
Five key takeaways as England reach Euros final with last-minute win
It required an added time equaliser and last-minute winner but somehow the Lionesses got over the line once more in Geneva.
Here are five key takeaways from a night that provoked nearly every emotion in the book.
England into a third consecutive major tournament final
No doubt performances will be raked over and tactics dissected as England turned in another questionable display in Geneva that saw them require late intervention once more, but their achievement is undeniably brilliant.
The Lionesses will now appear in a third consecutive major tournament final - a feat of consistency that is nothing short of remarkable.
The feat also marks a fifth consecutive major final for Sarina Wiegman, having reached two with the Netherlands before joining England.
Whatever it is that has got them here - resilience, belief or just a 'proper English attitude' - it surely cannot just be luck after completing the feat so many times.
They will either meet Spain or Germany to set up a definite repeat of one of their prior two finals - losing to Spain 1-0 in the World Cup final in 2023 and defeating Germany 2-1 at Euro 2022.
Poor start proves costly…again
When the post-mortem started on England's questionable first 70 minutes against Sweden in the quarter-finals, the overwhelming call was simple: start better.
It was a call it felt obvious for the Lionesses to heed as they entered the semi-finals as clear favourites against an Italy side who had last reached a European Championship semi-final in 1997.
Though in control for large periods of the opening half, England seemed to coast rather than take the impetus to press for a goal.
It fell straight into the hands of an Italy side who clearly planned to sit back and soak up England pressure before raiding on the break.
And that was exactly what happened as Sofia Cantore charged down the right to fire in a cross that was not dealt with by the Lionesses and Barbara Bonansea was on hand to fire home at the far post.
Once more, it left England with a deficit to fight back from and they left it right until the last minute to save themselves.
If they start like this again in the final, the outcome could prove much worse.
WE'RE IN THE #WEURO2025 FINAL! 🙌 pic.twitter.com/aAIey9IVPE — Lionesses (@Lionesses) July 22, 2025
Italy's back five brilliance
If Andrea Soncin could have produced a blueprint of how he wanted the semi-final to play out, it probably would not have looked too dissimilar to the 90 minutes that emerged in Geneva.
It was only the added and extra-time after that proved the manager's undoing.
Setting up in a back five, the Italians sought to absorb England's early pressure and did so to full effect, soaking up all their threat and with it seemingly any attacking impetus from the Lionesses.
Soncin had clearly set up to hit England on the break and they did so devastatingly in the 33rd minute as Cantore burst down the right with pace and caught their opponents' defence off guard.
Bonansea was on hand to deliver what appeared to be a fatal blow and from there they could set up to frustrate.
Bodies behind the ball, time-wasting unlocked with Laura Giuliani booked for the offence, and it never looked likely that the Lionesses would penetrate the blockade until the entrance of Michelle Agyemang.
Agyemang again
Michelle Agyemang just continues to deliver. At 19 years old she has delivered in a major tournament twice in just a handful of appearances.
On Tuesday evening, she was once more in the right place at the right time and showed maturity beyond her years to finish with aplomb.
In a performance where England were all too often too hasty with their final ball, rushed passes and shots. With a performance that was veering towards head loss, Agyemang brought a calm in the box.
Despite being the youngest player on the pitch, when Beth Mead cut the ball back into her path, she waited a second before placing her shot past Giuliani.
Good morning everyone - from our #WEURO25 finalists 🤗 pic.twitter.com/UKZx2e1nus — Lionesses (@Lionesses) July 23, 2025
It was with just four minutes of extra time remaining that Agyemang came millimetres away from turning from hero to legend.
Breaking free of the Italy defence she showed her strength to fire a deliberately clipped shot towards the goal that dipped to hit the crossbar and rebound off.
Agyemang is not a star in the making but a star already shining the brightest in the Lionesses' constellation.
Chloe Kelly is clutch
It was not an all-time performance from Chloe Kelly and yet she still picked up the official Player of the Match award.
The scenario was exactly what you would expect of a player of Kelly's mentality.
Shunned at Manchester City this season, leaving her in a place where she considered quitting football, Kelly forced a move to Arsenal to rejuvenate her England hopes.
Despite the doubters, in north London she thrived. She would not only force her way into a strong starting XI but start as Arsenal won the Champions League after defeating Barcelona.
Having been named on the bench for all of England's games at Euro 2025 so far, she came on once more to prove her worth.
Against Sweden, that had shown in the form of two brilliant assists/pre-assists to set-up England's comeback.
On Wednesday that contribution shifted because while her crossing was not up to scratch, noticeably putting a corner straight into the side-netting with minutes left, she stepped up to take a potentially game-winning penalty.
Despite seeing her first attempt saved, she was on hand to show that resilience again, and power home the rebound.
It marks a second time the winger has given England an historic 2-1 win in extra-time, having been the scorer of the winner at Wembley back in 2022.
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Daily Mirror
8 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
'I was in the crowd when England's Lionesses roared home - the atmosphere was incredible'
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Metro
9 minutes ago
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Why England hero Jess Carter decided to miss Euro 2025 trophy parade
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Metro
9 minutes ago
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'What is Sarina doing?' - Wright 'baffled' by Wiegman call in Euro 2025 final
Ian Wright says he 'couldn't believe' Alessia Russo was taken off after scoring against Spain and feels Sarina Wiegman was 'very fortunate' to avoid a backlash as England went on to win the Euro 2025 final on penalties. For the third match on the bounce, the Lionesses were forced to come from behind after conceding to a Mariona Caldentey header midway through the first half in Basel. Just as they had done against both Sweden and Italy, the holders dug deep and managed to wrestle the momentum back in their favour, with Russo reacting brilliantly to nod home Chloe Kelly's pinpoint cross and level in the 57th minute. The two teams could not be separated after extra-time and it was England who eventually prevailed after another nerve-jangling shootout, with Kelly scoring the decisive spot-kick to seal a famous 3-1 win over the world champions. The Lionesses' latest triumph – which came at the end of a rollercoaster campaign – marked the first time in history that an English team had won a major tournament on foreign soil. It also further cemented Wiegman's legendary status as an international head coach. The 55-year-old first lifted the trophy with the Netherlands in 2017 before steering England to back-to-back titles over the last three years. Dissecting the final on the Crossways podcast, Wright was somewhat reluctant to criticise Wiegman considering just how far England had come since she took over the reins from Phil Neville. However, the iconic ex-Arsenal striker believes there were a couple of key decisions which could easily have gone against the England boss on another day. 'I've got to say, the Russo substitution is the most baffling thing I'll ever see if she's not injured. I could not believe it,' Wright said. 'Michelle [Agyemang] came on and, obviously, she's amazing, Young Player of the Tournament, only coming off the bench and doing enough to win, that was amazing on her part. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video 'But I think she [Agyemang] needs Russo on there with her in this time. 'They would have caused Spain so many problems because Russo would have dropped off, she would have been in the box. 'What is Sarina doing taking her off?! What's she doing taking her off?! I couldn't believe it.' According to Wright, Wiegman has proven beyond doubt that she is a 'genius' and a 'legend' – but hauling Russo off with 20 minutes remaining made little sense in the context of the match. 'She was feeding off scraps,' Wright said of Russo. 'When you're playing in a game like that, all you're hoping for is one chance that you can try and take, which she did, and then you get a second wind. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video 'When she went off you could see it. She's so sweet and she's saying thank you to everybody but you can see it in her mind, she must be thinking, 'What the f***'s going on?! What are you taking me off for?!' 'In the end, she's very fortunate. She's obviously shown she's a great coach with three European Championships on the spin. That's legendary. 'But some of the decisions… you're thinking to yourself, 'If that's what you're doing on purpose because you see the outcome in your head then you are a genius!', but she is a genius with what she's done.' Wright was similarly taken aback that Wiegman opted to 'gamble' on Lauren James' fitness when she had a player of Kelly's quality raring to go the start. 'With Lauren James, it's a Euros final. If she thinks, 'You know what? If I can get something out of myself I might be able to do it', then you're going to play,' he continued. 'And I think it was a gamble that I don't think Sarina should have taken, especially when you've got Chloe there. Chloe is ready to go and she showed that when she came on. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video 'I thought it was strange. Again, you're talking about somebody who is obviously not fit enough. 'Then, we know that [Lauren] Hemp can come back and work back as well and help and you've got Ona Batlle, Aitana Bonmati and Athenea del Castillo all on that side, that's the most attacking they can be on that side, and you've got Lauren James whose natural game is not to track back and try stop those players. 'She's half fit and it just felt like, 'Oh my gosh, what's going on?!'' More Trending Given the journey Kelly had gone on following a 'dark' time in her career at the start of the year, Wright had to fight back the tears when the Arsenal forward stepped up to convert the winning penalty. 'Who in history has had the opportunity to do that? She has won us a tournament the last kick,' he went on. 'I got emotional as well when she did it. I just had a feeling and I felt like I was going to cry. 'I was just so pleased for her and I wanted it to happen and I wanted it to happen for us a country.' Did Wiegman make a mistake bringing off Russo? For more stories like this, check our sport page. Follow Metro Sport for the latest news on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. MORE: Legendary Lioness hero 'tipped for glittering TV career' after Euros 2025 win MORE: When is the next Women's World Cup and where is it being held? MORE: Lionesses trophy parade: England celebrate historic Euro 2025 victory in London