
Spain out to finally end winless run against Germany in Euro semi
Spain have never beaten eight-times European champions Germany, most recently losing to the Germans for bronze at last year's Paris Olympics.
"Personally I see it more as an opportunity, not so much a revenge or a thorn in my side," Spain midfielder Alexia Putellas said in Tuesday's pre-game press conference.
"The Olympics are a completely different competition and any player who has been able to play the Olympics and a European Championship or a World Cup, I think we all agree, it is a totally different context, other stadiums, another way of competing.
s"So I think that the Olympic Games will have nothing to do with the European Championship, with tomorrow's game, but, well, in the end it was a rival against whom we lost and tomorrow we have the opportunity to win it for the first time."
Spain coach Montse Tome would love to end their winless run against Germany.
"We have not been able to beat them, but we have been closer and closer to beating them," Tome said. "In the Olympic match, we had a chance to do so, it was good and now we are at another point.
"I think they are also another team, they have another coach, but Germany is Germany and they have eight European Championships. Their essence is the same, regardless of who is in charge, and we are very clear about the game we want to play tomorrow, how we want to condition it and where we want to take it."
Spain won their three group stage games by a combined score of 14-3 before defeating a spirited Swiss side 2-0 in the quarter-finals.
"My feelings are good, full confidence in what we are creating, in the mentality we have, in the game we have played throughout the European Championship," Putellas said.
"It will be a very tough game, like any semi-final of a major tournament, but with maximum enthusiasm and maximum motivation to move forward and make history once again."
The winner meets either England or Italy in the final on Sunday in Basel.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Swimming-Facing fears more important than gold for Australia's McKeown
Swimming - World Aquatics Championships - Women 100m Backstroke Final - World Aquatics Championships Arena, Singapore - July 29, 2025 Australia's Kaylee McKeown reacts after winning the women's 100m backstroke final REUTERS/Edgar Su (Reuters) -Kaylee McKeown won gold in a thrilling 100 metres backstroke final at the world championships in Singapore on Tuesday, but the Australian said she was prouder of the fact that she had faced her fear of failure than winning the race. The five-time Olympic gold medallist came from behind to overtake rival Regan Smith and touch the wall in a championship-record time of 57.16, beating Smith by 0.19 seconds. It was a triumphant return to the world championships for McKeown, who had said after the semi-finals on Monday that she had not wanted to compete in the event. The 24-year-old had also said she was hoping to rediscover her love for the sport in 2025 following a challenging spell during which she took a mental health break shortly after her 100 and 200 backstroke victories at the Paris Olympics. Asked on Tuesday what it meant to win the gold medal, McKeown said: "I don't think it necessarily means anything to win. "I know that sounds bad, but I think what means most to me is being true to myself and being strong and coming to these world championships and not fearing away. "There were a lot of comments saying that I'm scared to lose but that's not the case at all. "If anything, I'm scared to fail myself. I've worked really, really hard to get up there tonight and prove to myself that I am a good athlete and swimmer. It doesn't matter if I come first or last. "I just didn't want to keep steering away from fear because the more that you feel fear, it becomes like a monster and you have to chase your demons at some point." American Smith said she was content with her performance, especially in light of the illness which swept through the United States team during their training camp in Thailand just before the championships. "It was a really good execution, and at the end of the day, America as a whole had the odds stacked against us," she added. "We had a really unfortunate situation happen to us during a training camp, and I did not think I was going to go for 57.35. "To come up with a silver, I can't really control the place of the medal, but what I can control is how fast I swim and how well I can do my race, and I think I did an incredible job, especially under the circumstances." Smith and McKeown will renew their rivalry in the 200 backstroke, with the final scheduled to take place on Saturday. (Reporting by Aadi Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Peter Rutherford)


The Star
3 hours ago
- The Star
Biathlete Dahlmeier missing after mountaineering fall in Pakistan, reports say
FILE PHOTO: IBU World Biathlon Championships - Women's 4x6 km Relay - Oestersund, Sweden - March 16, 2019. Laura Dahlmeier of Germany competes. TT News Agency/Robert Henriksson via REUTERS/ File Photo BERLIN (Reuters) -German biathlete and double Olympic champion Laura Dahlmeier has been at least seriously injured in a mountaineering accident in Pakistan, with emergency responders so far unable to reach her, according to media reports on Tuesday citing her management. The accident occurred on Monday when Dahlmeier was hit by a falling rock in the Karakoram, a mountain range in the Kashmir region, the ZDF broadcaster reported. Her management did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment from Reuters. ZDF said that a helicopter overflight on Tuesday had found no signs of life. Dahlmeier retired from the sport in 2019, aged 25, a year after becoming the first female biathlete to achieve a sprint and pursuit double at the same Olympics. (Reporting by Rachel More, editing by Kirsti Knolle)


New Straits Times
3 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Popovici says came close to going home before winning world gold
SINGAPORE: Paris Olympics champion David Popovici claimed a thrilling 200m freestyle gold at the swimming world championships on Tuesday – then revealed he had very nearly pulled out. The popular 20-year-old Romanian timed it perfectly to reel in US rival Luke Hobson in the closing stages and take the title in 1min 43.53sec. Hobson was forced to settle for silver (1:43.84) with Japan's 18-year-old Tatsuya Murasa taking bronze (1:44.54). "Even better than the Olympics to be honest," said Popovici, who reclaimed his world crown from 2022. "You know why?" he added. "I trained a lot for the Olympics but this year has been more relaxed and easygoing." He added: "I am very proud of myself." The final in Singapore was billed as a duel between Popovici – the Olympic champion – and Paris bronze medallist Hobson. And so it turned out, with Popovici putting on the afterburners in the dying stages of the race. Popovici said afterwards that fear of realising his full potential had made him seriously think twice about racing. "Frankly, just one or two days before the competition I wanted to pull out," he said. "I just wasn't feeling well. It wasn't fear of competing or fear of losing, it was the fear of – how do I put it – I scratched my own potential, the huge potential I realised I have this year, I scratched it, I saw it, I tasted it, and then the fear of reaching your own potential. "That's very scary. And so I'm really glad I didn't quit." Asked how close he had come to not competing, Popovici said: "I started looking for flights back. "It was a mental thing and it had to do with the fear of seeing my real potential." Britain's Matthew Richards, who took silver in the French capital a year ago, was a surprise casualty in the semi-finals. South Korea's Hwang Sun-woo, who went to the first turn in front, finished just outside the medals in fourth.