logo
Euro 2025: Switzerland riding wild emotions on and off the field into quarterfinals debut

Euro 2025: Switzerland riding wild emotions on and off the field into quarterfinals debut

Fox Sports11-07-2025
Associated Press
GENEVA (AP) — Let's go crazy, Switzerland.
The national women's soccer team is riding a wave of passionate support in a country where emotions are typically kept under control.
Crucial goals like Switzerland got in the 90th and 92nd minutes of the past two games in sold-out stadiums helped unleash those strong feelings.
'We feel the whole of Switzerland behind us. It's unbelievable,' defender Viola Calligaris said late Thursday after a frantic finish to the 1-1 draw with Finland.
The stoppage-time leveler by substitute Riola Xhemaili advanced the Swiss at the expense of the Finns — and earned the hosts a full week of anticipation before its first ever knockout game at a Women's Euros. The wait was a mighty long time — 41 years — and will end next Friday in Bern, likely against world champion Spain. "You have to get crazy"
It is what veteran coach Pia Sundhage asked of her players before the tournament, when there was much less public faith in their potential: 'You have to get crazy.'
Sundhage saw in her first year in the job that good Swiss players were precise and correct but lacked the risk-taking to reach for greatness.
'Sometimes that is not good enough,' Sundhage, who coached ultra-confident United States players to win two Olympic titles, said in May. 'And that is scary for a Swiss player.'
They look fearless now. Fans and team in harmony
The noisy crowds in Geneva on Thursday and Bern last Sunday — when Iceland was swept aside 2-0 by a late tide of attacks — have responded to their high-energy team.
'It is so much more fun to coach and play when you have a loud crowd,' Sundhage said in the glow of staying in the tournament. 'The reason we are in the quarterfinal is because we are on home soil.'
The 65-year-old Swedish coach perhaps underplayed her own tone-setting role in the late drama.
Switzerland needed only a draw with Finland to advance alongside Group A winner Norway on goal difference ahead of its opponent.
Yet at halftime of a goalless game, Sundhage rejected caution and went for the win. Top teenage prospects
She sent on 19-year-old Leila Wandeler and pushed forward 18-year-old Iman Beney to form an all-teenage attack with Sydney Schertenleib — top talents signed by Lyonnes, Manchester City and Barcelona, respectively. She brought on Switzerland's record goalscorer Ana-Maria Crnogorcevic to play at right-back.
Swiss play became faster, more fluid, chances were created and Finland scored only from a 79th-minute penalty that was recklessly conceded.
Sundhage then put more attackers on the field, including Xhemaili who was in the Finland goalmouth in stoppage time to score by diverting in Geraldine Reuteler's shot.
'I just saw in everyone's eyes that we would still score this goal,' Reuteler said about the strike that kept Switzerland in Euro 2025.
Was this the 'get crazy' moment Sundhage sought, she was asked.
'A little bit of a start, maybe,' she said. 'I try to lead by example. That's why Wandeler, she plays. Iman plays. Sydney Schertenleib plays. It's okay to make a mistake. They go in and they just play.'
Finland's goalscorer Natalia Kuikka, the experienced Chicago Stars defender, also saw it.
'They clearly came to the game that they wanted to win and it kind of showed,' Kuikka said of the Swiss. Joyous Swiss
A tournament veteran like Sundhage saw the positive signs in camp of what she called 'this phenomenal team coming together.'
'Since we went into the (tournament) bubble I think they've been louder,' she said. 'They are dancing and they are creating this energy which I think helps us when we go on the pitch."
'It is so important to embrace that joy, that is all that matters. And we are not finished yet.'
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kaylee McKeown tops rival Regan Smith for another major title at swimming worlds
Kaylee McKeown tops rival Regan Smith for another major title at swimming worlds

Yahoo

time12 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Kaylee McKeown tops rival Regan Smith for another major title at swimming worlds

Australia's Kaylee McKeown edged American Regan Smith to win gold in the women's 100-meter backstroke final Tuesday at the swimming world championships in Singapore, a blistering-fast edition of the rivalry between two of the best in the sport. McKeown won in 57.16 seconds, just missing the world record, with Smith just behind in 57.35 for silver. Both were among the top five times in the event's history. American Katharine Berkoff took bronze in 58.15. Smith was a fraction ahead at the 50-meter mark, but McKeown passed her in those final meters for her second world title in the event. It's the fourth time in four tries that McKeown has outpaced Smith in the event at either the Olympics or world championships. Smith also took silver behind McKeown at the Paris Olympics and the 2023 worlds and earned bronze in the Tokyo Olympics behind McKeown and Canada's Kylie Masse. Smith won gold at the 2022 worlds, which McKeown did not compete in. Smith's time was her third-best ever and is now the fifth best in the event's history. However, one of those four superior times was McKeown's in the lane next to her on Tuesday. 'What more can you do? I have no control over how fast Kaylee swims,' Smith said in an interview on Peacock. 'I'm going to choose not to be frustrated — 57.35 is pretty fantastic.' Though McKeown has owned the biggest meets, the rivalry is still one of the best in swimming. Smith is the current world-record holder, setting the mark of 57.12 at last year's U.S. Olympic trials. She also set the Olympic record of 57.28 in Paris — the event's second-best time ever before Tuesday — but it came in the women's medley relay, in which the U.S. beat McKeown's Australian squad for gold. In the individual 100-meter final, McKeown beat Smith 57.33 to 57.66. McKeown now has five world championship golds and 13 overall medals. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Olympics, Global Sports, Women's Olympics 2025 The Athletic Media Company

Marseille signs Brazilian winger Paixão from Feyenoord to boost attacking options
Marseille signs Brazilian winger Paixão from Feyenoord to boost attacking options

Fox Sports

time40 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

Marseille signs Brazilian winger Paixão from Feyenoord to boost attacking options

Associated Press Ligue 1 club Marseille has bolstered its attack by signing Brazilian winger Igor Paixao from Feyenoord in a deal that could rise to 35 million euros ($40.6 million). The 25-year-old Paixão scored 18 goals in 47 games last season and was voted the Dutch player of the season. Marseille beat competition from newly promoted Premier League team Leeds to sign him. Marseille announced the deal late Friday without giving further details, but French media reports valued the deal at 30 million euros with an additional 5 million in performance-related bonuses. Marseille paid a club-record 32 million euros to Portuguese club Braga to sign forward Vitinha in early 2023. Vitinha failed to settle and scored only six goals in 43 games before being sold to Genoa. Paixão showed his full repertoire of skills during a Champions League game against AC Milan in February, scoring in a 1-0 win and giving the Milan defense a torrid time all game with his quickness. Marseille finished second in Ligue 1 last season behind Paris Saint-Germain and qualified directly for the Champions League. Marseille coach Roberto De Zerbi has made several moves in the transfer market this summer, including bringing back veteran striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang from Al-Qadsiah in the Saudi Pro League. The 36-year-old Aubameyang scored 21 goals for Al-Qadsiah last season, after having spent the 2023-24 campaign at Marseille — where he netted 30 goals overall and became a fan favorite in the southern port city. Attacking midfielder Angel Gomes joined from Lille and gritty central defender Facundo Medina arrived from Lens. The arrivals of Aubameyang and Paixão bring extra firepower to an attack that already features Mason Greenwood — who scored 21 league goals last season and Amine Gouiri. Marseille opens the new Ligue 1 season when it travels all the way up the country to face Brittany-based Rennes on Aug. 15. ___ AP soccer: in this topic

Best way to nurture kids' pro sports dreams? New study challenges a popular belief
Best way to nurture kids' pro sports dreams? New study challenges a popular belief

San Francisco Chronicle​

time40 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Best way to nurture kids' pro sports dreams? New study challenges a popular belief

For young athletes looking to go pro — and for parents motivated to help their children get there — is specializing in their sport early on the best path forward? New research out of UCSF suggests that narrative may be false. Dr. Nirav Pandya, a pediatric orthopedic surgeon and vice chair of orthopedics at UCSF, has found that the incentive behind specializing in sports lies largely in the lack of education on the topic. 'Most parents just want the best for their kids, so they're in this helicopter parenting age. They're like, 'The best way I can get my kid there is, make sure they have the best private coach and they're on the best team, and they're doing soccer 24/7,'' Pandya told the Chronicle. 'Parents want their kids to do well, so they go to club sports and specialize … but without knowing the data.' But Pandya's UCSF study suggests that professional athletes who played multiple sports in high school are not only achieving higher success in the pros, but are missing fewer games due to injury than their single-sport counterparts. The study focused on 10 years worth of NBA first-round draft picks. The results showed that NBA players who participated in multiple high school sports appeared in 19% more games, had a higher player efficiency rating and were twice as likely to win awards than their single-sport counterparts. Pandya said broader research conducted by him and UCSF also extended to other leagues — including NFL, NHL, MLB and many Olympic sports — and the findings were similar. But there's another misconception about intensive training that is often overlooked. 'The kids I've seen go professional, it's not because they specialize or they play multiple sports,' Pandya said. 'They were going to be professional athletes because they're just naturally gifted and have that skill, and they're lucky not to get injured.' Pandya became curious about the subject when he noticed a rise in young athletes coming into his office with serious sports injuries. He quickly identified a pattern in his patients: Many began to focus on only one sport early in their careers. And the age they were suffering injuries increasingly grew younger. Sue Phillips has also noticed these trends. Inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2024, Phillips has led the Mitty girls to multiple state and national high school championships over three decades. She has also coached several USA Basketball youth national teams to gold medals. 'The drawbacks of sport specialization for young athletes include a variety of issues: overuse injuries, emotional burnout, minimizing one's social circle and 'potentially' preventing the development of diversified motor/processing skills,' Phillips wrote in a text message. Phillips relates specialization at younger ages to a combination of factors. The current landscape of youth sports is intentionally designed for year-round competition — a departure from the days of playing one sport, and switching to another in the offseason. The youth sports industry has grown into an extremely profitable business, drawing in more than $40 billion annually, according to the Aspen Institute. Club sports play a heavy hand, serving as one of the most focused and intensive avenues for young athletes to train at the highest levels. 'In certain situations, when club sport directors/coaches and trainers rely on these avenues for their livelihood, there can be a narrative presented to their clients that 'more is more,'' Phillips wrote. 'When we all know that 'working smarter not harder' or 'less is more' proves to be in the best interest of the athlete.' UC Santa Cruz midfielder Alex Freeman considers herself a case of early specialization. Freeman began playing soccer at 4 years old, and while she had brief stints playing other sports recreationally, she knew early on that her goal of playing high-level soccer would require fully dedicating herself to it. Freeman played at Berkeley High School and with a competitive club that is now called Eastshore Alliance FC. While she had a positive experience, she knows many athletes who didn't share her delight while playing for other elite clubs. And at least, as she says, she was able to play both high school and club. 'I think for a lot of my friends, they felt they shouldn't do high school because they felt like it was a lower level,' Freeman said. 'You only have four years of high school, and to get (a scholarship) offer, most rosters are done by junior year. So there's no time to have three months of break. … So I think a lot of people felt pressure' to only play club soccer. In high school, Freeman tore her right and left ACLs on separate occasions — both the result of non-contact injuries while playing soccer. Her twin sister, Erin, who plays alongside Freeman at UC Santa Cruz, suffered identical ACL injuries at alarmingly similar times. But that experience wasn't uncommon. Freeman says at least one of her teammates tore an ACL every year. Her older sister, Leah, who also specialized in soccer early on, is also no stranger to injury. Freeman underwent hip surgery in December 2022 to repair a torn labrum. Leah played for the youth national team and is now a goalkeeper for Bay FC. For the Freeman family and by way of the kids' desire, soccer was year-round. But that's the case for most young athletes looking to go pro. There is no offseason — it's some combination of specialized training, high school, training camps and competitive clubs. And for many, the experience is exactly what it sounds like: ultra-competitive. 'Club is, again, not my club, but it gets super serious. You're playing in front of scouts like all the time. And it's hard to be friends with your teammates sometimes because there's so much competition between you guys, and like, it's so easy to burn out,' Alex Freeman said. 'For a lot of people who have been playing competitive for their whole lives, they kind of don't know who they are without it, and that's really scary.' When asked what advice they would give to parents motivated to help their children achieve their sports goals, Pandya, Phillips and Freeman's father all shared that the end goal should center around a child's happiness. 'Any decision that you make for your kid should be in support of what they want to do,' said Freeman's father, Dale. 'I think that a kid that's interested in athletics hopefully can get exposed to a lot of different sports, but whatever decision you make should be in support of your kid's interests, as opposed to some larger goal based on a parent's perception of what their kid is good at.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store