logo
Fran Kirby announces England retirement after missing out on Euro 2025 squad

Fran Kirby announces England retirement after missing out on Euro 2025 squad

The Guardian2 days ago

Fran Kirby has announced her retirement from international football with immediate effect after learning that she will not be part of Sarina Wiegman's squad for this summer's European Championship.
In interviews with the BBC and ESPN, released shortly after England's 2-1 loss against Spain on Tuesday, the 31-year-old midfielder explained that she had already been planning to retire from England duty after July's Euros but she has brought that decision forward after being told she will not be going to Switzerland. Wiegman will name her final squad of 23 on Thursday.
The news is the second sudden retirement by a member of the Lionesses' Euro 2022-winning side in the space of eight days, after Mary Earps' shock announcement in May. Kirby, who has 77 senior international caps and scored 19 goals, had been a key part of the national-team setup since her debut in 2014.
'After being in the England team since I was 21, it's time to close that chapter of my life. I didn't ever want this day to come, but I cannot tell you how proud I am [that] it happened,' Kirby said in a statement on Instagram.
'It's been the biggest honour to represent my country, one that I had only dreamt about as a young girl. My journey has been full of ups and downs, setbacks and achievements. Enough has been said and written about those, but regardless of whatever was thrown at me, I want you all to know that every time I put on that England badge I gave it 100%.
'Every single call-up, I accepted my role and did whatever was needed for the team. I wanted England to win. I've always been there to help England win. My mum had a dream of me representing my country and I'm so proud I was able to do that and play in front of you all.
Sign up to Moving the Goalposts
No topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women's football
after newsletter promotion
'Starting in every game and winning the Euros in 2022 was a dream come true, to be part of change in women's football was one of the best experiences I could ever have imagined.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BREAKING NEWS Aryna Sabalenka dethrones French Open queen Iga Swiatek in thrilling semi-final - as world No1 eyes fourth Grand Slam title
BREAKING NEWS Aryna Sabalenka dethrones French Open queen Iga Swiatek in thrilling semi-final - as world No1 eyes fourth Grand Slam title

Daily Mail​

time28 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Aryna Sabalenka dethrones French Open queen Iga Swiatek in thrilling semi-final - as world No1 eyes fourth Grand Slam title

The queen of Paris is dethroned, guillotined by the Tiger from the East. Iga Swiatek had won three straight French Open titles and four overall - but never before had she faced Aryna Sabalenka. The Belarusian hammered home her status as world No1, winning a pulsating semi-final 7-6, 4-6, 6-0. The two finest players of the decade had not met at a Grand Slam since the 2022 US Open, and after three years of cold warfare, of straining at the leash, they flew at each other with tooth and claw. When the dust settled, Sabalenka, 27, moved into her first Roland Garros final. Whichever of Coco Gauff and French wildcard Lois Boisson wins the other semi-final, Sabalenka will be favourite to complete the third leg of a career Grand Slam, after her US Open title and two in Australia. The context to this match was Swiatek's terrible form coming in. The 24-year-old had not won a single title since her fourth here last year, and had suffered a succession of shocking defeats - mostly to the kind of power baseliners of which Sabalenka is the gold standard. It has been akin to when a Test cricket batsman is 'worked out' by the bowling fraternity. Not everyone can execute it - still very few in fact - but it is now clear how you beat Swiatek: you rush her, especially on the forehand win where she takes such a big backswing; you play relentlessly flat and hard, attack her first and second serves, especially by drilling the ball straight at her on the forehand side. Sabalenka did exactly that, steaming into a double-break 4-1 lead. Everything about Swiatek's game was frenetic, rushed. She was not giving the match, or herself, any time to breath and settle. In a comparison of these two players' strengths, the greatest advantage to Swiatek would lie in her movement. Sabalenka moves well enough but she is more of a wham bam woman; Swiatek's footwork is freakishly fast; she seems to take twice the number of steps of anyone else. Sabalenka is a tiger, as the tattoo on her left forearm denotes; Swiatek is more of a gazelle, whose traditional approach when facing a big cat is to run rings round it, not trot up and say, Fancy a scrap? In the final analysis, of rallies between one and four shots, Sabalenka won 34 more than her opponent; in rallies of five or more strokes, Swiatek was +10 - but she did not do enough to elongate the rallies. Still, at 4-1, with a double break, some tension seemed to creep into the Sabalenka game. Leading 40-30, she hit an ace that would have made it 5-1, but the umpire called back the play for a net cord, leaving Sabalenka bemused. Whether that affected her concentration or not, it was a different match thereafter. Switek was starting to pick the Sabalenka serve better and adjust to the pace of her shots. Her first hold of the match brought her back to 3-4, then Sabalenka played a shocker of a service game, including two double faults, to level the scores. At 5-5, having been a net-cord from 5-1, the Sabalenka of a few years ago would have crumbled emotionally; the imperious new version played a brilliant return game, including her best shot of the match, a curling forehand pass on the run. Swiatek responded with a break of her own but Sabalenka snatched the tiebreak 7-1. The standard of returning had been breathtaking. A recent innovation in tennis has been data company Infosys and their shot-quality metrics. The gist is every shot is scored out of 10; at the end of the first set, Sabalenka and Swiatek's return quality was measured at 9.8 and 9.4 respectively, compared to the field's average of 6.5. The return quality dipped in the second set - how could it not? - and holds became more easy to come by. Swiatek played with more poise, too, mixing up her game far better, getting her opponent on the run. Her first serve percentage almost jumped from 54 to 76; Sabalenka's dropping from 55 to 48. After two hours of brutal brilliance, we looked set for an epic deciding set. Instead it was a rout, as Sabalenka sorted out her first serve percentage and landed massive forehands time and again. She ended, appropriately, with two clean return winners.

'We need a striker' - your transfer window priorities
'We need a striker' - your transfer window priorities

BBC News

time28 minutes ago

  • BBC News

'We need a striker' - your transfer window priorities

We asked for your thoughts on what Aberdeen need to do in the transfer what some of you said:Russell: We need an out-and-out number nine. Someone around the age of 23 making a name for themselves. Would also like to see a young, combative central midfielder. [Dunfermline's] Ewan Otoo looked good against us in the cup Another good goalkeeper to add competition. Tall targetman, Sam Dalby is available and a couple of physical midfielders who can go box-to-box. Also a natural left-back who can drive forward out of With the news that Bojan Miovski is to become available, would it not be far fetched to think we could either offer a loan or even sign him, albeit on reduced terms? The club has some money to spend and it would give a clear indication of what they want next Need a left-back, two midfielders and two strikers as a priority. I feel there needs to be a pathway for some of the youngsters to get some game time. Alfie Stewart, Findlay Marshall, Fletcher Boyd, Adam Emslie and Alfie Bavidge and obviously Jack Milne after his outstanding performance in the cup Some players do still need to depart. We don't really want any of the loan players back, and could do with moving Peter Ambrose on. Need a couple of strikers, a centre-back, left-back, a couple more midfielders and a good number Squad needs trimmed. A couple of full-backs and some midfield legs required. This season has to see some of the sterling talent in the youth ranks getting more We need a striker and a left-back as a priority. Kevin Nisbet is too expensive and not really worth the wages so we need to be scouring Europe or further afield. The media will naturally link us with guys like Ronan Hale out of sheer laziness.

BRYONY GORDON: I was fat-shamed at eight and quickly learned my value was based on my dress size. It plunged me into a world of depression, OCD and eating disorders... this is how I finally snapped out of it
BRYONY GORDON: I was fat-shamed at eight and quickly learned my value was based on my dress size. It plunged me into a world of depression, OCD and eating disorders... this is how I finally snapped out of it

Daily Mail​

time29 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

BRYONY GORDON: I was fat-shamed at eight and quickly learned my value was based on my dress size. It plunged me into a world of depression, OCD and eating disorders... this is how I finally snapped out of it

When I was only eight years old, I heard the words that all girls growing up in the 1980s and 1990s dreaded. 'Gosh, hasn't Bryony got an appetite on her?' It was bellowed by a friend of my father's, who had come round for Sunday lunch. At the time, such comments about female bodies were so normalised that it barely registered on anyone else's radar. But to me it felt completely humiliating.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store