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Hannah Hampton regrets revealing water bottle trick after hate comments on grandfather tribute
Hannah Hampton regrets revealing water bottle trick after hate comments on grandfather tribute

The Independent

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

Hannah Hampton regrets revealing water bottle trick after hate comments on grandfather tribute

Hannah Hampton has said she regrets revealing the water bottle trick she used during the penalty shootout that decided the Euro 2025 final after online hate comments targeted a tribute she had written to her recently-deceased grandfather. England dramatically beat world champions Spain 3-1 on penalties to retain their European Championship title with goalkeeper Hampton the hero as she saved spot-kicks from Mariona Caldentey and Aitana Bonmati, while Salma Paralluelo missed. In the days after the final, Hampton – who had usurped Mary Earps as England's No 1 in the build-up to the tournament, leading the 2023 BBC Sports Personality of the Year to retire from Lionesses duty rather than be a back-up – revealed she had spotted Spain goalkeeper Cata Coll's cheat sheet for England's penalty preferences on her water bottle during the shootout and tossed it into the crowd. Coll was visibly confused to find a replacement bottle – which Hampton had put there after discarding the original – without her notes, and searched in vain for initial one. However, the Spain No 1 has since disputed Hampton's claim about her notes being tossed into the crowd, quote-tweeting a clip of the talkSPORT interview and writing: 'Okay, okay, calm down, calm down. At least if it were true...' Hampton appeared on ITV show Lorraine on Wednesday (13 August) morning to discuss the incident and admitted to guest host Ranvir Singh that she regrets telling the world about her trick due to the online hate she has received, most notably on a social media post she wrote in tribute to her grandfather, who passed away two days before Euro 2025 and who she described as her 'biggest supporter'. 'I wish I didn't say it in the first instance because it's brought so much hate,' said Hampton. 'The outside people bringing in hate because it disproves people. It's just hard. 'If I could take it back, I wish I didn't say anything. It's positive and negative. It's great there's so much engagement with the women's game now and people are interested in what you say but you open yourself up to hate. 'It's difficult because people just jump on it and make comments that are unnecessary. Bringing hate comments. There's a lot of hate. My thing is, I wish I didn't say it because on the post I put about my grandad, people are saying that's why he's gone [because she threw Coll's water bottle in the crowd]. There's five bottles on the floor, I know I've picked one up, she's saying it's not hers. In that moment, I've genuinely thought it is hers. 'It's hard. Being in the public eye, you learn the hard way. We're human. I've made mistakes many times. You learn from it and you move on. I've got nothing but respect for Cata, it wasn't done in a disrespectful way.' Although Coll has since denied the claims, insisting it wasn't her water bottle that Hampton threw into the crowd, the England goalkeeper had explained her thought process during the talkSPORT interview with Sam Matterface. Hampton said: 'The Spanish keeper had it (the penalty information) on her bottle, so I thought when she was going in goal, I'd just pick it up and chuck it into the English fans so she can't have it. I don't ever put it on a bottle because anyone can do that so I put it on my arm. 'It wasn't hard. When she's gone in the goal, it's on its own isn't it? It's in the towel.' 'She was walking back to take the penalty and I was walking the other way and she was so confused, and I was just trying not to burst out laughing, being like, 'I don't know what's happening'.' Hampton subsequently became one of five Lionesses to be nominated for the Women's Ballon d'Or, alongside Lucy Bronze, Chloe Kelly, Alessia Russo and Leah Williamson.

England's remarkable Euro 2025 success a triumph for 'incredible' Wiegman
England's remarkable Euro 2025 success a triumph for 'incredible' Wiegman

France 24

time28-07-2025

  • Sport
  • France 24

England's remarkable Euro 2025 success a triumph for 'incredible' Wiegman

The Dutch coach has now firmly established herself as one of the greatest in the women's game. The Lionesses came from behind against Spain to draw 1-1 after extra time before winning Sunday's final 3-1 on penalties in Basel, exacting revenge for their defeat in the World Cup decider in 2023. England cannot claim to have been the most accomplished tournament winners, having started by losing 2-1 to France. That was followed by a quarter-final against Sweden in which they were 2-0 down with 12 minutes to go before roaring back to equalise and eventually win on penalties. Then came the semi-final against Italy, when Wiegman's team required a 96th-minute Michelle Agyemang equaliser to force extra time and Chloe Kelly scored the winner as a shoot-out loomed. England won the trophy despite being ahead for a grand total of one minute across three knockout ties, and Wiegman admitted: "This is the most chaotic and ridiculous tournament we have played. "Of course we have players who have talent, and the togetherness of this team is really, really incredible," she added. "The players think they can win by any means, and we just never, ever give up." Regardless of how they did it, Wiegman's Lionesses are the first England senior team, men's or women's, to lift a major trophy on foreign soil. Three in a row They were hit in the run-up to the tournament by the retirements of goalkeeper Mary Earps and Fran Kirby, along with Chelsea captain Millie Bright's decision to make herself unavailable. But England's success was achieved in large part thanks to their strength in depth, with the quality available to Wiegman on the bench helping them change the course of numerous games. If England do not have the same clearly defined way of playing as Aitana Bonmati's Spain, they do have a brilliant manager. The Lionesses had never won any major tournament before Wiegman arrived in 2021, and now they have won back-to-back Euros while also reaching a first Women's World Cup final. They have rarely done it easily, with just three wins out of nine in major tournament knockout matches under the Dutchwoman coming inside 90 minutes. But her influence is obvious, given the way England's players speak about her, and Wiegman's record is remarkable. She has been to five consecutive finals between European Championships and World Cups, and has won three straight Euros having led her native Netherlands to victory in 2017 before taking charge of England. "She is bloody amazing. She is an incredible woman," said Kelly, who scored the winning penalty against Spain. "We should all be so grateful for what she has done for this country. She has taken the women's game, not just in England but the whole women's game, to another level." Record attendance Thoughts will soon turn to what the future might hold for the winners and England will switch their attentions to the 2027 World Cup in Brazil, with qualifying starting early next year. English FA chief Mark Bullingham said last week that they were determined to retain Wiegman, whose contract runs through to the World Cup. Assuming they qualify, England will hope to be among the leading contenders along with Spain and Olympic champions the United States, coached by England's Emma Hayes. On the whole, the tournament in Switzerland confirmed the growing popularity of women's football, with the total attendance of 657,291 the highest ever at a European Championship -- even more than in England in 2022, despite over 87,000 attending that year's final at Wembley. It also confirmed England and Spain as the leading forces, off the back of Arsenal defeating Barcelona in the Women's Champions League final. But there was plenty of drama throughout the competition, and impressive performances elsewhere, notably from Italy in reaching their first semi-final since 1997. Wiegman is optimistic the competition will have a lasting impact in helping the women's game grow across the continent. "How I have experienced this tournament is that the level went up again, the intensity of the games went through the roof," said the 55-year-old. © 2025 AFP

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