England vs Netherlands LIVE: Result and reaction as Lionesses produce stunning Wembley comeback
England 3-2 Netherlands: Ella Toone scored a stoppage-time winner after the Lionesses were two goals down at half time
Your support helps us to tell the story
My recent work focusing on Latino voters in Arizona has shown me how crucial independent journalism is in giving voice to underrepresented communities.
Your support is what allows us to tell these stories, bringing attention to the issues that are often overlooked. Without your contributions, these voices might not be heard.
Every dollar you give helps us continue to shine a light on these critical issues in the run up to the election and beyond
Eric Garcia
Washington Bureau Chief
England kept their bid to secure Olympics qualification for Great Britain alive in dramatic fashion as Ella Toone’s stoppage-time goal completed a fightback from two goals down to beat the Netherlands 3-2 at Wembley.
Needing a win to remain in contention to finish top in Nations League Group A1, the final position required for them to have a chance of obtaining a place for GB at next summer’s Games in Paris, the Lionesses were on course for a third defeat in the pool as Lineth Beerensteyn notched a first-half brace for the Dutch.
But Sarina Wiegman’s side battled back with two goals in quick succession from Georgia Stanway and Lauren Hemp around the hour mark, before substitute Toone capped the turnaround in the first minute of time added on to bring a huge roar from the 71,632 crowd in attendance.
It leaves England in second place, level on points with the Netherlands and one in front of Belgium, ahead of concluding their group matches by playing Scotland at Hampden Park on Tuesday. Belgium drew 1-1 with Scotland in Friday’s other Group A1 contest.
Follow all the live action in the blog below and here are the England vs Netherlands latest odds.
FT: England 3-2 Netherlands
Call off the inquest, turn off the alarms: the real Lionesses are back. How motivated are England to qualify for next summer’s Olympics? Well let this thrilling second-half comeback against the Netherlands at Wembley answer that question. With their hopes of reaching the Nations League finals on the line and down 2-0 against the Dutch, England produced a stunning turnaround to claim a vital win, with Ella Toone steering in a dramatic stoppage-time winner to rescue the Lionesses from a nightmare night.
That was what Sarina Wiegman’s side looked set for after what was perhaps their poorest first-half performance under the Dutch manager. Wiegman’s former side were far sharper, far hungrier, but the Lionesses showed all of their resilience and battling qualities when they needed them most. England tore through the Netherlands after the break and, by the end, were thoroughly deserving of victory, even if there is still more to do.
Report from Wembley
Lionesses avoid Wembley nightmare after resurgence of greatest quality
England 3-2 Netherlands: The Lionessess kept their Olympics hopes alive after coming from two goals down to defeat the Dutch at Wembley
FT: England 3-2 Netherlands
England boss Sarina Wiegman maintained full faith in her side to stage the stunning second-half comeback that lifted the Lionesses to a 3-2 win over the Netherlands in their penultimate Women’s Nations League group-stage clash at Wembley.
Needing a victory to remain in contention to finish top in Group A1 and advance in the tournament, which serves as a qualifier for next summer’s Olympics in Paris, England quickly dug themselves a hole after Lineth Beerensteyn netted twice before the break to put the Dutch 2-0 up.
But the Lionesses battled back after the restart on a frigid night in London, Georgia Stanway and Lauren Hemp stoking the crowd back into a frenzy by the hour mark before substitute Ella Toone sealed a dramatic victory in stoppage time.
Wiegman said: “I was actually pretty calm. I was very disappointed they scored the second goal because I didn’t think we played bad. The second goal we were a little bit unlucky, it was an unnecessary goal. We didn’t play bad but we needed some more. We truly believed we could turn it around. We never lost trust.”
‘We never lost trust’: Sarina Wiegman remained confident of England comeback
England hit back from 2-0 down to beat the Netherlands 3-2 at Wembley
FT: England 3-2 Netherlands
An emotional Mary Earps apologised to her England team-mates despite the Lionesses coming from behind to beat the Netherlands at Wembley.
The goalkeeper, who captained the Lionesses and has had an outstanding year for the national team, saw a soft shot from Netherlands forwards Lineth Beerensteyn slip through her fingers as the visitors took at two-goal lead before half time.
The Lionesses came roaring back after the break and won 3-2 thanks to Ella Toone’s stoppage-time strike, but England will head into Tuesday’s final Nations League fixture against Scotland knowing that the Netherlands remain in charge of the group.
England needed to beat the Dutch by two goals to take control of their Olympics qualification hopes but now need to either win against Scotland by three more goals than the Netherlands - or hope they fail to beat Belgium.
Earps was in tears after the game and held her hands up depsite England going on to secure victory at Wembley. “I thought the girls were unbelievable to come back into the game,” Earps told ITV. “I thought they were unbelievable.
“I am just sorry that my performance has cost the team tonight. That [second goal] will haunt me for a long time today, I am really gutted because it could have been a really special night.”
More here:
Mary Earps apologises for England error: ‘It will haunt me for a long time’
The Lionesses fought back to win 3-2 against the Netherlands on a thrilling night at Wembley
FT: England 3-2 Netherlands
Wiegman on Beth Mead: “She had a very good impact, I think it was really impressive, coming back from an injury, coming back in with Arsenal and then coming back in to this environment with 72,000 people, it was very good.”
FT: England 3-2 Netherlands
Wiegman on what is needed on Tuesday against Scotland at Hampden Park: “How we approach is first that we have to win that game, and that’s what we’re going to do, of course we’re going to put them under pressure to try and score as many goals as possible, we need to win with three more than what the Netherlands do if they win.”
FT: England 3-2 Netherlands
Some more questions for Wiegman:
Concern over the issues arising in the last couple of months: “No I think this was a totally different team against a very good opponent, and I think their first goal was just a great counter-attack, the Belgium game we lost the ball in a moment when we didn’t expect to lose the ball and I think we played a lot better than in the other games.”
On the defeatist reaction of the players at the final whistle: “The team knows exactly what we have to do, and I think we were very close to a 4-2 and that was the disappointment and that would have totally changed the situation. I am really proud of the team in how we stepped up and how we showed resilience.
FT: England 3-2 Netherlands
When asked about Mary Earps, Wiegman said she had words with the goalkeeper following her comments, adding: “Of course she didn’t let the team down, I think you only let your team down when you don’t put effort in the game and we never didn’t put effort in the game.
FT: England 3-2 Netherlands
When asked about her reaction at 2-0 down, Wiegman said: “I was actually pretty calm, I was very disappointed they scored the second goal because I thought we didn’t play well.
“The first time they came in our half of the pitch was on 11 mintues and they scored straight away, the second goal was a bit of an unlucky goal and we played bad.
“We truly believed we could turn around, and the players believed that too, if we scored one goal...we never lost trust.”
FT: England 3-2 Netherlands
Sarina Wiegman has just come into the press conference...
FT: England 3-2 Netherlands
England manager Sarina Wiegman told ITV: “I feel a little bit strange. I am really happy with the win but in the end you hope you win by two goals so you’re in a better position. But, coming back from 2-0 down and how we showed up in the second half was so well done. It was a good performance. Overall it was a really good game.
“We started well and were totally dominant but they came with one counter-attack and went 1-0 up. It was a good goal from there.
“We said at half-time that we weren’t playing badly, but yes we’d conceded two goals and we had to do better but keep going because they are struggling too.”
Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this article
Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments