ENGLAND ARE through to their first major final since 2009 after the Euro 2022 hosts powered past Sweden with a 4-0 victory at Bramall Lane.
Following a shaky start for the Lionesses in which Sweden’s Stina Blackstenius hit the bar, Beth Mead, already leading the race for the Golden Boot, put Sarina Wiegman’s side ahead with a 34th-minute strike that took her to six goals for the tournament.
Mead then turned provider early in the opening moments of the second half, delivering a corner that was headed in by Lucy Bronze, before substitute Alessia Russo notched her fourth goal of these finals with a delightful back-heeled effort in the 68th minute.
Fran Kirby added the fourth with a chip eight minutes later and it could have been even more for England, with Lauren Hemp having rattled the woodwork at 2-0, as they comprehensively avoided more semi-final disappointment after exiting at this stage at their last three major tournaments.
They can now look forward to a showdown on Sunday with either Germany or France at a sold-out Wembley, where victory will secure them the first major trophy in their history.
It will be a third appearance in the competition’s final after the runners-up finishes of 13 years ago – when they suffered a 6-2 loss to Germany – and at the inaugural Euros in 1984, which saw them beaten on penalties by Sweden.
Triumphing on Sunday would also mean back-to-back Euros successes for boss Wiegman, who, after overseeing her native Netherlands winning the 2017 edition on home soil and then reaching the 2019 Word Cup final, has had an England tenure that remains unbeaten after 19 matches, with 17 wins, 104 goals scored and only four conceded.
HOW did she miss the first chance?
— RTÉ Soccer (@RTEsoccer) July 26, 2022
HOW did she score the second chance?
Alessia Russo all but seals a place in the final for England with an inventive third goal#WEURO2022 #rtesoccer
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The sense the team are on the brink of something special was certainly tangible among England fans in the 28,624 crowd at the stadium, with chants of “football’s coming home” reverberating around the ground at various points.
Wiegman again kept faith in the XI that had started each of England’s four previous matches at the tournament, while world number two-ranked Olympic silver-medallists Sweden, who triumphed 2-1 in the third-place play-off between the teams at the 2019 World Cup, had a line-up showing two changes as Peter Gerhardsson brought in forward Sofia Jakobsson and defender Hanna Glas.
The Swedes threatened in the opening seconds as Jakobsson was played in and saw her strike saved by Mary Earps’ boot, before Mead glanced a fourth-minute header wide at the other end from Kirby’s cross.
There were further scares for England soon after, Blackstenius bringing another save out of Earps, then heading against the bar from the resulting corner, and Fridolina Rolfo shooting into the hosts’ side-netting.
As Wiegman’s side then started to build some momentum, Ellen White and Georgia Stanway saw efforts gathered by Hedvig Lindahl, while Bronze headed a corner wide.
They then grabbed the lead just after the half-hour mark when Hemp’s cross evaded White, Bronze delivered the ball back into the danger zone and Mead turned and fired past Lindahl to add yet another goal to her haul and bring a huge roar from the crowd.
Stanway and Kirby each sent ambitious shots off-target before the break as England sought to boost their advantage.
The second goal did then arrive three minutes after the interval as Bronze headed home from Mead’s corner, the effort being confirmed after a VAR check for offside.
Sweden attempted to hit back, with Blackstenius heading wide, Hemp almost made it 3-0, seeing her shot come back off the bar, and Earps did well to tip over a Blackstenius effort as Gerhardsson’s team pushed again.
England’s job then appeared all but done when Russo once again made a mark after replacing White, beating Lindahl with a fantastic back-heel through the goalkeeper’s legs after she had parried her initial shot.
And it did not take long for the advantage to be extended further – and more singing to break out in the stands – as Kirby collected the ball from Mead and crafted a chipped attempt that Lindahl got gloves to but could not prevent going into the net.
Russo put an effort wide late on before the final whistle saw the noise level up once again as England were confirmed as Wembley-bound.
Great game four brilliant goals especially the back heel one . Most likely England V Germany in the finals England to win . They put the mens team to shame
@Robert Preston: I told you Germany would win and be in the finals
Definitely a very good chance it’s coming home this time.
Here’s hoping England lose the final.
@Rafa Condron: you sad person,
@JWT 999: I noticed you never commented on L.o.I. e.g Shamrock rovers, if you know whi they are!!
@JWT 999: Congratulations.
@JWT 999: Anyone who follows football knows, regardless of gentalia, why nobody wants England to win an international trophy, of any kind. It’s unbearable every tournament from their media. Anyway – glad you read 1 comment from me and labeled me a ‘sad person,’…with a rogue comma nonetheless; have a nice day.
@Rafa Condron: My guess is it’s a sports article and most people on here enjoy chatting about the games and teams themselves rather than petty predictable comments.
@Johnny Mads: God forbid someone has an opinion on who they would like to see not win a tournament without being viciously attacked with libelous comments about their state of happiness.
@Rafa Condron: Never questioned your happiness Rafa. Personally prefer a bit of in depth background to why you hope the womens team lose. Rather than you hope ‘england lose’. Thats all really fella. Nothing personal.
@Rafa Condron: don’t watch English media if you hate England that much
@Rafa Condron: Everybody has an opinion but you are nasty and sad
@Johnny Mads: Background? Because I support Germany.
@Robert Preston: explain? I also hoped man city would not win the league. Are my hopes in who wins a sports tournament not valid? Or is it just sad because you’re associating my hopes with anti-womens/political reasons for hoping another nation wins the tournament. I also hoped Real Madrid didn’t win the league. And hoped Ireland’s men and women’s team made it to tournaments and did well. I hoped Germany would get to the women’s euro final. And I hoped to win the mega jackpot in the lottery. But my hopes are sad and nasty. Somebody arrest me for having an opinion.
@Rafa Condron: Ehh.. So why not say, here’s hoping Germany go on and win the final?
@Johnny Mads:Exactly hes looks on the negative instead of the positive . Must be a very un happy person
@Rafa Condron: how do you think Irish media and general population would act if Ireland made the WC or Euros final? They’d be ecstatic and rightly so. You watch English media, that’s why you see English opinions on their teams progress.
Sweden keeper was very poor
@Tony O Neill: … and that’s being polite about it.
Great win , I fancied Sweden to go all the way !!
@Stephen Lambkin Moroney: I fancied the Swedish team too…
Impressive by England tonight, but can’t help thinking that tomorrow’s winners will be too tough, for different reasons.
@Sean O’Toole: You mean Germany or France/afro team
Here we go again with the it’s coming home
@Ron: That’s been happening for 56 years, and may it happen for 56 more!
IT HASEN,T been happening for 56 years , and maybe another 56 more !!