Sarina Wiegman promises England will party into the night after winning Women's Euros on penalties - as she hails 'incredible' Chloe Kelly

10 hours ago 3

By TARA ANSON-WALSH

Published: 22:05 BST, 27 July 2025 | Updated: 22:05 BST, 27 July 2025

England stunned world champions Spain by beating them 3–1 on penalties to retain their European Championship trophy and become the first British team to secure a major trophy on foreign soil.

Chloe Kelly, who scored the famous stoppage-time winner at Euro 2022, was the hero once again as she fired England to glory from the spot after Hannah Hampton saved two penalties.

Sarina Wiegman, now a three-time European champion after previous success with the Netherlands in 2017, said: 'I'm very happy. I actually can't believe it myself. How can this happen? But it happened. I'm so incredibly proud of the team and the staff. We're just going to party tonight.'

The Lionesses had gone behind in the first half when Arsenal midfielder Mariona Caldentey headed home from close range.

But England responded resiliently – for the third time this tournament coming from behind – as Alessia Russo equalised with a superb glancing header from Kelly's cross.

With the scores locked at 1–1 after extra time, the match was decided by penalties and Hampton denied both Caldentey and Ballon d'Or winner Aitana Bonmati.

England manager Sarina Wiegman promised England would party into the night after their Women's Euros victory

Wiegman led England to a second successive Euros win as they beat Spain on penalties

She also hailed the 'incredible' Chloe Kelly, who scored the winning spot kick on Sunday

Chloe Kelly then stepped up to bury England's fifth penalty, blasting past Cata Coll and once again writing her name into footballing history.

'Every player has their own story and every story is incredible on their own,' Wiegman said of Kelly's impact. 'I'm so happy for her too. She loves these moments and she wanted to take the penalty of course. To be able to score that penalty under that pressure is impressive.'

Wiegman's decision to start Hampton over Mary Earps as England's No 1 was vindicated. The keeper expressed gratitude for her manager's trust: 'She knew what I was capable of and she really put that in me to really go and showcase what I can do. I think throughout the tournament I've kind of done that, maybe not to the levels that I wanted to but there's still a lot more to come from me.'

Lucy Bronze, who was seen in tears after being substituted in the 105th minute due to injury, later revealed she had been playing through a fractured leg.

'I've actually played the whole tournament with a fractured tibia but no one knew and then I've hurt my knee today on the other leg,' she said after the game.

'I think that's why I got a lot of praise from the girls after the Sweden game – because I've been through a lot of pain. But that's what it takes to play for England.'

The Lionesses will celebrate their victory with fans in Central London on Tuesday 29 July. An open-top bus procession will begin along The Mall at 12.10pm, concluding with a staged ceremony at the Queen Victoria Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace at approximately 12.30pm.

King Charles marked the victory with a message on social media, saying: 'You have shown through your example over past weeks that there are no setbacks so tough that defeat cannot be transformed into victory, even as the final whistle looms.

'Well done, Lionesses. The next task is to bring home the World Cup in 2027 if you possibly can!'

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