Hosts Switzerland beaten by Norway in their Women's Euro opener
Switzerland took the lead against Norway but fell to a 2-1 defeat on home soil after scoring an own goal on the opening day of the Women's Euro 2025 championship on Wednesday, with Norwegian captain Ada Hegerberg netting the equaliser and missing a penalty.
The hosts had plenty of opportunities to grab what would have been a famous victory but the Norwegians dug deep to snatch a narrow win, their third over the Swiss by a single goal in 2025.
🇳🇴😤#WEURO2025 pic.twitter.com/ktJWpH5SCd
— UEFA Women's EURO 2025 (@WEURO2025) July 2, 2025
Having lost to the Norwegians twice in the Nations League this year, the home side dominated the opening 45 minutes and Geraldine Reuteler came close to giving them the lead in the 24th minute with a shot that cannoned back off the crossbar before Nadine Riesen struck four minutes later to send the St. Jakob-Park Stadium into raptures.
Riesen reacted quickly to an attack that broke down, rattling the ball past Vilde Boe Risa and off the near post into the net to send the Swiss fans at St Jakob-Park into raptures.
What a moment 😍#WEURO2025 pic.twitter.com/9cM3ROXsGu
— UEFA Women's EURO 2025 (@WEURO2025) July 2, 2025
However, it was a different story after the break and it was Norway's Hegerberg who turned the page.
After barely featuring in the first half, she levelled nine minutes into the second with an emphatic header from a corner that briefly silenced the home crowd and four minutes later, under pressure from Hegerberg, Switzerland's Julia Stierli turned a low cross from Caroline Graham Hansen into her own net.
Reuteler was sparkling throughout for the Swiss but despite a number of golden chances, she could not get the goal both she and her team deserved, and she conceded a penalty which Hegerberg missed in the 70th minute.
Switzerland were awarded a spot-kick of their own that was overturned after a VAR review and, as the Swiss poured forward, the Norwegians hung on grimly for a victory that puts them top of Group A, with Finland second after their 1-0 win over Iceland earlier in the day.
"This was important, this means a lot for us... the goal was euphoria for me but it was damn important for the team as well," Hegerberg told Norwegian broadcaster TV2.
"It is very strong of us to manage to turn it around. It may not happen in the prettiest way. We were told forcefully during the break that we did not run enough, then we saw two clips, a defensive and offensive, about how to take them, I think we managed to do that," vice-captain Graham Hansen said.
Swiss coach Pia Sundhage was unhappy that her side did not manage to get more out of the game.
"I think it's very heavy, a defeat like that. Our game plan was good and we even scored a goal... today it's tough but tomorrow we'll see a smile and start working," she told broadcaster SVT.
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