She Kicks Magazine
·1 de agosto de 2025
England’s Euro 2025 squad and Sarina Wiegman to be inducted into National Football Museum Hall of Fame

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsShe Kicks Magazine
·1 de agosto de 2025
The entire England Euro 2025 squad and manager Sarina Wiegman will be inducted into the National Football Museum Hall of Fame.
Sky Sports have reported that every player in the England squad from Euro 2025, as well as head coach Sarina Wiegman will be inducted into the Hall of Fame at Manchester’s National Football Museum.
It comes after the Lionesses became the first senior England squad to win a major tournament on international soil.
They also became the first senior England squad to successfully defend a trophy, after previously winning Euro 2022 on home turf.
England defied the odds to come from behind in each of their three knockout phase matches, to go on and win the tournament.
Against Spain, they fell behind to a Mariona Caldentey goal, before a second-half Alessia Russo header took the game to extra-time.
In penalties, Hannah Hampton saved spot-kicks from Aitana Bonmati and Caldentey, before Chloe Kelly scored the winning penalty for the Lionesses.
The Lionesses have been celebrating their triumph this week. A trophy parade was held in London on Tuesday in front of thousands of fans.
UK betting websites have already made the Lionesses 3/1 second-favourites behind Spain to win the tournament again four year’s time.
Listed below are the 23 players who will be inducted into the National Football Museum’s Hall of Fame alongside Sarina Wiegman.
Goalkeepers – Hannah Hampton, Khiara Keating, Anna Moorhouse
Defenders – Lucy Bronze, Jess Carter, Niamh Charles, Alex Greenwood, Maya Le Tissier, Esme Morgan, Lotte Wubben-Moy and Leah Williamson
Midfielders – Grace Clinton, Jess Park, Georgia Stanway, Ella Toone and Keira Walsh
Forwards – Michelle Agyemang, Aggie Beever-Jones, Lauren Hemp, Lauren James, Chloe Kelly, Beth Mead and Alessia Russo
To date, 190 players and managers have been inducted into England’s football Hall of Fame by the National Football Museum in Manchester.
That list includes a number of women’s footballers. Some notable names were inducted in the most recent class of 2024.
Steph Houghton, who played 121 times for England, was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2024.
She was inducted alongside Mary Phillip – the first black player to captain an England women’s international team.
Jill Scott was inducted in 2023 – the year after the Lionesses won Euro 2022 on home soil.
Below are some other players who have also been inducted over the past 10 years;