Scottish Daily Mail

Kelly creates a bit of history as England triumph

LIONESSES OVERCOME GERMANY AT WEMBLEY

- MARTIN SAMUEL at Wembley Stadium

It was the night when it, finally, all came together for England. twirling her white jersey around her head in an echo of one of football’s most famous celebratio­ns, match-winner Chloe Kelly no doubt epitomised the depth of feeling of her nation.

England are the champions of Europe. they triumphed over their greatest rivals, their nemesis, Germany, in extra-time at wembley. Kelly’s scrappy 110th-minute goal was the decider of a fine match that took a hammer to the notion that this is somehow a meeker, milder, tamer, less captivatin­g version of the sport.

this was a ferocious encounter, that only tired towards the end because two hours on this huge pitch saps the energy from even the best conditione­d athletes, male or female. and England went the distance.

they found the energy for one last push. Historical­ly, England fear the worst once any encounter with Germany creeps beyond 90 minutes. Extra-time is bad enough. But then, gulp, penalties.

Not this time. and then, mischievou­sly, Kelly gave English football its Brandi Chastain moment. she whirled her shirt around her head in a moment of abandon, as she raced away pursued by ecstatic team-mates. what a moment it was, what a noise, what promise for the future.

It was Chastain of the United states who in 1999 celebrated scoring the world Cup winning penalty against China by ripping off her shirt to reveal the most famous sports bra in history. It became an iconic image of female empowermen­t. a yes-we-can, seen around the planet. and this was England’s belated riposte.

In many ways, the celebratio­n almost overwhelme­d the goal itself, becoming the image that will dominate this morning’s front pages and news bulletins. as for the goal, that was not even as special as Ella toone’s first. well, not as spectacula­r certainly.

Lauren Hemp swung in a corner, won by Lucy Bronze, and the ball fell to Kelly. Her first swing missed, but Germany goalkeeper Merle Frohms did not collect, so Kelly tried again. this time she made contact, muscling in front of the German defence.

It was this persistenc­e that summed up England on the night. they were not daunted by Germany’s equaliser, scored with 11 minutes to go. they did not surrender to the familiar doomy narrative, the decades of hurt, this notion that, at the end, Germany always win. they changed their own record of disappoint­ment at the last. what was it sir alf Ramsey told his players entering extratime in 1966? You’ve won it once, now win it again. and they did. and this England did, too.

and so, as the ball hit the net, away Kelly went, shirt swirling in the night air, pure emotion on legs. they had delivered, as promised.

and at the end there was dancing and tears, as there should be. It’s been a long road here. Not just for this group and coach sarina wiegman, but also for women’s football in a man’s world.

Last night, though, felt worth it. all worth it. and as she whirled away into the night, Kelly seemed to sense that, too.

were England the better side? Not entirely. Not always. when wiegman brought on her supersub pairing of toone and alessia Russo early in the second half, it was a response to Germany’s growing domination. Lina Magull had got the better of Keira walsh in the 49th minute before shooting wide and should have scored. wiegman had seen enough.

On came what Eddie Jones would call her finishers and six minutes later toone changed the game. so wiegman’s instincts were again justified. Germany had taken the second-half initiative and it needed to be wrested from them. toone did that. and she did a little more. she scored one of the most memorable and special goals in England’s history at wembley.

It was the 56th minute when

Toone crossed the white line to enter play and the 62nd when she scored the goal that looked to have delivered victory.

In 1966, it was a red-shirted England man, haring clear of the German defence before providing a definitive, iconic finish. This time, it was a white-shirted England woman, but the product was the same.

What a finish. What a goal it was. Walsh’s ball over the top was whip smart and accurate, but Toone exploited a gap between Germany’s deepest defensive pair, won the foot race, and as Frohms advanced lofted the ball over her with exquisite precision.

Growing up near Wigan, Toone would pretend to be Cristiano Ronaldo when playing in her back garden. He would have been proud of this finish, too. Any forward would. It deserved to win this game. It deserved to win almost any game. But sport doesn’t always conform to our desires; so it didn’t.

Germany wouldn’t give up. That’s what is great about them. That’s why they have eight of these titles, plus two World Cups. That’s why they have won every game they have ever played on English soil — 14 of them — until last night.

Magull had already hit the near post with goalkeeper Mary Earps getting the merest of touches, but in the 79th minute she went one better. Sydney Lohmann pushed the ball to Tabia Wassmuth on the right flank. She struck a low cross and Magull — Germany’s biggest danger throughout — flicked it past Earps at the near post. Into extra-time we went. It’s Germany: what did anyone expect?

Not this, maybe. Not an England team that, while not always the best here technicall­y, were often the best at executing a gameplan effectivel­y, at pressurisi­ng opponents, that had the heart and, yes, the soul that is required to triumph when it matters.

There were plenty of moments when a lesser team might have crumbled. Ellen White missed two very good chances in the first half.

Referee Kateryna Monzul, from Ukraine, awarded some soft early bookings that could have taken a toll had players not kept their heads. And, yes, they rode their luck, too, not least when Germany lost their best player and captain minutes before kick-off.

Alexandra Popp was contending tournament top scorer with Beth Mead — no mean feat given how free-scoring England have been — but muscular problems saw her withdrawn from the starting XI at the end of the warm-up, and replaced by Lea Schuller.

If it was a blow to Germany, it wasn’t as much help as England might have hoped, either. A coach as thorough as Wiegman would no doubt have made special plans for Popp and this gave her scant time to change them. At the back, England did not capitalise creatively as much as they might have hoped.

Nor did White. As early as the third minute. Fran Kirby found her with an arrowed pass which she headed straight at goalkeeper Frohms. Then, six minutes before half-time, White found Mead, who sped down the flank and cut back her pass inside. In a strong position, White shot over.

Yet these are mere footnotes now. By the end, only friends and family remained to serenade England’s players but the celebratio­ns echoed outside. Here it was. England’s game-changer. From here, it can go anywhere, do anything. From here, who knows?

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? History is made: Kelly stabs home to put England in dreamland
GETTY IMAGES History is made: Kelly stabs home to put England in dreamland
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 ?? ?? England’s win over Germany was watched by 87,192 fans at Wembley: the highest attendance for any European Championsh­ip final — men’s or women’s — in history
England’s win over Germany was watched by 87,192 fans at Wembley: the highest attendance for any European Championsh­ip final — men’s or women’s — in history
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Bedlam: Kelly wheels away with her shirt off
GETTY IMAGES Bedlam: Kelly wheels away with her shirt off

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