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Goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger made an excellent stop during the additional time and saved two penalties during a shootout, as Germany survived playing for almost two hours with 10 players to defeat France and reserve a semifinal against Spain in Zurich on Wednesday (20:00 BST).
Berger de Gotham denied Amel Majri and Alice Sombath in the shooting, after having a sensational moment in hitting a detour through teammate Janine, turned off the line during the first half of the added 30 minutes.
Germany began a nightmare when the defender of great experience, Kathrin Hendrich, granted a penalty that the Bleu scored and was sent for throwing the captain of France Griedge Mbock Bathy on the 13th minute.
Ann-Katrin Berger is the hero! 💚
Germany is done through the semifinals after beating France 6-5 by penalties pic.twitter.com/ghuojhnbob
– ITV Football (@itvfootball) July 19, 2025
Grace Geyoro turned the following kick, but SJOEKE NUSKEN de Chelsea directed from the corner of Klara Buhl to tie the eight years of champions 10 minutes later.
The goal of France, Pauline Peyraud-Magnin, saved the 69th minute and Blue, the replacement of Melvine Malard, almost set the contest in the 120th minute when the Manchester United striker won the crossbar from a distance.
Sara Dabritz was the only player in Germany to be wrong during the shooting to hit the crossbar, while Berger used a set of diagrams stuck in a water bottle to evaluate where the players in France had directed their penalty in the previous games.
📰 Content table
QF1: Norway 1-2 Italy (Geneva)
QF3: Sweden 2-2 England (2-3p) (Zurich)
QF2: Spain 2-0 Switzerland (Bern)
QF4: France 1-1 (5-6p) Germany (Basel)
SF1: QF3 V winner winner QF1 (Geneva, 20:00)
SF2: QF4 V winner winner QF2 (Zurich, 20:00)
SF1 V winner SF2 (Basel, 17:00)
England received a difficult task to Group D, facing the 2017 champions in the Netherlands, and a team from France took the eleventh place in the world by FIFA.
Any other place, Germany met with the inaugural winners and four times Sweden Finalists in Group C, while Spain’s attempt to reach the final for the first time put them against opponents, including Italy, runners -up in 1993 and 1997.
Finland, Iceland, Norway, Switzerland
Belgium, Spain, Italy, Portugal
Denmark, Germany, Poland, Sweden
England, France, Netherlands, Wales
🏴 Who is your England number 1? 🧤#Uwnl pic.twitter.com/vxpd1t5yqm
– UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 (@Weuro2025) March 4, 2025
Group to: Iceland 0-1 Finland (Thun)
Switzerland 1-2 Norway (Basel)
Group B: Belgium 0-1 Italy (Sió)
Spain 5-0 Portugal (Berna)
Group C: Denmark 0-1 Sweden (Geneva)
Germany 2-0 Poland (St. Gallen)
Group D: Wales 0-3 Netherlands (Lucerne)
France 2-1 England (Zurich)
Stop -ho, Matilda Vinberg 🥵#Uwnl || @svenskfotboll pic.twitter.com/oo1swrubm
– UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 (@Weuro2025) March 1, 2025
Group A: Norway 2-1 Finland (Sió)
Switzerland 2-0 Iceland (Berna)
Group B: Spain 6-2 Belgium (Thun)
Portugal 1-1 Italy (Geneva)
Group C: Germany 2-1 Denmark (Basel)
Poland 0-3 Sweden (Lucerne)
Group D: England 4-0 Netherlands (Zurich)
France 4-1 Wales (St. Gallen)
Group A: Finland 1-1 Switzerland (Geneva)
Norway 4-3 Iceland (Thun)
Defense of Gemma Evans’s last ditch 💪#Uwnl || @Cymru pic.twitter.com/8wfqng5xtq
– UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 (@Weuro2025) March 3 2025
Group B: Italy 1-3 Spain (Bern)
Portugal 1-2 Belgium (Sió)
Group C: Sweden 4-1 Germany (Zurich)
Poland 3-2 Denmark (Lucerne)
Group D: Netherlands 2-5 France (Basel)
England 6-1 Wales (St. Gallen)