Wales crash out of Euro 2025 after suffering heavy defeat to England

Wales departed Euro 2025 after being thrashed 6-1 by England – and having conceded 13 goals in three group games.
A consolation goal from Hannah Cain was the only bright spot on a night that Wales boss Rhian Wilkinson would no doubt have feared after watching her side suffer a 3-0 loss to the Netherlands and a 4-1 loss to France.
Simply, reigning European Champions England, outclassed Wales in all areas.
Alessia Russo opened her Euro 2025 account for England as the defending champions cruised into the quarter-finals after the win in St Gallen.
Georgia Stanway opened the scoring with a 13th-minute penalty before Ella Toone, handed her second start in Switzerland, doubled the scoring in the 21st minute, and also contributed two assists.
Lauren Hemp made it three inside the opening half hour, Russo got on the scoresheet in the 44th minute and substitute Beth Mead made it five before Hannah Cain clawed one back with Wales’ second-ever goal in a major tournament.
Substitute Aggie Beever-Jones then struck her first goal of the competition for an assured England, who will face Sweden in Zurich on Thursday after finishing as runners-up to France in Group D.
England boss Sarina Wiegman named an unchanged starting line-up, while Rhian Wilkinson made three changes for Wales.
Olivia Clark was preferred in goal, Rhiannon Roberts returned to the defence and Carrie Jones – whose goal against the Republic of Ireland in December helped Wales qualify for Switzerland – was handed her first start of the tournament.
England were initially awarded just a free-kick when Stanway was tripped by Jones, but given a penalty after a lengthy VAR review concluded the foul had been committed inside the area.

Clark guessed right, but, diving to her right, could not stop the Bayern Munich midfielder from firing England one step closer to the quarters.
Jess Fishlock, who on Wednesday night became the first Welsh woman to score a goal in a major tournament, then tried for a second, firing over the crossbar from distance.
Toone made it two after Roberts’ clearance caught Stanway, falling favourably for Russo to dig out and round Clark before finding the Manchester United midfielder.
Toone’s first attempt was cleared off the line by Lily Woodham but came straight back, and she delivered at the second time of asking.
Wales captain Angharad James called Hannah Hampton into a save, but it was not long before Toone turned provider, whipping in a cross for Hemp to nod home at the back post to make it three on the half hour.
Russo, who contributed three assists against the Netherlands on Wednesday night, then made it four, Toone adding another assist after latching onto a pass from Lauren James before picking out the unmarked Arsenal striker, who took her time before planting the ball into the bottom left.
Wales had a few opportunities to claw a goal back in added time, first from Rachel Rowe, whose attempt was just high, then Fishlock, who could not take advantage after Hampton gifted her the ball.
Wiegman had already replaced Hemp with Mead and handed Jess Park – who came on for Toone – her first minutes of the tournament to start the second half.
The England boss made more changes before the hour, introducing Chloe Kelly and Beever-Jones for James and Russo.
And it was a pair of substitutes who combined for England’s fifth, when Beever-Jones pivoted before finding Mead, who side-stepped Roberts and added her name to the scoresheet with a bottom-right finish.
Wales were running out of time to make more history, but seized on the opportunity, when Fishlock added the first major tournament assist in Wales women’s history with a superb threaded pass to substitute Cain, who found the top corner with the most stylish goal of the night.
Beever-Jones then made it six with her maiden major tournament goal, assisted by Mead, while an excellent Clark save denied Keira Walsh late on.
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Proud they got there and tried. Glad I went to Switzerland to support. Another milestone in the growth of our ladies team. Be great to get a result, but the gap was big. Let’s plug away at it.
Sad ending to our tournament. The gulf between Wales and the other teams was obvious. As soon as we conceded a goals the floodgates opened. We need greater investment into the women’s game to compete.
Apparently some Welsh fans applauded GSTK. 90 minute patriots that should be sent over the border if this is true.
Shocking if true. Our independent national identity is way more important than applauding a song for someone who for so many years claimed to be the bizarre Prince of Wales ruling over us.
The English can say that Welsh football is totally reliant and subservient to English football for anything above amateur level, but this means we’ll be nothing more than their principality, giving us club positions in their lower leagues and lower league players they don’t want.
As long as we beat the English I don’t care – about anything else!
Small minded attitude. You show respect to the opposition whoever they are.
Unless it’s Ukraine v Russia, Palestine v Israel, Cymru v England, plus many others who suffer from historic or current colonialism.
So you go ahead and say this to Albanians when they play Serbia. To Turks when they play…any team. You tell the English to do exactly this! You call me small minded when our neighbours undoubtedly booed our anthem. Absolute hypocrite.
A better stance would be to understand why Welsh and Scottish fans boo GSTK and cheer on anyone but England. Firstly GSTK is the UK anthem not the English anthem therefore England should not be claiming it as theirs and get their own, secondly is the media. Whenever England play Wales or Scotland in any sport they act as though as if England are up against a bunch of johnny foreigners.
GSTK may be the UK anthem, but the UK that excludes us from the flag as we were annexed rather than signed up as a country.
We’re obviously not ‘United’ and despise the ‘King’ of their ‘Kingdom’, as he still believes we serve their English Prince of Wales/Outsiders. Money is power these days, but their abuse of that power extends into port. Through the BBC and their media they can hype us up when it suits them, but kick the legs from under us whenever they want.