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Broken bones, bloodied noses and never-say-die spirit… and this lot win trophies too – Lionesses are pride of England

Broken bones, bloodied noses and never-say-die spirit… and this lot win trophies too – Lionesses are pride of England

The Irish Sun28-07-2025
STUART PEARCE was lauded for trying to 'run off' a broken leg for ten minutes while playing for West Ham against Watford in 1999.
After England's Lionesses successfully defended their Euros crown, Lucy Bronze revealed she had
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Lucy Bronze played throughout the Euros with a fractured shinbone
Credit: AFP
It's not scientifically true that women have higher pain thresholds than men.
But the full-back — whose full name is genuinely Lucy Roberta Tough Bronze — clearly isn't bound by such trivialities as medical science.
Keeper Hannah Hampton - who was told she could never be a professional footballer due to an eye condition - is another Lioness who laughs in the face of the doctoring profession.
Hampton suffered a nosebleed and played with a tampon up one nostril during the ­quarter-final victory over Sweden — drawing comparison with
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READ MORE ON LIONESSES
England played 360 minutes of knockout football at these Euros and led for less than five of them — roaring back from behind in all three fixtures.
So while Joey Barton and a dwindling number of Sid The Sexists on social media continue to howl the word 'woke' at the moon, it's hilarious the Lionesses have triumphed thanks to the attributes traditionally regarded as the strengths of the English men's game.
Physical bravery, stoicism, never-say-die spirit.
Three comebacks, two penalty shootouts, broken bones and blooded noses.
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And this lot actually win trophies, too.
Unlike in the last Euros on home soil in 2022, England weren't the best team in the tournament — that was runners-up Spain.
England's Lionesses depart Zurich following their Euro 2025 victory
There was some pleasing sour grapery among the beaten finalists about English 'luckiness'.
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But when you keep on doing something over and over again, it can never be down to luck.
England prevailed because they were mentally and physically tougher than any other side.
They became the first English senior team to win a major tournament on foreign soil and they drew the highest TV audience of the year.
Women's football is now an integral part of the national sporting landscape and that is a tribute to everyone who has helped to ­promote it during the move into professionalism over the past couple of decades.
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There have been elements of positive discrimination in this.
For a while, the game was over- exposed by the FA and much of the media, in comparison to the numbers of those who paid to watch it.
But anyone uncomfortable with this needs to remember that women's football was banned in this country for half a century until 1971.
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England celebrate consecutive European Championship wins
Credit: Reuters
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Hannah Hampton was told she could never be a professional footballer due to an eye condition
Credit: EPA
Which sounds as weird as the fact beer was banned in Iceland — the nation, not the freezer shop — until 1989.
But it legitimises all of the efforts to grow the women's game, which is now increasingly able to stand on its own feet.
European club champions Arsenal have attracted sell-out crowds of 60,000 for matches at the Emirates.
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And, from this coming season, they will hold all of their Women's Super League fixtures at the club's stadium, which will boost their average gate of 29,000.
Watching a women's match live is a family-friendly experience, with the anger and hatred of the men's game largely absent.
The game is different, the atmosphere is different, comparisons are tiresome and needless.
Nobody feels the need to distinguish between men's and women's events when tallying up the gold medals won at an Olympics.
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Keely Hodgkinson didn't have to suffer any sniping that she wouldn't have qualified for the men's 800m final when she won gold in Paris last summer, because women's athletics has been established over decades.
Women's football is reaching a similar status.
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Sarina Wiegman made it consecutive Euros wins
Credit: AP
And manager
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After a promising start, Neville quit in 2021 after a run of seven defeats in 11 matches.
The women's game will never be patronised in such a way in future.
As part of this process, BBC TV pundits have sounded less like cheerleaders than in previous women's tournaments.
And there wasn't much media soft-soaping of the Lionesses when they opened their Euros campaign with a deserved defeat by France.
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This is as it should be. We are talking about elite international competition, not a school sports day.
Chloe Kelly — the scorer of England's final winner against Germany three years ago, as well as the clinching penalty in Sunday's shoot-out in Basel —
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Chloe Kelly scored the winning penalty
Credit: EPA
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Kelly was criticised by Spanish media for the cockiness of her celebrations
Credit: Getty
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But there is nothing nicey-nicey about her on the pitch.
Criticised by Spanish media
She marked England's latest success by ­sniping at critics on social media.
And all of her team-mates will have similar stories.
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Some of them started out at a time when the idea of girls playing football was seen as ­unusual.
Such ideas are fading into distant history.
Kelly, Hampton, Bronze and Co are rarely referred to as 'trailblazers' and 'pioneers' any more, because the trailblazing and pioneering has been done.
Now they are simply regarded as habitual winners and champions.
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NEW DRAMA
THIS sort of thing isn't supposed to happen to Newcastle United anymore.
The club's Saudi takeover should have ended the days of a star like Alexander Isak demanding a move.
Should we be pleased Profit and Sustainability Rules have hampered the Geordie Arabia revolution?
That depends if you're more bothered about the competitiveness of a title race or the widespread human-rights abuses of those bankrolling the club.
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STICKY WICKET
ENGLAND'S bowlers managed just two wickets in the last 142 overs of the drawn Fourth Test against India.
The series has been compelling at times but the combination of flat batting tracks and a schedule with little breathing space, means both teams will be dead on their feet heading into Thursday's decider at The Oval.
As in every other sport, there is little thought for player welfare when there are TV schedules to be packed.
SPURRED OFF
TOTTENHAM'S Europa League success, and subsequent Champions League qualification, was supposed to make them a des res for players in this summer's transfer market.
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Yet their failure to land two leading targets, Morgan Gibbs-White and Bryan Mbeumo, shows there are no longer any easy pickings when attempting to raid Premier League rivals.
Especially when you finished last season in 17th place.
AUSSIE WHINES SO SWEET
AUSTRALIAN rugby union may be down at heel, with the British & Irish Lions' tour Down Under far lower in profile than most such trips.
And yet the series win by boss Andy Farrell and his crew, secured by a mighty comeback in Melbourne, remained a reason to be cheerful.
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Because there is nothing so magical in sport than the sound of whingeing, defeated Aussies.
SMALL WONDER
I SPENT my Friday night in Ballybofey, Co Donegal which, with a population of around 5,000, is reckoned to be the smallest town in Britain and Ireland to host league football.
Ballybofey's Finn Harps drew 2-2 with Roy Keane's ex-club, Cobh Ramblers, in an entertaining and refreshingly honest match.
Also, you could pop to the local at half-time for a pint of the black stuff without anyone checking your ticket on the way back in.
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TOUR COMEBACK: Hugo Keenan's tour got off to a nightmarish start, denied his Lions debut, initially by a minor injury and then a virus that by his own admission. 'I was sick for about 12 days. I couldn't stop, yeah… getting off the jacks was an issue. Yeah, I lost about five or six kilos. It was a rough few weeks,' the full-back said memorably having made just two appearances ahead of starting all three Tests and becoming the player who secured the series win in Melbourne. ON-FIELD MOMENT: The Lions secured that series having led the second Test only by a matter of seconds, thanks to Keenan's excellent finish as the men in red, prompted by Finn Russell, kept their cool, stuck to the plan and managed the game better than the Wallabies. It needed a much-debated ruck clear-out by Jac Morgan on opposing replacement back-rower Carlo Tizzano to get the job done, which only added to the drama before referee Andrea Piardi concluded there was no foul play and wild celebrations ensued. OFF-FIELD LIONS MOMENT: Andy Farrell and captain Maro Itoje's media conference after the second Test being drowned out the by a dressing-room sing-song conducted by a squad of roaring Lions. TOUR LOWPOINT: The Sydney rain which did its best to ruin the spectacle for 80,000-plus supporters at Accor Stadium on Saturday night, including a near 40-minute lightning delay. It coincided with the poorest Lions performance of the tour and the Wallabies' best, a 22-12 defeat of the tourists that hopefully restores faith in the green and gold among supporters in a challenging sports market dominated by Aussie Rules and Rugby League. BIGGEST DISAPPOINTMENT: That Josh van der Flier, so dependable for Farrell as a near-permanent selection in the Ireland back-row at openside flanker, was overlooked for the series and did not play a minute of rugby as a Test Lion despite putting in some impressive performances on tour. A crying shame for the 2022 World Rugby men's player of the year. BEST QUOTE: 'Our Wives Think We're At Coldplay' – Lions supporters' banner at the First Nations & Pasifika game in Melbourne. BEST QUOTE: British & Irish Lions supporters before the second test match at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne. Pic: Brendan Moran/Sportsfile BEST INVOCATION OF SCIENCE TO MAKE A POINT: Joe Schmidt reverting to schoolteacher mode to explain Jac Morgan's clearout on Australia's Carlo Tizzano: "We are all aware of Newton's third law (of motion) - for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. When that force hits him and the speed of his head collapsing down, he recoiled out the back of the ruck. "I don't think he wanted to recoil like that but that's the nature of force. That there is an equal and opposite reaction.' BEST NICKNAME: A tie between Jamie Osborne's 'Showbiz' and Ollie Chessum's 'Bin Chicken', the colloquial name given in these parts to the Australian White Ibis, a long-nosed bird seen wandering around city centres pecking at food thrown on the floor or left on outdoor tables. LIONS IN AUSTRALIA BY THE NUMBERS Played: 9, Won: 8, Lost: 1 Test series v Wallabies: Won 2-1 Players used: 49 Most appearances: Ronan Kelleher, Alex Mitchell – 8 each Tadhg Beirne, Ben Earl, Tadhg Furlong, Ellis Genge, Huw Jones, Jac Morgan, Will Stuart – 7 each Bundee Aki, Ollie Chessum, Jack Conan, Tom Curry, Tommy Freeman, Jamison Gibson-Park, Maro Itoje, Andrew Porter, Finn Russell, James Ryan, Dan Sheehan – 6 each. Most minutes: Tadhg Beirne – 507 Huw Jones – 455 Tommy Freeman – 428 Maro Itoje – 419 Finn Russell – 419 Jack Conan – 414 Most tries: Duhan van der Merwe – 5 Huw Jones – 4 Dan Sheehan – 3 Garry Ringrose - 3 Most points:

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