time. I can't tell you specifics, but it's almost like saying this guy is going to come and bowl to you and before he does this, this is what you're going to do. This is your first option. And you practice that. It gives a person clarity and belief that, 'I've practiced this and this is how I'm going to put him under pressure'. You take that punt.' One can connect the dots. Rohit had to improve on slow build-ups from previous IPL seasons, overcome his trouble against left-arm pacers, and better the sub-par returns in IPL. 'Every cricketer starts realising that bowlers are also understanding how you take them down. So, you have to come out with different ways,' he says. 'They can be very, very small things. It can be the guard you're changing, which ball you're stepping out to. Those are tactical changes that players normally relate to, buy into, rather than technical changes.' Does working with women cricketers require re-strategising? 'I think the coaching philosophy and the language that you speak to men and women is slightly different,' he says. 'Cricket per se is not new to me because I've done a lot of commentary on women's cricket and that helps. I'm used to understanding fields.' Nayar had worked under the previous UP Warriorz head coach Jon Lewis for the franchise and he did some camps with the England women's team. The former India and Mumbai cricketer says he's had conversations with some NCA coaches, 'not on how to coach, but on how to speak to them or what works when you speak to women. And what can get them going and what they don't like.' As players search for ways to stay relevant across formats, the same team coaches take time out to provide customised sessions for the next challenge. 'It's here that I too get to enhance my skills,' says Nayar. 'Every player expects a new challenge, a new drill. So, as hard as it is for the player, it's as hard for me as well. Because I have to constantly keep thinking out of the box as to how I can make him feel that he is more prepared than he was the last time. So, it's a hard one… a constant evolution on both ends.'


NDTV
an hour ago
- NDTV
"Only If You Score 21 Ducks...": Gautam Gambhir's Blind Faith In Star India Batter Revealed Ahead Of Asia Cup
Sanju Samson has established himself as one of India's key players in the T20I format over the past year. Samson was part of India's T20 World Cup 2024-winning squad, where he did not play a game, but has since risen into the team's first-choice opener under the leadership of Suryakumar Yadav and Gautam Gambhir. Samson, in a conversation with legendary India spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, has now revealed exactly the words that Gambhir told him to reassure him even after two ducks in a row. Samson had scored ducks in both the T20Is he played against Sri Lanka in 2024 - his first matches since the T20I World Cup win. That is when Gambhir re-emphasized his faith in Samson. "I scored two ducks in two matches against Sri Lanka. I started thinking, 'oh, is it going back to the same thing, two matches in the team and then I go out'. I was a bit down in the dressing room, and Gauti bhai (Gautam Gambhir) saw. He came up to me and asked, 'Kya hua? (What happened?)'," Samson revealed. "I said, I got two chances, but I couldn't score. Gauti bhai said, 'Toh kya hua? (So what?)," Samson said. "Only if you score 21 ducks, I will drop you from the team," were Gambhir's words of reassurance, as revealed by Samson. "Those are the words he used. These kinds of words from the captain and coach raise your confidence. You feel that they really trust you, and want you to do well," Samson said. Samson also revealed that during the Duleep Trophy 2024/25, Suryakumar Yadav walked up to him and told him that he'd get a run of seven games as an opener in T20Is. As it turned out, Samson not only featured regularly in the four-match T20I series against South Africa in November 2024, but also in the five-match T20I series against England in January and February 2025. The wicket-keeper batter repaid the trust shown in him, slamming two centuries during the period. Meanwhile, Samson has been involved in the centre of Indian Premier League (IPL) trade chatter, after an under-par season with Rajasthan Royals (RR), where his team finished ninth out of ten teams. As per a report by Cricbuzz, the 30-year-old Samson has formally handed in a request to RR to be either traded or released into the auction, after serious differences emerged between him and the team management.