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    Teen fan slams Nike for not releasing Lioness goalie Mary Earps’ World Cup shirt

    A TEEN who called on Nike to sell replicas of Lioness goalie Mary Earps’ World Cup shirt has been snubbed.Millie Winslett, 17, of Clacton-on-Sea, Essex, wrote to the sportswear giant before the tournament but has had no reply.
    Nike have snubbed calls from fans to sell replicas of Lioness goalie Mary Earps’ World Cup shirtCredit: Rex
    Millie Winslett, 17, was left gutted when Nike told her they wouldn’t release the England women’s goalkeeper shirtCredit: SWNS
    She said: “They should be embarrassed.”
    The teen had penned a heartfelt note to the company ahead of the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand asking if they would consider selling the shirt.
    And in the message, she explained how she was saddened that her little sister couldn’t currently get her hands on the fabled sportswear.
    She said: “While I’m devastated that I can’t currently purchase an England shirt with ‘Earps 1’ on the back, it saddens me further that my 10-year-old-sister Lacey, and every other little girl in the country cannot buy [an Earps shirt].”
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    Now, after the Lionesses secured a place in the World Cup final for the first time, she joined the chorus of calls for Nike to release the goalie shirt.
    And Millie, who watched the Lionesses roar to victory at her home in Clacton-on-Sea, Essex, yesterday added she was still waiting for a reply from the company.
    She said: “I’ve had no response yet. I’m not sure if I’ll get one now. I’m hoping that they’ll give me one, but they’re still refusing to comment.
    “[Mary Earps] has kept us in the game, as she has done for so many games, and I just think surely that’s enough of a statement to Nike to start producing the kit.
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    “I’ve lost a little bit of respect for the company. I’m very into my sport and like the things that they produce, but I do think it’s gone on too long now.
    “There are so many people that have reached out and spoken about it… I think by this point, they should be embarrassed by themselves for not doing it.”
    Millie said she was thrilled that the Lionesses had made it through to the World Cup final after their brilliant victory in the Euros last year.
    And she’s backed the side to ‘do the double’ again, saying they were one of the best Football teams that England had ever produced. More

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    Sarina Wiegman set for new deal as USA try to poach Lionesses boss… but salary will still be FAR less than Southgate’s

    THE FA will vehemently reject any US approach to poach Sarina Wiegman for their vacant women’s team boss role.Dutch coach Wiegman, 53, will lead England into Sunday’s World Cup final against Spain in Sydney after masterminding last summer’s Euros glory at Wembley.

    The FA will turn down any bids for England manager Sarina WiegmanCredit: Getty
    Wiegman has led England to the Women’s World Cup Final against SpainCredit: Rex
    Her current £400,000-a-year contract runs until the summer of 2025.
    And the US are eyeing Wiegman to replace coach Vlatko Andonovski, who quit after the world champs crashed out in the last 16 Down Under.
    Asked if the FA would snub any USA approach for three-time Fifa Best award winner Wiegman, chief executive Mark Bullingham replied: “One hundred per cent. It is not about money.
    “We are very, very happy with her.
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    “We’ve seen lots of rumours, and she is a special talent. She is contracted with England until 2025 and doing a great job.
    “We’re huge supporters of her and we’d like to have with us for a very long time.”
    The FA are ready to discuss a new deal “at an appropriate time” after this tournament, but won’t offer her pay to match Southgate’s £5million-a-year salary.
    Bullingham added: “Over time, there’s where you’ve got to get to.
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    “If you look at the disparity in the market and the income coming in, that’s why you’ve got a difference.
    “Sarina is, within the market she operates, well paid.
    “The men’s game is a different market.
    “I really want those markets to merge, but we’re not there yet.”
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    Bullingham also refused to rule out the Lionesses coach succeeding Gareth Southgate as the boss of England’s MEN’S team.
    Bullingham insisted: “Do I think Sarina could do any job in football? Yes, I do.
    “I’m really happy with the job she’s doing and I hope she stays doing that job for a long time.
    “If at some point in the future she decides she wants to move into the men’s game, that would be a really interesting discussion but that’s for her, right?”
    Asked if she could be seen as a potential successor to Southgate, Bullingham added: “It’s a bit disrespectful of the Lionesses to project it as a step up.
    “People always say it is, ‘the best man for the job’ or, ‘the best Englishman’.
    Sarina is, within the market she operates, well paid. I really want those markets to merge, but we’re not there yet.FA chief Mark Bullingham
    “Why does it have to be a man? Our answer is always it’s the best person for the job.
    “Football is behind other sports in terms of lack of female coaches at the top level, and that has to change.
    “Sarina is doing a great job. If she decides  in the future to go in a different direction,  she’s perfectly capable.
    “If and when we get a vacancy in either of our senior men’s or women’s manager positions, we would go for the  best person capable of winning matches.”
    Wiegman is the first coach – male or female – to lead two different nations to World Cup finals and will be appearing in her FOURTH successive final.
    Wiegman, though, makes far less than England men’s manager Gareth SouthgateCredit: The Sun
    The FA will discuss a new contract for England manager WiegmanCredit: Getty
    She won the 2017 Euros with her native Netherlands, who she managed in a World Cup final defeat to the USA two years later, before leading England to Euro 2022 triumph.
    The Lionesses are set to resume talks concerning World Cup bonuses after negotiations reached a stalemate.
    England stars are dismayed some of their rivals receive performance-related bonuses whilst they don’t.
    But Bullingham promised: “We’re sorting it after the tournament.”
    The FA are also planning a parade when the Lionesses return, while talks are also ongoing surrounding a Wembley statue.
    Bullingham said: “We have gone through various permissions, the next stage is working on the design.
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    “You can imagine the iconic images that came out of the Euros.
    “There are some brilliant things which could be produced.” More

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    Prince William and Rishi Sunak decide to skip Lionesses’ World Cup final in Sydney

    PRINCE William and Rishi Sunak have scored an own goal by deciding to skip the women’s World Cup final.The Prince of Wales and the Prime Minister are to miss the match in Sydney, Australia, despite it being the Lionesses’ first appearance in the final.
    Prince William and Rishi Sunak will be skipping the women’s World Cup finalCredit: Getty
    The Prime Minister will miss England’s first World Cup final since 1966, sending Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer insteadCredit: PA
    It comes as Spain’s Queen Letizia revealed she would be heading Down Under.
    Yesterday, Kensington Palace confirmed Prince William, who is president of the FA, would be roaring on the Lionesses from home.
    William is believed to be against the 9,400-mile flight as he wants to keep down his carbon footprint.
    The Prime Minister will also miss England’s first World Cup final since 1966, sending Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer instead.
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    Royal expert Phil Dampier tweeted: “If Prince William as president of the FA isn’t going to the Women’s World Cup final we should be told why not.
    “If it was in Europe, he’d be there.”
    Mandu Reid, leader of the Women’s Equality Party, added: “No chance Prince William would be ‘missing in action’ if the England men’s football team made it to the World Cup final.”
    It comes as the Government faces calls to announce a day off if the Lionesses beat Spain.
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    A No10 spokesperson said: “We’ll find a way to celebrate.”
    The Lionesses will make their first-ever World Cup final appearance on SundayCredit: Alamy More

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    How Sarina Weigman went from disguising herself as a boy to play football to the most successful women’s manager ever

    WITH the Lionesses roaring into the World Cup final for the first time, manager Sarina Wiegman is celebrating her own record-breaking achievement.The former PE teacher has become the first manager to take two national teams all the way to the final — having coached her native Netherlands through the tournament in 2019.
    Sarina Weigman has become the first manager to take two national teams all the way to the World Cup finalCredit: Getty
    Former England players have said the key to Sarina’s success is how much she gets to know her playersCredit: Getty
    Sarina, who as a child disguised herself as a boy to play in her local team, is now being talked about as a possible successor to Gareth Southgate as manager of the England men’s team.
    FA boss Mark Bullingham confirmed that it was considering appointing a woman when Southgate’s contract expires at the end of next year, saying: “It’s the best person for the job. If that best person is a woman then why not?”
    And those who have trained under mum-of-two Sarina, a three-time winner of Fifa Women’s Coach of the Year, reckon she is well qualified.
    Ellen White, part of last year’s Euros-winning squad, says the key to Sarina’s success is how much she gets to know her players.
    READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS
    Ellen, 34, said: “We needed someone to bring everyone’s strengths together on and off the pitch and allow them to be free to express themselves.
    “Sarina is a genuinely lovely person that shows a lot of empathy. She wants to know you on a human level, not just as a player. She has conversations with you about your family.
    “Her communication levels are on another level to what we have experienced before. It’s the fact she knows each player individually and knows what makes them tick.”
    True grit
    But what sets Sarina apart is also her true grit — born from a lifetime of fighting for her place in a sporting world dominated by men.
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    Sarina, who learned her skills playing against boys when girls’ football was banned in the Netherlands, led the charge for women to be paid professionals in the country.
    Dutch player Leonne Stentler said: “She tried to fight for that at every moment. She saw our progression was going so fast that it would be possible some day that we would be full-time professional players.
    “She had to fight for everything. She was trying to break through every wall.”
    That fighting spirit was awakened early in her childhood in The Hague when she discovered a love of football alongside twin brother Tom.
    As her country banned girls from the pitch, she cut her hair short to look more like a boy, so she could play alongside her sibling in the local team, ESDO.
    Despite the ban, her parents supported her dreams.
    She recalled: “As a little girl, when I was five or six, girls were not allowed to play football, but I just liked football and my parents never made any fuss. They just said, ‘If you want to play football, you’re going to play football’.”
    A breakthrough then came in the 1970s, as Uefa made all of its member nations invest in women’s football and Sarina was able to move to HSV Celeritas, which had a female team.
    As a child, Sarina disguised herself as a boy to play in her local teamCredit: Twitter
    At the age of 18, Sarina was part of the Netherlands squadCredit: PA
    Despite her obvious talent, the barriers to women were so entrenched Sarina never saw it as a possible career.
    She said: “I knew in elementary school that I wanted to be a PE teacher. That’s very strange, too, but I just wanted to be involved in sports.
    “I didn’t know I could be a coach because there was nothing for women in football — I couldn’t see it, so I didn’t think that it was an opportunity.”
    In 1987, the midfielder joined the Delft club KFC 71, winning the national cup the same year and was selected to play for her country.
    A year later, at the age of 18, she was part of the Netherlands squad invited by Fifa to compete in the Women’s Invitation Trophy, a precursor of the World Cup, in China.
    While there, she caught the eye of Anson Dorrance, the manager of the US Women’s Team and head coach at the University of North Carolina, who offered her a sports scholarship and a place in the university’s Tar Heels women’s soccer team.
    The secondment to the US, where women’s football was on the up, was a turning point, making her more determined to make her mark in her homeland.
    “It was an absolute trigger for me,” she said. “I thought: ‘If I can contribute in the Netherlands, to create what is in the US in the Netherlands, I would be a happy person.’ It took 20 years.”
    On her return, she worked as a PE teacher at Segbroek College in The Hague, a job she kept throughout her playing career.
    She trained with the men at ADO Den Haag several times a week and eventually joined the women’s team of Ter Leede, where she played for nine years, helping them to win two league titles and the Dutch cup, while also earning 104 caps for her country.
    As captain of the team, her leadership skills were clear — as well as her need to nurture the players who, unlike their male counterparts, were not paid professional wages.
    Teammate Jeanet van der Laan recalled: “She was pretty loud in the dressing room and very confident about her qualities.
    “Sarina came to visit me because she wanted to see where I lived.
    “I only had a washing machine and not a dryer.
    “She asked me, ‘How are you going to do this? You have to train, practise almost every day. How are you going to dry your gear?’.
    “I said, ‘I don’t know, I don’t have any money’. So, she gave me her tumble dryer. And that’s something I will never forget.”
    Sarina, who is married to childhood sweetheart and sports lecturer Marten Glotzbach, retired from the pitch to start a family at 33, and had daughters Sacha and Lauren.
    While still working as a PE teacher, she returned to the club as its coach, winning the double in her first season — and continued to fight for the rights of women players.
    When the Dutch women’s league, Eredivisie, was launched in 2007, she was asked to coach a new team for Ado Den Haag on a part-time basis but she refused until they gave her a full-time job.
    She became the first female coach at a Dutch professional football organisation when she joined Sparta Rotterdam.
    Host of honours
    In 2014, she became the assistant coach of the Dutch women’s team but turned down the top job a year later. “Sarina only begins a new adventure when she’s ready for it,” explained husband Marten.
    In 2017, she agreed to take over as head coach and, in one of the first team meetings, she handed players an article entitled “Thirteen things you should give up if you want to be successful”.
    Sarina celebrated with the Lionesses after dispatching Australia 3-1 in Sydney to reach England’s first World Cup FinalCredit: Getty
    Included on the list was, “Give up your need to be liked”.
    It’s a philosophy that Dutch former player Leonne Stentler says the single-minded coach lives by.
    She said: “Sarina is someone who has a goal and just tries to reach that goal.
    “To anything else, she’s just . . .  blind is not the right word, but she doesn’t let anyone or anything change her mind or influence her.”
    The approach worked — as she guided the Netherlands to their first Euros win in 2017, earning Sarina a host of honours, including being named Best Fifa Women’s Coach and a Knight of the Order of Orange-Nassau.
    She followed it by taking the Dutch team to a runners-up medal at the 2019 World Cup, following which she became the first woman to be honoured with a statue at the Dutch Football Association.
    But a year after the World Cup triumph she disappointed her home fans by agreeing to take over from Phil Neville as head coach of the Lionesses, saying: “Why not? I only want to work at the top. I wouldn’t be happy with any less.”
    A brilliant tactician, Sarina has turned around the fortunes of the England team, who have lost just one match out of 38 under her stewardship.
    While she nurtures her players, she also has a ruthless streak, and caused controversy by leaving England captain Steph Houghton out of this year’s World Cup squad because of injury.
    As she heads to her second World Cup final as a national coach, she says winning is not as im­portant as changing the perception of women’s football — and creating opportunities she was denied as a child.
    Sarina said: “I really love the medals but what I’m proud of most is that now young girls have perspective, young girls can play football and young girls can wear shirts [with players’ names on].
    “When you go to the grocery store and people tell you, ‘My daughter was wearing that shirt but my son is wearing that shirt now too’, we’ve changed society.
    Read More on The Sun
    “That’s the change I’m proud of the most. I didn’t have opportunities. I have two daughters, they played football in mixed teams when they were younger, and it was normal.
    “Things are changing, but there is still a long way to go.”
    Sarina Wiegman, second from left on bottom row, as a girl in her local football team in the Hague
    Sarina retired from the pitch to start a family at 33, and had daughters Sacha and Lauren with husband MartenCredit: sarina.wiegman/instagram More

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    ‘They are very special, but we have full belief’, says Keira Walsh of England’s World Cup final foes

    KEIRA WALSH reckons England’s World Cup final fight with Spain will be won or lost in midfield as she prepares to face her Barcelona pals. And the Lioness hailed Spain stars for staying focused on their tournament dream a year after a player rebellion against their coach Jorge Vilda.
    Keira Walsh is set to battle some of her Barcelona team-mates when England play Spain in this year’s Women’s World Cup finalCredit: Getty
    Walsh and England team-mate Lucy Bronze won a Champions League and Spanish top-flight title with Barcelona last seasonCredit: Getty
    Sunday’s clash between the Lionesses and their rivals, which starts at 8:00 pm will see both playing in the contest final for the first time in their histories. 
    And it will see Walsh and Lucy Bronze take on their Barcelona team-mates for the first time in a major tournament decider.
    Walsh said: “A lot of people say where the game is won and lost is in midfield. 
    “We have got some massive talent in there, with Georgia Stanway,  Ella Toone and Lauren James. 
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    “The way we set up now we can see the front two (Alessia Russo and Lauren Hemp) are really exciting and have scored some crucial goals. 
    “Hempo is on fire at the minute and it’s exciting where our attack is going at the moment.” 
    “We have full respect for Spain, they are an unbelievable team. 
    “It’s a challenge that we have faced before and hopefully it will be a good game on Sunday. 
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    “We’ve got the experience of being in a final before and a little bit of fight, a little bit of competitiveness. 
    “We have gone behind and come back. All those things kind of add up. 
    “I think this group is really excited about where we can go.”
    This year’s final comes 11 months after 15 Spain aces mutinied against Vilda over issues concerning his coaching methods and work and training conditions. 
    Last September each member of the group individually wrote to the Royal Spanish Football Federation.
    They declared themselves unavailable for international duty and called for changes to the national team set-up. 
    Their boss’s managerial style, which is said to have affected their health and emotional wellbeing, was among the concerns flagged. 
    Other issues raised include the head coach allegedly being overly controlling with players reportedly pressured to keep their room doors open until midnight.
    While players denied that they had called for Vilda to be fired, their federation refuted this and threw their support behind the coach.
    Spain aces who stood down from national duty included a number of Walsh’s and Bronze’s Barca team-mates
    Out of the 15 who rebelled only three were named in Vilda’s squad for the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. 
    They included Walsh’s club pals Mariona Caldentey and Aitana Bonmati and ex-Man United defender Ona Batlle who sealed a transfer to Barca this summer. 
    The trio chose to end their exile from international duty before the start of the tournament.  
    Walsh added: “I see those girls every day (when we are at club) and how competitive they are. 
    Salma Paralluelo will be among Spain’s biggest attacking threats with the player having scored against Japan and Sweden in the knockout stagesCredit: The Mega Agency
    “I think it shows the professionalism for them to kind of park it (their concerns), do the job they have done and get to a World Cup final. 
    Read More on The Sun
    “We message before each game saying good luck and the idea was hopefully we would see each other in the final – but we didn’t actually expect it to happen! 
    “Once we cross that white line it will be a very interesting game. It’s nice to see so many players that I know in and around the final.” More

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    England fans get big boost ahead of historic World Cup final in call for early opening hours for pubs

    PUB bosses today called on Rishi Sunak to loosen Sunday licensing rules for the Women’s World Cup final.Hospitality chiefs want boozers to be permitted to sell alcohol before 10am, with the Lionesses set to take on Spain an hour later.
    Pub bosses today called on Rishi Sunak to loosen licensing rules for the Women’s World Cup finalCredit: Alamy
    Most pubs are banned from selling alcohol in the early morning.
    But hospitality chiefs want an exception this Sunday.
    Chris Jowsey, chief executive officer of Admiral Taverns, which runs more than 1,600 pubs, said: “We urge the Prime Minister to allow pubs to open at 10am on Sunday to support our Lionesses and bring communities together to cheer on the team.
    “It has been inspiring to watch not only their outstanding achievements on the pitch, but the way it has brought the nation together off the pitch.”
    READ MORE LIONESSES NEWS
    Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, added “Millions of people have been cheering on our amazing Lionesses throughout this tournament at their local pub.
    “Now, as England enter their first World Cup Final since 1966, we need the government to step in and allow the necessary regulatory easement to allow pubs to serve the public from 10am on final day.
    “Where there’s a will, there has to be a way.”
    Individual pubs can apply for a temporary licence to serve booze before 11am.
    But the process takes a minimum of five working days.
    So far there’s no plans from government to make sweeping changes the rules.
    MPs today joined calls from the hospitality industry.
    The Lib Dems demanded politicians return to Westminster from parliamentary recess so a new law can be passed to change alcohol restrictions on the day.
    Lib Dem Deputy Leader Daisy Cooper MP said: “This is an open goal for the government.
    “The Lionesses have made history by reaching the final, it’s only right that people across the country can come together and show their full support on Sunday.
    “MPs should get down to Westminster tomorrow and score a last minute winner for our pubs and the Lionesses.”
    Most read in The Sun
    Alun Cairns MP, chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Beer Group, said: “Early opening and serving would be a fitting tribute to the Lionesses and a welcome boost to the industry.
    “I have raised the issue with the Home Secretary directly who is looking in to see what is possible.” More

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    BBC vs ITV pundits and hosts Laura Woods and Alex Scott compared as they go head-to-head for Women’s World Cup final

    LIKE England and Spain, BBC and ITV will also being going head-to-on Sunday.Both channels are showing the Women’s World Cup final, as the Lionesses aim to follow up their Euros glory by winning the biggest showpiece in football.
    Presenter of the moment Laura Woods will be hosting ITV’s coverage of the Women’s World Cup final
    While BBC Sport have turned to seasoned pro Gabby Logan to present their World Cup coverage
    That means presenters Laura Woods and Gabby Logan will be competing for viewing figures.
    While pundits like Alex Scott and Karen Carney will be offering their differing opinions on the game.
    But, how do the hosts and pundits compare?
    Laura Woods – ITV
    The current jewel of TV sports presenting, Woods, 36, is now a staple for viewers of ITV Sport.
    Read more Lionesses news
    Her handling of the men’s World Cup last year in Qatar was championed and earlier this year she landed a new role as TNT’s Champions League host.
    Fans have loved Laura Woods’ work at the World Cup so farCredit: ITV
    While talkSPORT listeners will already know her expertise and love of Arsenal, from when she hosted her popular breakfast show.
    Woods has certainly stolen the style stakes during this tournament.
    Gabby Logan – BBC
    Logan, 50, is a seasoned pro of a sports presenter.
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    The daughter of the late Wales manager Terry Yorath, she began working for BBC Sport in 2007 following stints at Sky Sports and ITV Sport.
    Logan is fronting the BBC’s coverageCredit: Getty
    She has always been a huge advocate for women’s football and signed off from last year’s Euros final with a rallying cry for media and viewers to get behind the women’s game.
    Off the screen, Logan is married to retired Scottish rugby player Kenny Logan, after they tied the knot in 2001.

    Alex Scott – BBC
    Former Arsenal star Scott has made TV presenting and punditry look a cinch.
    Since 2019, she has worked across both BBC Sport and Sky Sports.
    Alex Scott has won fans over with her punditry
    Scott appeared on Strictly Come Dancing in 2019
    Scott, 38, has transcended football, appearing on The One Show and BBC Sports Personality of the Year.
    Strictly Come Dancing producers also picked her as a contestant, where she came fifth on the 17th series of the show.
    Karen Carney – ITV
    36-year-old Carney played for Arsenal and is a Champions League winner.
    Her credentials earned from her playing days scored her jobs with Sky Sports and Amazon Prime from 2019.
    Karen Carney has scored multiple broadcast jobs in football
    Solihull-born Carney was a part of the first all female line-up analysing a men’s football game at the World Cup last year.
    The journalist also writes for a column for The Guardian.
    Seema Jaswal – BBC
    Seema, 38, started her career as a runner at Sky Sports, before scoring her first TV job in presenting as a roving reporter for CBBC Newsround.
    In 2015, she relocated to India and became the face of Indian football for Star Sports presenting the Indian Super League  and football show Lets Talk Football Star Sports.
    Seema Jaswal started as a runner for Sky Sports before scoring a job with BBC Sport
    But it’s since 2018 her career has really taken off.
    In recent years, she’s appeared on BT Sport’s Champions League coverage, BBC’s Football Focus and much more.
    Ellen White – BBC
    As England’s all-time record scorer, White, 34, knows all about representing the Lionesses.
    She was famously part of the team that lifted the Euros in 2022.
    BBC pundit Ellen White had to fight back tears after England reached the final
    However, she came agonisingly close to winning the World Cup in 2015, but had to settle for a third-placed finish.
    It’s no wonder she had to hold back tears as she delivered her verdict following England’s semi-final victory over Australia.
    Eni Aluko – ITV
    Aluko, 36, earned an impressive 102 caps for the Lionesses from 2004-2016.
    Incredibly, she was called up into the international set-up when she was just 14.
    Alongside her punditry, Aluko has held senior roles on the staff of Aston Villa and LA-based Angel City FC
    After retiring from football, Aluko took on a job as the director of women’s football at Aston Villa.
    A year later, she became the sporting director of Los Angeles-based Angel City FC before departing this year following a transition to a recruitment role.
    Steph Houghton – BBC
    Houghton suffered the misfortune of missing out on Sarina Wiegman’s World Cup squad.
    That was after her stellar displays for her country in the Euros.
    Steph Houghton missed out on England selection for the World Cup
    Currently, the 35-year-old is gearing up for another season with WSL side Manchester City.
    Houghton is married to former Bradford City defender Stephen Darby, who was forced to retire in 2018 after he was diagnosed with motor neurone disease.
    Jill Scott – ITV
    Another famous Lioness of the Euros success, Scott’s aggression on the pitch scored her plenty of fans.
    She famously caused a stir when a foul-mouth tirade against a German player was caught on camera, which she was forced to apologise for.
    Lauren Hemp hugs Jill Scott during ITV’s World Cup coverage
    Scott, 36, has since retired and gone on to launch her own podcast, Jill Scott’s Coffee Club.
    Last year, she capped off an incredible 2022 by winning I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!
    Fara Williams – BBC
    As England’s most capped player – representing her country a whopping 177 times – Williams is well versed in the Lionesses.
    She played for Everton, Liverpool, Arsenal, and Reading from 2004-2021.
    Fara Williams is England’s most capped player of all time
    She has had to battle hardship – and was homeless for seven years in the early part of her career living in hostels.
    Williams now finds herself offering punditry for both the men’s and women’s game.
    Emma Hayes – ITV
    Since 2012, Hayes, 46, has been the head coach of Chelsea.
    She has won an astonishing six WSL titles with the Blues during that period and is recognised as one of most successful coaches in the game.
    Read More on The Sun
    Last year she received an OBE for her services to women’s football.
    Hayes was forced to shut down reports linking her with the vacant Wimbledon post in 2021, calling it an insult to the women’s game.
    Emma Hayes is one of football’s most successful coaches More

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    Ireland star takes hilarious swipe at Australian rival after England win following Women’s World Cup spat

    RUESHA LITTLEJOHN seems to have taken aim at Caitlin Foord in a hilarious online jibe following the pair’s previous spat. Ireland international Littlejohn appeared to joke about switching her allegiances to England after the Lionesses knocked hosts Australia out of the World Cup.
    Fans think that Ruesha Littlejohn (right) has taken aim at Caitlin Foord (left) with her latest tweetCredit: EPA
    The pair came to blows in the World Cup group stage after Littlejohn refused to shake Foord’s handCredit: AFP
    The incident is rumoured to be as a result of Littlejohn’s break-up with Ireland team-mate Katie McCabeCredit: Getty
    England were 3-1 victors over the Matildas in their semi-final clash and have booked themselves a place in Sunday’s World Cup final.
    Following the game Littlejohn took to social media to declare her love for England in a funny tweet.

    She posted: “I’ve always been a big England fan. Engerlandddddddd.”
    But some fans are dubious of the midfielder’s new found love for the England national team and believe she could have had ulterior motives.
    READ MORE WOMEN’S WORLD CUP
    Many believe it may have been a swipe at Australia international Caitlin Foord because of her previous drama with the Arsenal player.
    Littlejohn refused to shake Foord’s hand when the pair faced off during Ireland’s 1-0 loss to Australia in the World Cup group stage.
    The 33-year-old was also seen being “restrained” by her Ireland team-mates following the game as she went over to confront Foord.
    It’s been suggested by fans that the handshake snub may have had something to do with Littlejohn’s split from long-term partner and Ireland captain Katie McCabe.
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    Katie McCabe and Caitlin Foord were snapped enjoying a holiday with Arsenal team-mate Jordan NobbsCredit: Instagram @katie_mccabe11
    Littlejohn and McCabe were together for seven yearsCredit: Instagram @_katie_mccabe11
    The couple separated shortly before the World Cup after more than seven years together.
    And according to the Daily Mail, McCabe and Foord are close friends and recently went away together on holiday to Ibiza as part of a large group of friends.
    They currently both play in the Women’s Super League for Arsenal together, whilst Littlejohn is without a club after leaving Aston Villa at the end of the season.
    There is no suggestion Foord had anything to do with McCabe and Littlejohn splitting up. More