Euro 2025: Spain's style vs. England's will to win sets up fascinating final
How they got to Basel on Sunday is a whole other story.
Spain has mostly cruised through its five games except for a late scare in a tense semifinal against Germany. England has trailed for long periods of three games and survived being on the brink of elimination in both knockout games.
Spain is a supremely technical team with a dream midfield pairing two-time Ballon d'Or winners Alexia Putellas and Aitana Bonmatí. England has incredible will to win and has called a pair of dramatic game-changers off the bench, Michelle Agyemang and Chloe Kelly.
'We always have the confidence that in terms of positioning and having possession, we tend to be very precise and it's difficult to take the ball off us,' Putellas said. 'So we're ready for anything.″
It looks like an ideal final of contrasting styles. One made possible only because England's humbling opening 2-1 loss to France ultimately kept the title holder out of Spain's side of the knockout bracket.
Leaders and trailers
Four vs. 219. That's the number of minutes Spain has trailed at Euro 2025 games compared to England.
Spain fell behind between the 10th and 14th minutes of a group-stage game against Italy when some starters were rested because the team was likely to finish top.
England gave up two first-half goals against France in their group, again to Sweden in the quarterfinals and one more to Italy in the semifinals. England's equalizing goals by Agyemang in the knockout games came in, respectively, the 81st and then the sixth minute of stoppage time.
'I think we've nearly killed her twice this tournament!' England's Ella Toone said of coach Sarina Wiegman. 'She says we've definitely aged her.'
Spain midfielder Patri Guijarro said of England's resolve: ″There's no fragility. And I think that above all, their competitiveness, is what has got them this far. But what they're doing is not easy.″
Trading wins
Spain and England each beat the other when winning their recent titles, and they traded wins in a UEFA Nations League group this year.
England eliminated Spain 2-1 after extra time in the quarterfinals of its home Euro 2022. Does this sound familiar? England trailed into the 84th that day before two substitutes — Alessia Russo and Toone — assisted and scored to force extra time.
Spain got a deserved 1-0 win in the 2023 World Cup final played in Sydney, Australia.
Spain is now on a run of 13 wins in 14 games and the blip was a 1-0 loss to England at Wembley in February. Spain won the return game 2-1 on June 3, rallying with two Clàudia Pina goals in the second half.
Winning women coaches
For the eighth straight edition, the title-winning coach will be a woman.
England's Wiegman and Spain's Montse Tomé were in a minority of seven female head coaches with the 16 teams that started in Euro 2025.
They are the last coaches standing to extend a winning run started in 1997.
Wiegman won the past two, with England in 2022 and her native Netherlands in 2017. Germany coaches Silvia Neid and Tina Theune won the previous five. Spain never reached the final in 13 previous editions since 1984.
Penalty shootouts
That first final 41 years ago is the only one decided by a penalty shootout.
Sweden beat England in a rain-soaked, near-empty stadium in Luton after a two-leg final ended 1-1. The scorer of Sweden's decisive penalty, and its goal in the first leg, was Pia Sundhage, who coached Switzerland to the quarterfinals here, losing 2-0 to Spain.
England's second shootout in Women's Euros history also was against Sweden, last week in the quarterfinals. A madcap affair saw only five of 14 spot kicks scored and Sweden fail twice when scoring would have sent England home.
Spain was involved in just one Women's Euros shootout, losing to Austria in the 2017 quarterfinals.
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
21 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Another Barcelona star misses training ahead of Como clash
A leading member of the midfield ranks at La Liga champions Barcelona played no part in group training on Friday. That's according to Blaugrana insider Victor Navarro, who points towards Dani Olmo as the player in question. The subject of injury problems has of course emerged as an altogether prominent one in Catalunya's capital over recent days. This comes after both Ferran Torres and Fermín López picked up fitness concerns. As much was then followed earlier today by confirmation that Robert Lewandowski has been ruled out of this weekend's Joan Gamper Trophy match owing to a muscular issue. As alluded to above, though, the problems for Hansi Flick and his staff do not end there… As per a report from the aforementioned Victor Navarro of COPE: 'Dani Olmo was sidelined today due to a muscular overload.' In more positive news for Barcelona, though, it is also noted that Ferran Torres has now rejoined group activities at The Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper. Conor Laird – GSFN
Yahoo
21 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Anthony Richardson could return to Colts practice as soon as Saturday after dislocating pinkie finger
Anthony Richardson could return to Indianapolis Colts practice as soon as Saturday after dislocating his right pinkie finger Thursday night against the Baltimore Ravens in the teams' preseason opener, according to ESPN's Stephen Holder. After the game, Colts head coach Shane Steichen told reporters that Richardson's finger was popped back into place and that the 2023 first-round pick was "day to day." This story is being updated.
Yahoo
21 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hannah Hampton threw Spain goalkeeper Cata Coll's notes into crowd during 2025 Euro final penalty shoot-out
England goalkeeper Hannah Hampton revealed that she threw penalty notes belonging to her Spanish counterpart, Cata Coll, into the crowd during the European Championship final-deciding shoot-out. The 24-year-old explained in an interview with TalkSport that she discarded the water bottle which belonged to Spain goalkeeper Coll, and contained notes detailing penalty statistics, into the contingent of English fans, while instead writing her own notes upon her arm to ensure Coll could not do similarly. 'The Spanish keeper had it (penalty notes) on her bottle,' Hampton said. 'So I thought when she was going in goal I'll just pick it up and chuck it into the English fans so she can't have it.' She added: 'I never put it on a bottle because anyone can do that, so I put it on my arm. Hampton saved two spot-kicks while Salma Paralluelo fired her penalty wide as England defended their European title with a 3-1 victory over world champions Spain in the shoot-out. The game had finished 1-1 after goals from Alessia Russo and Spain's Mariona Caldentey. 'It wasn't hard, when she's gone in the goal it's on its own isn't it? You just pick it up,' the England international said. 'When she saw my bottle in there instead, mine's blank but it has the same sponsors and stuff so I just put mine in there, chucked hers in with the fans and she had an empty bottle. 'She was walking back and I was walking the other way and she was so confused, I was trying so hard not to burst out laughing.' The Chelsea goalkeeper had played a pivotal role in keeping England in the tournament just ten days earlier, saving twice in the 3-2 penalty shoot-out quarter-final win over Sweden despite Sarina Wiegman's side missing four of their kicks. Hampton described that shoot-out as 'traumatic' for the England squad, and explained how head coach Wiegman stepped up her team's penalty preparations for the final two rounds of the tournament in Switzerland. 'From then on Sarina was saying 'you're taking penalties every day whether you like it or not',' Hampton said. 'We were (doing so) before in the small-sided games, we'd have a penalty for each at the start of the games but afterwards it was about taking two or three then after training, Anna (Moorhouse) and Khiara (Keating) faced about 100 penalties a day.' Hampton was one of five England players listed in the 30-player shortlist for the Women's Ballon d'Or on Thursday, and emerged as Wiegman's No 1 following the international retirement of Mary Earps in May. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. England, Spain, Women's Euros 2025 The Athletic Media Company