
Karen Carney fights back tears over women's football backlash at Euro 2025 final
As the Lionesses prepared to face Spain, the broadcaster aired an interview with Beth Mead in which the striker recalled how she was laughed at when she started her career playing for a boys' team.
Karen Carney, one of England's most-capped players, became emotional after the interview finished as she reflected on how far the sport has come.
"There is a little girl and also a little boy that now knows that there is a place for everybody to play football," she said.

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The Sun
8 minutes ago
- The Sun
Morecambe on brink of being thrown out of National League as final deadline is missed
MORECAMBE are on the verge of being chucked out of the National League. Panjab Warriors were trying to buy the 105-year-old club from owner Jason Whittingham's Bond Group Investments. 1 But tonight it was confirmed that a deal had not been reached. The Shrimps are suspended from football's fifth tier until August 20 over a failure to comply with the league's rules. And if they fail to satisfy National League chiefs, they will be expelled. It now seems likely they will go the same way as Bury and Macclesfield and be forced to reform. Morecambe are set to go out of business in the coming days, with a statement from Panjab Warriors last week saying: "As of Monday, 4th August: The Club is officially shut. " £0 in the bank and no cash on site means operations cannot continue. "Senior staff have taken the heart-breaking decision to stop working after months of holding the Club together under impossible circumstances. "Without an agreement today: The Club will rapidly disintegrate. "Staff and players are leaving - soon there will be nothing left to sell. "Jason Whittingham your legacy is in your hands. "You will be remembered in Morecambe not for your intentions, but for the outcome of today. Do the right thing, stop the suffering." Morecambe were relegated from League Two last season following an 18-year spell in the EFL. They are currently suspended by the fifth tier National League for failing "to meet its financial obligations for the 2025/2026 season". This all comes after the Panjab Warriors had a takeover bid approved by the EFL in June. After the board tried to force through the sale, Whittingham responded by sacking the entire board before later inviting them back. Rugby club Worcester Warriors were expelled from the Premiership under Whittingham's management three years ago.


Daily Mail
8 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Brendon McCullum's era is still lacking a prize scalp as England come up short again, writes LAWRENCE BOOTH - after India fight back to deserved draw
A series that has given us everything was never going to end any other way. With England needing seven to win — or six for the tie that would have secured the series — Gus Atkinson swung for glory and lost his off stump to Mohammed Siraj, India 's bowling hero of an astonishing few weeks. At the other end was Chris Woakes, his left arm in a sling to protect a dislocated shoulder and a symbol of England's desperation for victory. Even without facing a ball, he felt as central a protagonist as anyone. A quarter of an hour earlier, Woakes walked out to a standing ovation from a crowd of 25,000, who had all turned up just to be able to say: 'I was there.' Now, the applause rang out for India and for Siraj, a 2–2 draw plucked from the fire. The Oval has rarely witnessed scenes like it. Even the workmen building luxury apartments in the famous gasholders downed tools to watch. The decisive exchanges of the inaugural Anderson–Tendulkar Trophy had been condensed into less than an hour on an overcast final morning, the 25th day of the 25 scheduled. The equation was simple — England needed 35 runs, India four wickets, though with the caveat that Woakes would be no more than a non-striker. When Jamie Overton pulled and inside-edged the day's first two balls for four, home hopes grew. But Siraj is a warrior of a fast bowler, armed with the skills of a surgeon. He had Jamie Smith caught behind from the third ball of the second over, then won a marginal lbw decision against Overton, with England still 20 short. Three runs later, Prasidh Krishna bowled Josh Tongue for a duck, leaving India on the brink of victory. Out walked Woakes, a spine-tingling moment acknowledged by both sets of fans and pre-destined to go down as one of cricket's bravest acts, whatever the result. Gus Atkinson swung Siraj for six, the ball tipped over the ropes by a diving Akash Deep, then pinched a bye as Woakes grimaced in pain. Even the act of running was agony. Goodness knows what would have happened had he been required to take strike. With 10 needed, Atkinson pulled Krishna for two, before once more pinching the strike. Siraj, though, was a man possessed and produced a perfect full-length delivery that dipped under Atkinson's legside mow. As India celebrated the narrowest win in their Test history, it was impossible to deny that a drawn series was the fairest result. The tourists had chances to win both the games they lost, at Headingley and Lord's, and in Siraj had the only seamer who lasted all five Tests. So much for Jasprit Bumrah, whose three games coincided with two England wins and a draw. In the games he played, Siraj took seven wickets at 61. In the two he missed, Siraj took 16 at 19, relishing the extra burden. Last man out during India's 22-run defeat at Lord's, he then dropped Harry Brook early in his 195-run stand with Joe Root on the third afternoon at the Oval. Instead, he will be remembered for his five-for here and 23 wickets in all, four clear of anyone else. The line between hero and villain can be perilously thin. It seems harsh to ask what went wrong for England when six more runs would have spawned questions about what went right. In one sense, their narrow defeat counts among their most heroic failures, given the absence of Ben Stokes just as he threatened to peak in Manchester, and the injury to Woakes, which left England's three inexperienced seamers with too much to do. Yet they will also know that, at 301 for three, with Brook and Root batting beautifully and India losing heart, a target of 374 was within reach. To lose seven for 66 reflected poorly on some of the shot selection — not least by Jacob Bethell and Smith — as much as it reflected well on India's seamers. The nature of narrow defeats is such that every passage of play attracts greater scrutiny in hindsight. What might have happened had England not dropped six catches, or Tongue had not conceded 11 wides in his first over, or Washington Sundar had not squeezed 39 out of India's last wicket? The ifs and buts will linger for a while, for England came within a whisker of the prize scalp the Bazball era has craved. Thanks to the Manchester rain in 2023, and India's fightback here, their two home series against Australia and India under Brendon McCullum have finished all square. Their record under Stokes and McCullum remains strong, but Bazball's critics — mainly in Australia and India, though plenty in England — will not take them seriously until they beat one of the other members of the so-called Big Three. The stakes going into this winter's Ashes are considerably higher than if they had won 3–1. This series, at least, has allowed them to make a call on a few fringe players. Liam Dawson and Overton look out of the reckoning, while Woakes — 37 before the start of the next home summer — may have played his final Test. But some questions remain unresolved. Ollie Pope, captain in this game, averaged just 34 in a series so batsman-friendly that 12 different players totalled 21 centuries, including seven between Shubman Gill and Root alone. Zak Crawley averaged 32, but while his place is protected in part by his opening partnership with Ben Duckett, Pope has no such security blanket. Despite his double failure here, Bethell must come into the mix for Australia. As ever, much will come down to the fitness of Stokes, who won the man of the match awards at Lord's and Old Trafford and balanced the line-up in a manner beyond any other player. The first half of England's defining year has ended in disappointment, but not defeat. The second will provide a clearer picture.


Telegraph
8 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Emma Raducanu hires ‘best coach in the world'
Emma Raducanu has scored a coaching coup by making an agreement with Francis Roig, a former top-60 player who was part of Rafael Nadal's coaching team for 17 years. Raducanu 's long roster of previous coaches includes a number of highly respected names, but no one who has spent so much time working alongside a tennis legend. A 57-year-old from Barcelona, Roig has not coached on the WTA Tour before. After ending his time with Nadal in 2022 – because, in his own words, 'I felt like I needed a new challenge in my life' – he spent the best part of a year with former Wimbledon finalist Matteo Berrettini. The fact that Roig has signed up with Raducanu for the rest of 2025 speaks for the potential that he must see in her. According to sources, the pair began talking about a collaboration during this summer's Wimbledon, and then did a coaching trial before Raducanu entered the American hard-court swing. Raducanu is well known for being a keen student of the game, and for having a knack for picking up new skills quickly. As a result, she should benefit from working with a man who – according to Nadal's biographer Christopher Clarey – 'is an excellent swing doctor, adept at fixing glitches in strokes.' In the same recent book on Nadal – which is entitled The Master – Clarey quotes the former Spanish No 2 Feliciano Lopez, who describes Roig as a uniquely skilled observer. 'Technically I think he's the best coach in the world,' Lopez said. 'He doesn't use that much video analysis, but he sees things that the rest of the coaches don't see. He's able to see things in Rafa's forehand or movement that no other guys would notice, and it allowed them to be very specific and precise.' As Clarey's book goes on to explain, 'Roig provided Rafael with another voice on tactics and technique for nearly 20 years, helping him in particular with his volleys and slice backhand.' Roig is understood to have recently joined Raducanu in Cincinnati, where she is scheduled to play in the final build-up tournament before the US Open. The concluding grand-slam event of the tennis year – which she famously won in 2021 – is set to begin in three weeks' time. While Raducanu's path has been a bumpy one in recent seasons, she is showing signs of improving her consistency, both in terms of fitness and form. Since teaming up with long-time associate Mark Petchey in Miami in March, she has won 20 of 24 matches against opponents ranked outside the top ten, and generally avoided the sort of niggling injuries that have dogged her progress over the last four years. The problem has been her inability to defeat the elite, as demonstrated by her 0-6 record against top-tenners in that time. This is where Roig's input could be particularly useful. While consistent and disciplined from the back of the court, Raducanu is not as physically imposing as most of the leading players, and often lacks the weight of shot to trouble them. Nevertheless, her ranking now stands at No 33 in the world – the highest it has been since the points from her US Open triumph dropped off in September 2022 – and a strong campaign in Cincinnati could potentially earn her a seeding at Flushing Meadows this year. Her form across the Atlantic has been promising so far, with three wins in Washington and two in Montreal, although she was given a 6-2, 6-1 schooling by this year's Wimbledon runner-up Amanda Anisimova in her most recent match. Raducanu had previously been working with Petchey for much of this season, but their arrangement had been constrained by his long-standing broadcasting arrangements. Petchey made it clear that would not sacrifice his commentary career in order to become her full-time coach. Before that, Raducanu had spent the 2024 season with Nick Cavaday – formerly the director of tennis at her childhood academy in Orpington – before he was forced to step down in February by chronic health issues. The full roll-call of coaches from her professional career now features at least eight names, and includes Nigel Sears, Andrew Richardson, Torben Beltz, Dmitry Tursunov and Sebastian Sachs. There was also a brief interlude in Indian Wells this year where Vladimir Platenik sat in her player box while she lost a first-round match against Japan's Moyuka Uchijima.