Women’s Euro 2025: Hosts Switzerland fall at first hurdle but hope Euro 2025 can spark change

“This once for a lifetime, will never come back.”
Swiss head coach Pia Sundhage called its players to embrace the “edition” of the opening games as Euro 2025 hosts.
Nevertheless, Switzerland, Basel, the first big women’s tournament on the territory of the house began with 2-1 defeat of Norway, Basel did not get the victory in a very bad way.
Sundhage, an highly experienced Sundhage, knows how to lead a host nation at a major stage with Sweden in the home territory in Euro 2013, which he describes as “one of my best years”.
This time, the Swiss team went ahead 1-0 and defeated the defender Julia Stierli in a cruel defeat.
Ada Hegerberg had canceled for almost four minutes from Nadine Riesen’s opener to Stiierli’s own network.
The first woman’s euro hosts to lose their opening matches, but Hope is still going to reach the knockout scene.
This tournament did not start with pyrotechnicals or something flashy before the match. Instead, the opening ceremony in Basel was fun and fun as he danced with silver tubes before a giant female euro cup was formed before a giant female euro cup was established with the flags of 16 countries competing in Switzerland.
Sundhage’s players seemed to take the expectation burden on the steps by playing the front. In the first half, they dominated the European champion Norway at the St Jakob-Park, but they could not see the job.
Evaluating that his players embraced the pressure and embrace the pressure, Sundhage said, “Oh yes. I have never seen this kind of dressing room before leaving the hotel before and before leaving the hotel.
“Step by step, the best part, different players using their voices. We prepared. After the game, I talked to them and use your language, body language and words after defeating your words because we still have the chance to play the quarter -final.”
Now this is the message – Sundhage wants the rest of the group A to benefit from the best ways.
“We start with Iceland and play a good game, we will put ourselves in a good place,” he said.
“Be responsible for what you say, what you do and how you behave, because this is the best thing for the Swiss National Team and the Swiss people.”