
Women's Euro 2025: countdown to France v Germany, plus England news
Date: 2025-07-19T09:08:04.000Z
Title: Be sure to recap last night's clash by reading Suzanne Wrack's match report from Bern…
Content:
Update:
Date: 2025-07-19T09:00:46.000Z
Title: Preamble
Content: Hello, good morning and welcome to another Euro 2025 Matchday live! Today we'll be reacting to last night's clash between Spain and Switzerland, which resulted in a 2-0 win for the world champions and heartbreak for the tournament hosts. We'll also be looking ahead to this evening's meeting between France and Germany, the last quarter-final of the four.
I'll be with you all day, keeping you up to date with all the latest news from Switzerland.
Join me!

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Liverpool close in on deal to sign Eintracht Frankfurt striker Hugo Ekitike
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Reuters
40 minutes ago
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Germans face race to recover after emotional Women's Euro win over France
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The Guardian
an hour ago
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Tour de France 2025: stage 15 from Muret to Carcassonne
Update: Date: 2025-07-20T10:45:47.000Z Title: Preamble Content: It was nice of Tadej Pogacar to finally let some of the other riders to have a go yesterday and he still found a way to twist the knife further into the heart of Jonas Vingegaard's beleaguered hopes of winning the Tour de France. Even the Dane's most generous fans would struggle to describe him as a yellow jersey rival now. Pogacar's advantage is 4mins 13secs and he is essentially racing against himself. The Slovenian has 21 stage wins and there is every chance that he will continue his rapid pursuit of Mark Cavendish's record. Pogacar made it pretty clear after winning stage 13 on Friday that he is not planning to take any days off. 'I'm not here to make enemies,' he said, 'but it's the Tour, you cannot just back off if there's the opportunity for a stage win. You never know when it's your last day on the Tour. 'I will say it honestly. The team pays you to win, and there's a big team behind me that supports me and that works every single day of their career to come to the Tour, to win the Tour. If there is an opportunity, you go for it. You can't say no to a stage in the Tour.' Still, UAE Emirates may look at the empty threat to Pogacar's general classification lead and decide to play this one safe. There are three categorised climbs and a lumpy to descent into Carcassonne to contend with, so maybe there is a bit of hope for the breakaway? Should that be allowed to play out, such is the nature of professional cycling in this constant-go era that a winner for this stage will likely be a familiar name capable on the slopes from the one-day racing pack. Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck) and Wout van Aert (Visma-LAB) are strong contenders, maybe even Matteo Jorgenson (Visma-LAB) or someone with that kind of profile. For the good of the Tour, a non-Pogacar stage win would be good. Domination can quickly become dull and while there is nothing boring about Pogacar's style of racing, cycling as a foregone conclusion is not much of a sport.