Winner of last season's Serie A Golden Boot at the age of 35, the Juventus striker is now at the forefront of the Azzurre's incredible summer
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Women's Euro Tickets
Secure your Women's Euro 2025 tickets for this summer's international tournamentLocation: SwitzerlandStadiums: Various, including St. Jakob Park, Stadion Wankdorf, Stade de Genève and moreDate: July 2 – 27Final: July 27, St. Jakob Park
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New kits from adidas, Nike and Puma have been released for the Women's Euro tournamentGrab your favourite team's kit to support throughout the gamesSearch for your team, including Italy, England, Germany and moreAvailable in sizes XS – XXL
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Buy nowRead MoreTickets
Women's Euro Tickets
Secure your Women's Euro 2025 tickets for this summer's international tournamentLocation: SwitzerlandStadiums: Various, including St. Jakob Park, Stadion Wankdorf, Stade de Genève and moreDate: July 2 – 27Final: July 27, St. Jakob Park
From
€149
Buy nowRead MoreAccommodation
Where to stay
Book hotels, apartments and accommodation across Switzerland for the Women's EurosSearch for places to stay near the stadiums, across Zurich, Basel, Bern, Geneva and moreLook for accommodation based on your dates, number of bedrooms, and budget on Booking.com
From
€49
Book nowRead MoreKits
Shop your kit
New kits from adidas, Nike and Puma have been released for the Women's Euro tournamentGrab your favourite team's kit to support throughout the gamesSearch for your team, including Italy, England, Germany and moreAvailable in sizes XS – XXL
From
€50
Buy nowRead MoreTickets
Women's Euro Tickets
Secure your Women's Euro 2025 tickets for this summer's international tournamentLocation: SwitzerlandStadiums: Various, including St. Jakob Park, Stadion Wankdorf, Stade de Genève and moreDate: July 2 – 27Final: July 27, St. Jakob Park
From
€149
Buy nowRead MoreAccommodation
Where to stay
Book hotels, apartments and accommodation across Switzerland for the Women's EurosSearch for places to stay near the stadiums, across Zurich, Basel, Bern, Geneva and moreLook for accommodation based on your dates, number of bedrooms, and budget on Booking.com
From
€49
Book nowRead MoreKits
Shop your kit
New kits from adidas, Nike and Puma have been released for the Women's Euro tournamentGrab your favourite team's kit to support throughout the gamesSearch for your team, including Italy, England, Germany and moreAvailable in sizes XS – XXL
From
€50
Buy nowRead More
Major tournaments are a great stage for players to introduce themselves to the wider world, with youngsters so often announcing themselves as stars of the future and ones to watch with performances under the highest of pressure. But one of the most heart-warming features of the 2025 European Championship has been the regularity with which long-standing icons of different nations have had their moments in the spotlight.
Lucy Bronze is a great example. The full-back enjoyed a breakout tournament when England reached the last four of the 2015 Women's World Cup and has been a key player in the run of six successive major tournament semi-finals that started, so it was fitting that she was such an inspiring figure in the remarkable comeback against Sweden in last week's quarter-finals, aged 33.
Jess Fishlock, meanwhile, is the greatest women's footballer Wales have ever produced, as well as being one of the best players in the history of the NWSL, the U.S. top-flight, but it long looked like she'd never play in a major international tournament. Thus after helping to finally drag Wales over the line in qualifying, having contemplated retirement in an emotional and often heart-breaking journey to that point, it was amazing to see her score the Dragons' first-ever goal on this stage – and provide a great assist as they bowed out against England.
But the best story of this kind during Euro 2025 has come in the form of Cristiana Girelli. Twelve years on from her senior international debut, the striker looks to be almost better than ever at 35 years old, with her goals having helped Italy put back-to-back group-stage exits at major tournaments behind them during an incredible run to the semi-finals, where they will take on the defending champions, England.
Getty ImagesIconic status
Girelli is a long-standing icon of the Italian women's game. Debuting back in 2005 for Bardolino Verona, aged 15, she would go on to represent Brescia and then Juventus, for whom she has scored 137 goals in just 206 appearances. She has 10 Serie A titles to her name, as part of 30 major honours, and was inducted into the Italian Football Hall of Fame in 2022 alongside Gianfranco Zola, Zinedine Zidane and Jose Mourinho.
Yet, perhaps one of her greatest achievements in a long and storied career is that, aged 35, she has just had one of her very best seasons. Girelli won the Serie A Golden Boot this year with her fifth-best scoring campaign in the league ever, one which helped propel Juventus back to the top of the domestic game after back-to-back titles for Roma.
“I don’t feel my age,” she told before Euro 2025, with her performances for Italy similarly exciting. Girelli scored three goals in four appearances in the Nations League at the start of this year, averaging a successful strike every 64 minutes. That form was a feature of a serious upturn in results for the Azzurre under head coach Andrea Soncin, and something that created real optimism around the national team before this tournament.
AdvertisementGetty ImagesBreaking the glass ceiling
But that optimism was cautious because, as Girelli knows well, things haven’t gone to plan for Italy in recent years. At the 2019 Women’s World Cup, she was one of the main faces of a team that reached the quarter-finals of that tournament for the first time since 1991, scoring a hat-trick against Jamaica in the group stages.
It was a run which captured the attention at home. ‘An Italy to love: Calcio discovers women’ was the headline in as television records were broken and, upon returning home, players received incredible receptions from those whose hearts they had won. “The media attention we’re getting is invaluable for the growth of women’s football in Italy,” Girelli said at the time. “We are here trying to win, but we are also here to send a strong message to society back home, that there is still so much to do.”
A lot of that work has been done in the six years since. Serie A has become a professional women’s league and has grown incredibly, now standing out as one of the best divisions in Europe. However, it coincided with surprising underperformance from the national team.
Getty ImagesBack-to-back disappointments
At Euro 2022, many expected Italy to back up the success of that World Cup and progress from a group that featured France, Belgium and Iceland. They didn’t. Then-head coach Milena Bertolini was keen to explain the disappointment, noting that it would take four or five years to "reap the benefits" of the professional era that was coming. "You can't think you can make up a 20-year gap in seven years,” she added. All that she said was fair enough, though there were questions about tactics, selection and performances that it couldn’t quite excuse.
At the 2023 World Cup, there was similar disappointment, as Italy again crashed at the first hurdle. A surprise 3-2 loss to South Africa in their final group-stage game saw their opponents progress at their expense and would result in Bertolini leaving her post. Having been at the helm during such an important point in the history of the Italian women’s game, at that 2019 World Cup, it was a sad way for her to depart, but her work remains significant.
"History is written by what has been done before,” Soncin, her successor, said last week. “We must give credit to those who were there in previous years, who, even without these possibilities, have given a boost to the movement. We are reaping the fruits."
Getty ImagesUnmatched and underrated
A lot about this Italy team has changed during that time, with just eight players left from the squad that re-established the Azzurre on the women’s football map in 2019, but it feels fitting that Girelli, now the captain, is still leading this team from the front. Scorer of the two goals that defeated Norway in the quarter-finals, her second coming in the 90th minute, the veteran is only further cementing her iconic status with her performances in Switzerland.
Cecilia Salvai described her as “an unmatched striker”, while Lucia Di Guglielmo cited her as a long-time “reference point” for her. “I remember a time during our preparations for the Euros when we were all tired and out on our feet at the end of a training session, but she was doing reps and running around more,” the defender explained. “I thought, ‘Well, this is what makes the difference’. It’s in your head, not your legs.” Elena Linari agreed, adding: “She showed during this season that it's not the age which makes the difference, but the mentality.”
“Throughout her career, she’s received less recognition than she truly deserves, both for her technical ability and her character,” Soncin said after Girelli’s match-winning brace against Norway. “There are very few like her in the box.”






