It needed âbodies on the lineâ and some old-fashioned stubborn defending to see it out late on, but they got there â just. Right now, they will not care too much about how. England are going to the 2025 Womenâs ÂEuropean Championship in Switzerland to defend their title, after securing automatic qualification with a nervy goalless draw in Sweden, and they have shown they are not going to give up their crown lightly.
The holders had left themselves an alpine mountain to climb when they lost at home against France in May and slipped down to third in the âgroup of deathâ. But since then they have defied this Âtoughest of qualifying draws to secure a place among the 16 sides that will Âcontest the finals next summer, Âwithout the need to participate in the lengthy playoff Âprocess between October and ÂDecember. That unenviable fate now awaits the Olympic silver medallists Sweden.
Knowing full well the importance of avoiding the playoffs the England head coach, Sarina Wiegman, said she was ârelieved and happyâ to get through a âvery, very toughâ group that had made been made up entirely of sides who reached the World Cup last summer and included three of the worldâs top-six ranked sides.
The Chelsea defender Millie Bright described the feeling of qualifying as âamazingâ and said: âThe qualifiers have been extremely tough, weâve been challenged in more ways than one, but ultimately weâve got over the line. We knew it would be âbodies on the lineâ to defend a clean sheet. It shows what weâre prepared to do to get the job done.â
Before kick-off, the job for each side had been simple: to qualify automatically Sweden needed a victory, while ÂEngland needed to avoid defeat. Nonetheless, Wiegman had vowed that her team would try to win this game and hopefully even top the group ahead of France. By the latter stages of the second half, however, her side were hanging on at times. But they showed the character of champions to hold off Sweden. For long spells, though, they were in full control.
The Gamla Ullevi stadium, which was sold out, is just under a mile away from Gothenburgâs famous Liseberg theme park, which boasts two rollercoasters that reach speeds of 100km/h, but it is fair to say this game did not set off at a fast pace, and the first half was severely lacking in thrills.
Neither side manaÂged an effort on target in the Âopening 45 Âminutes, although ÂEngland had the better of the play and controlled Âproceedings early on. Initially, the Lionesses classily dictated most of the possession, without displaying a tremendous amount of ruthlessness. The Bayern Munich midfielder Georgia ÂStanway bounced a low strike narrowly wide, in a half where Lauren Hemp and Leah ÂWilliamson were excelling in possession, but that final ball was missing.
At the other end of the pitch Wiegmanâs team selection had issued the strongest signal yet that Chelseaâs Hannah Hampton is leading the race to be Englandâs No 1 Âgoalkeeper for Euro 2025 with the 23âyearâold chosen to start for a third consecutive game and, more significantly, ahead of Mary Earps for the second game in succession when both of them have been available to play.
Wiegman said on Monday that this fixture was a âlittle bit too earlyâ to be perceived as a decisive Âchanging of the guard, after nearly three years with Earps being the standout No 1. Undoubtedly, though, to favour Hampton for such a vital fixture was a clear indicator of the trust Wiegman now has in her. The former Aston Villa keeper had very little to do until five minutes after halfâtime when she parried a strike from Real Madridâs Filippa Angeldal from the centre of the box. It was ÂSwedenâs first shot on Âtarget but then ÂHamptonâs Âpenalty area was almost constantly busy. She appeared uncertain Âaerially at two shaky corner kicks but later Âproduced an excellent one-handed save to keep out Angeldalâs Âswerving longârange effort.
As the full-time whistle sounded, Englandâs celebrations resembled more of a âjob doneâ vibe than wild jubilation. But they are off to Switzerland, and on Tuesday night that was all that mattered. Manchester Unitedâs Ella Toone told reporters: âThatâs what we set out to do. This group was really difficult. To get out of a group like that, weâre really proud.
âTowards the end it was quite difficult. Sweden came out fighting but we did well to weather that storm. To not concede and get the draw that we needed, weâre happy with it.â