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Euro 2025: Sophie Ingle makes Wales squad after injury-hit season to lift hopes

Euro 2025: Sophie Ingle makes Wales squad after injury-hit season to lift hopes

Yahoo7 hours ago

Sophie Ingle missed the whole of the last domestic season after rupturing cruciate ligaments in a pre-season game.
Sophie Ingle missed the whole of the last domestic season after rupturing cruciate ligaments in a pre-season game. Photograph: Jayde Chamberlain/SPP/Shutterstock
Sophie Ingle has been included in the 23-member Wales squad for Euro 2025 in Switzerland after winning a race against time and recovering from the anterior cruciate ligament rupture sustained last September.
That knee injury sidelined the much-decorated 33-year-old midfielder, who will leave Chelsea this summer, for the entire domestic season but her return to fitness represents a significant boost to Welsh hopes of exceeding expectations in their first major tournament.
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Related: Lots of England players helping own families with Euro 2025 travel costs
Rhian Wilkinson's squad – 30th in Fifa's rankings – have been placed in a tough initial group alongside the Netherlands, France and England but their capacity to cause an upset is boosted by the presence of their record scorer and cap-holder, Jess Fishlock, alongside Ingle in midfield.
Although now 38, Fishlock is still going strong in the United States at Seattle Reign and, as the undoubted star of the team, cannot be underestimated by even the best opponents. She and Ingle will be joined by her Reign teammate Angharad James, the Wales captain, in a formidable-looking midfield. The trio hold 432 international caps.
It also helps that Wilkinson, who is half-Welsh, is no tactical slouch. The 43-year-old former 183-cap Canada defender managed Portland Thorns to the NWSL title in the US in 2022 and served as a highly regarded assistant coach with Canada's and England's women.
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Since her arrival in February 2024 Wales have only once lost by more than a goal but scoring freely can remain a problem. The hope is that this can be remedied by the return to full fitness of the prolific Crystal Palace striker Elise Hughes after her second ACL rupture.
Olivia Clark (Leicester), Safia (correct) Middleton-Patel (Manchester United), Poppy Soper (unattached), Charlie Estcourt (DC Power), Gemma Evans (Liverpool), Josie Green (Crystal Palace), Hayley Ladd (Everton), Esther Morgan (Sheffield United), Ella Powell (Bristol City), Rhiannon Roberts (unattached), Lily Woodham (Seattle Reign), Jess Fishlock (Seattle Reign), Alice Griffiths (Unattached), Ceri Holland (Liverpool), Sophie Ingle (unattached), Angharad James (Seattle Reign), Lois Joel (Newcastle), Rachel Rowe (Southampton), Kayleigh Barton (unattached), Hannah Cain (Leicester), Elise Hughes (Crystal Palace), Carrie Jones (IFK Norkoping), Ffion Morgan (Bristol City).
Wilkinson, flanked by the Leicester goalkeeper Olivia Clark and the unattached former Real Betis defender Rhiannon Roberts, climbed to the top of Yr Wyddfa, previously known as Snowdon, on Thursday morning before naming her Switzerland-bound party from the mountain's summit. Squad announcements can rarely have been so innovative, or camera-friendly.
On Sunday the players will fly to Portugal for a week's training on the Algarve before arriving at their base in Lipperswil in north-east Switzerland, between Zurich and St Gallen and close to Lake Constance.
With more than 2,000 Wales fans attending the team's matches in Lucerne (against the Netherlands) and St Gallen (against France and England), the tournament's lowest-ranked side are poised to be among the best-supported teams in Switzerland.

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Wales are the tournament's lowest-ranked squad (30), with a group consisting of the Netherlands (11th in rankings), France (10th) and England (fifth). Advertisement They are one of two major tournament debutants, alongside Poland. There is a nine per cent chance of Wales making it out of the group, according to Opta. But at 8:45am the boldness of the setting is dizzying; the sensation of feeling puny, in the ascent and, eventually, from the top, inescapable. 'I love heights,' says Wilkinson, who led Portland Thorns to the 2022 NWSL Championship in her first year in charge at the club. 'In Vancouver, I live on a mountain. I like the exertion of climbing, the fatigue. I beat everyone up here. They didn't even know they were racing me.' There's a temerity in forcing assembled media to the top of a mountain before 9am for a squad announcement, a boldness in preparing to defy the fickleness of Welsh weather in the summer and internet signal at 1,000ft above sea level, that is not readily synonymous with Wales. But the boldness is welcomed. The FAW is the third-oldest football association in the world. Yet a national women's football team was not formed until 1973, three years after the near 50-year ban of women's football in the nation was lifted. The FAW refused to formerly recognise the women's national team until 1993, a 20-year window in which the team suffered countless 'deaths' according to players from the time, the result of volunteer energy and benevolence running dry. Ten years after recognition was granted, funding for the senior women's team was cut for three years amid the men's team's Euro 2004 qualification campaign. But always by some divinity (or, let's call it by its real name, the stubbornness of women), the team resuscitated. 'It's the mentality of the why not,' Wilkinson says. 'People outside of Wales can think whatever you want, they can look at rankings. Our goal is to be really present and deliver to the best of our ability. 'People will be looking up Wales on a map soon.' dreamy — Megan Feringa (@megan_feringa) June 19, 2025 Wilkinson's squad is as strong as it can be. Sophie Ingle's inclusion is a boon, the former Chelsea midfielder having returned to fitness after tearing her anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in a pre-season friendly against Feyenoord last September. The remaining faces are familiar: Seattle Reign and Wales centurion Jess Fishlock, fellow Reign team-mate Angharad James-Turner, Leicester City forward Hannah Cain, Everton defender Hayley Ladd. And for any potential claims of big-headedness that might come with making assembled media scale a mountain (most actually took the train, though The Athletic did not) before 9am, there's a still a palpable humility. As Wilkinson waits at the top for the entourage to arrive, three members of the Swiss embassy to the UK stand near her. When they clock her Wales-branded trousers, one asks: 'You're the head coach?' Advertisement She nods. She obliges with a photograph, answers questions of her nerve. While walking to the top (accomplished in 'just under an hour and a half' she says with no air of bravado), she listened to The New York Times' Daily podcast, happy to have time to herself. 'I actually debated whether I listen to anything, and I decided I'm going to listen to something because I feel ready.' Goalkeepers: Olivia Clark (Leicester City), Safia Middleton-Patel (Manchester United), Poppy Soper (Unattached) Defenders: Charlie Estcourt (DC Power), Gemma Evans (Liverpool), Josie Green (Crystal Palace), Hayley Ladd (Everton), Esther Morgan (Sheffield United), Ella Powell (Bristol City), Rhiannon Roberts (Unattached), Lily Woodham (Seattle Reign) Midfielders: Jess Fishlock (Seattle Reign), Alice Griffiths (Unattached), Ceri Holland (Liverpool), Sophie Ingle (Unattached), Angharad James (Seattle Reign), Lois Joel (Newcastle United) Forwards: Rachel Rowe (Southampton), Kayleigh Barton (Unattached), Hannah Cain (Leicester City), Elise Hughes (Crystal Palace), Carrie Jones (IFK Norrköping), Ffion Morgan (Bristol City).

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