Spain, Switzerland and UEFA Women's Championship
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England goes head to head against Sweden in UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 on July 17 at 3 p.m. ET, held in Zürich, Switzerland. Which team will finish on top? Read on for our prediction.
The 2025 UEFA Women's Euro soccer tournament began with 16 national teams competing for the UEFA Women's Euro trophy. The final eight teams entering the quarterfinals are England, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland, which all finished in the top two of their groups.
Watch Sweden v England on BBC One and BBC iPlayer on Thursday 17 July, with kick off at 8pm BST. Gabby Logan is live in Zurich as England take on Sweden in their quarter-final at the UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 tournament.
The UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 matchup between England and Sweden is slated for July 17 at 3 p.m. ET in Zürich, Switzerland. Want to watch live on TV? Details are below in this article.
Sweden embraces its underdog status at the Women’s European Championship but could change perceptions if it defeats England in Thursday’s quarterfinal in Zurich.
Relive the full dramatic penalty shootout as England beat Sweden 3-2 to progress to the semi-finals of Euro 2025 in Switzerland.
Gerhardsson went out on a high by winning the Swedish Cup in 2016 (no other manager at Euro 2025 has won a senior trophy in men’s football).
Sweden has secured a dominant 4-1 victory over Germany at the Women’s European Championship. The win guarantees Sweden the top spot in Group C and a potentially easier path to the final as it avoids the possibility of facing Spain in the semifinals.
Defending champions England advanced to a semi-final clash with Italy next Tuesday at the 2025 women's European Championships after a penalty shoot-out victory over Sweden.
England then bounced back by defeating the Netherlands 4-0 and Wales 4-1 to get to this stage of the tournament. In the win over the Netherlands, Georgia Stanway, Ella Toone, Lauren Hemp, Alessia Russo, Beth Mead, and Aggie Beever-Jones scored for England, setting up for this thrilling matchup against Sweden.
A new night train will be running from Switzerland to Sweden next year. The Federal Transport Office says it will subsidize the train from Basel to Malmö – running through Copenhagen. The money will come from the fund created by the CO2 law designed to cut carbon emissions.