England ‘really tough to watch’ as Kirby says Wiegman must find answers

Getty Images
  • 316 Comments

England manager Sarina Wiegman’s analysis of the defeat by France is “one of the most important ones in her career”, says former Lionesses midfielder Fran Kirby.

Wiegman’s side were beaten 2-1 in their Euro 2025 opener as they became the first defending champions to lose their first match of the next tournament at a women’s Euros.

Kirby retired from international football a month ago, after Wiegman told the 31-year-old Brighton midfielder she was not going to make the squad.

“It was very different to the Lionesses team I am used to playing in and watching,” Kirby told BBC Radio 5 Live about Saturday’s loss.

“There were too many errors, too many sloppy passes. Defensively we looked shaky and disjointed. It was really tough to watch.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Wiegman’s former side, the Netherlands, beat Wales 3-0 in their opener and Kirby is acutely aware England have to make a vast improvement to progress from Group D.

“This is one of the most important analysis days that the Lionesses have had because we have to find out what has gone wrong, why it went wrong and make it better for the next game. The next game is must-win.

“You can always say basics weren’t good enough, you can sit there and say these things, but we have to work on other things that are going to help us beat the Netherlands. “

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

‘I like the honesty’ – Kirby on Williamson

Captain Leah Williamson described England’s errors in the France defeat as “some cheap sort of emotional defending”.

Kirby said she liked Williamson’s honesty and does not expect the review to be “fiery – but it has to be productive”.

“Those quotes came out after the game. It was emotional losing the first game of the tournament and the players are coming off and they are emotional. I like the honesty,” Kirby said.

“That is something that hasn’t happened in the women’s game for a long period so I don’t mind that. “

Keira Walsh’s consolation goal in the 87th minute was England’s first shot on target in a match that was comfortable for Les Bleues until the closing stages.

“There will be honest conversations in the meeting [on Sunday] to make sure it doesn’t happen in the next game,” added Kirby.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

‘England at best under pressure’ – Morgan

Despite beginning the tournament with defeat, there is no shortage of confidence in the England ranks.

“We look forward to the challenge of winning those two games,” defender Esme Morgan told BBC Sport as she looked ahead to the rest of the group stage.

“I think when you have a situation where you can do nothing but win it brings the best out of people.

“You have to fight your absolute hardest knowing that if you don’t you could be on the plane home, so I think this situation is going to bring out the very best in us and we’ll rise to the challenge.

“We always tend to come out when things are against us. I feel like we produce our best. We’d always kind of been built that way as a nation. “

The Team Selector cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable JavaScript or try another browser.

Pick your England starting XI to face the Netherlands

Who makes your starting XI for England against the Netherlands at Euro 2025?

Related topics

  • England Women’s Football Team
  • UEFA Women’s EURO
  • Football
  • Women’s Football

Kartal misses out on first major quarter-final

Getty Images

Britain’s Sonay Kartal missed the chance to reach a first Grand Slam quarter-final with defeat by Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in a match that saw controversy over a faulty line call.

It was a gallant effort from the 23-year-old, who ultimately succumbed 7-6 (7-3) 6-4 to the experience and know-how of former French Open finalist Pavlyuchenkova.

Play was halted by the umpire in the ninth game of the first set when Kartal’s backhand dropped long but the electronic line-calling system failed to call it out and the point had to be replayed.

Ranked 51 in the world, Kartal was already enjoying her best run at a Grand Slam having never gone beyond the third round.

She was aiming to become the first British woman to reach the quarter-finals at SW19 since Johanna Konta in 2019.

This time last year she was ranked outside the world’s top 250 players but her efforts at the All England Club this week will see her attain a new career-high ranking after the tournament.

The rising star of British tennis will take comfort in her achievements – victory over a top-20 player in the first round, resilience to come from behind when needed and a memorable Centre Court debut in front of a partisan crowd at her home Grand Slam.

In a contest reflective of the one place that separates the two in the rankings, there were six breaks of serve in a chaotic first set.

Pavlyuchenkova’s heavy-hitting style brought more winners but also more unforced errors as Kartal took advantage of her speed to chase the ball down, clearly unhampered despite the heavy strapping to her knee.

The Russian knew Kartal backs herself when it comes to movement but tried to wear her down.

Having worked herself a break-back point at 3-2, Pavlyuchenkova pinged shots to one side of the baseline then the other, sending Kartal scurrying back and forth before cleverly deploying the drop shot – at which point Kartal stood with her hands on her hips in disbelief she hadn’t won the point.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

The tension was ramped up further when on Pavlyuchenkova’s game point on serve at 4-4, Kartal’s backhand dropped long but the electronic line-calling system failed to call it.

Kartal then went on to break in a game that Pavlyuchenkova should have won and the Russian fumed at the change of ends but regrouped to put the controversy behind her and take the opening set after a tie-break.

After a drama-filled one hour and 18 minutes, set two was a much lower-key affair.

Pavlyuchenkova, perhaps fuelled by her frustration at the technology failure, turned up the pressure to break in the fifth game and that proved to be decisive as she served out victory to book her place in the last eight with a ripping forehand.

Related topics

  • Tennis

Kartal misses out on first major quarter-final

Getty Images

Britain’s Sonay Kartal missed the chance to reach a first Grand Slam quarter-final with defeat by Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in a match that saw controversy over a faulty line call.

It was a gallant effort from the 23-year-old, who ultimately succumbed 7-6 (7-3) 6-4 to the experience and know-how of former French Open finalist Pavlyuchenkova.

Play was halted by the umpire in the ninth game of the first set when Kartal’s backhand dropped long but the electronic line-calling system failed to call it out and the point had to be replayed.

Ranked 51 in the world, Kartal was already enjoying her best run at a Grand Slam having never gone beyond the third round.

She was aiming to become the first British woman to reach the quarter-finals at SW19 since Johanna Konta in 2019.

This time last year she was ranked outside the world’s top 250 players but her efforts at the All England Club this week will see her attain a new career-high ranking after the tournament.

The rising star of British tennis will take comfort in her achievements – victory over a top-20 player in the first round, resilience to come from behind when needed and a memorable Centre Court debut in front of a partisan crowd at her home Grand Slam.

In a contest reflective of the one place that separates the two in the rankings, there were six breaks of serve in a chaotic first set.

Pavlyuchenkova’s heavy-hitting style brought more winners but also more unforced errors as Kartal took advantage of her speed to chase the ball down, clearly unhampered despite the heavy strapping to her knee.

The Russian knew Kartal backs herself when it comes to movement but tried to wear her down.

Having worked herself a break-back point at 3-2, Pavlyuchenkova pinged shots to one side of the baseline then the other, sending Kartal scurrying back and forth before cleverly deploying the drop shot – at which point Kartal stood with her hands on her hips in disbelief she hadn’t won the point.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

The tension was ramped up further when on Pavlyuchenkova’s game point on serve at 4-4, Kartal’s backhand dropped long but the electronic line-calling system failed to call it.

Kartal then went on to break in a game that Pavlyuchenkova should have won and the Russian fumed at the change of ends but regrouped to put the controversy behind her and take the opening set after a tie-break.

After a drama-filled one hour and 18 minutes, set two was a much lower-key affair.

Pavlyuchenkova, perhaps fuelled by her frustration at the technology failure, turned up the pressure to break in the fifth game and that proved to be decisive as she served out victory to book her place in the last eight with a ripping forehand.

Related topics

  • Tennis

Kartal misses out on first major quarter-final

Getty Images

Britain’s Sonay Kartal missed the chance to reach a first Grand Slam quarter-final with defeat by Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in a match that saw controversy over a faulty line call.

It was a gallant effort from the 23-year-old, who ultimately succumbed 7-6 (7-3) 6-4 to the experience and know-how of former French Open finalist Pavlyuchenkova.

Play was halted by the umpire in the ninth game of the first set when Kartal’s backhand dropped long but the electronic line-calling system failed to call it out and the point had to be replayed.

Ranked 51 in the world, Kartal was already enjoying her best run at a Grand Slam having never gone beyond the third round.

She was aiming to become the first British woman to reach the quarter-finals at SW19 since Johanna Konta in 2019.

This time last year she was ranked outside the world’s top 250 players but her efforts at the All England Club this week will see her attain a new career-high ranking after the tournament.

The rising star of British tennis will take comfort in her achievements – victory over a top-20 player in the first round, resilience to come from behind when needed and a memorable Centre Court debut in front of a partisan crowd at her home Grand Slam.

In a contest reflective of the one place that separates the two in the rankings, there were six breaks of serve in a chaotic first set.

Pavlyuchenkova’s heavy-hitting style brought more winners but also more unforced errors as Kartal took advantage of her speed to chase the ball down, clearly unhampered despite the heavy strapping to her knee.

The Russian knew Kartal backs herself when it comes to movement but tried to wear her down.

Having worked herself a break-back point at 3-2, Pavlyuchenkova pinged shots to one side of the baseline then the other, sending Kartal scurrying back and forth before cleverly deploying the drop shot – at which point Kartal stood with her hands on her hips in disbelief she hadn’t won the point.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

The tension was ramped up further when on Pavlyuchenkova’s game point on serve at 4-4, Kartal’s backhand dropped long but the electronic line-calling system failed to call it.

Kartal then went on to break in a game that Pavlyuchenkova should have won and the Russian fumed at the change of ends but regrouped to put the controversy behind her and take the opening set after a tie-break.

After a drama-filled one hour and 18 minutes, set two was a much lower-key affair.

Pavlyuchenkova, perhaps fuelled by her frustration at the technology failure, turned up the pressure to break in the fifth game and that proved to be decisive as she served out victory to book her place in the last eight with a ripping forehand.

Related topics

  • Tennis