Jonatan Giráldez Leah Williamson Fran Kirby Lucy Bronze Beth Mead International Britain Manchester Australia Canada Ireland New Zealand Nigeria county Republic soccer Sport cup as Jonatan Giráldez Leah Williamson Fran Kirby Lucy Bronze Beth Mead International Britain Manchester Australia Canada Ireland New Zealand Nigeria county Republic

Another blow for England as Fran Kirby out of World Cup

rte.ie

England forward Fran Kirby will undergo knee surgery and miss the women's World Cup, adding to a growing list of English players sidelined with knee injuries.Skipper Leah Williamson was the latest to be ruled out last month with a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament [ACL] while Beth Mead, who also ruptured her ACL in November, has not returned to action.The injury is also a blow to Chelsea, who are third in the Women's Super League, seven points behind leaders Manchester United with three games in hand."Unfortunately after a few months of rehab the decision has been made that I will require surgery on my knee," Kirby said in a statement."I have been trying my best to not have to undergo this but unfortunately my progress has been limited due to the issue in my knee."I'm absolutely gutted to announce that this means my season is over and I will not be able to make the World Cup in the summer."I'm going to be doing everything possible to be ready for the start of next season and want to wish my team-mates at Chelsea the best of luck for the rest of the season and my Lioness team-mates the best of luck for the summer."England and Barcelona defender Lucy Bronze also underwent surgery on her right knee last week but is expected to return before the end of the season after coach Jonatan Giraldez said she would be out for "just a couple of weeks".The World Cup kicks off on 20 July and will be held in Australia and New Zealand.

The Republic of Ireland are makign thei first ever appearance at the tournament. They are grouped with Australia, Canada and Nigeria in Group B. Listen to the RTÉ Soccer podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.

Related News
After Chelsea had navigated their way past Bayern Munich in 2021 to earn a place in their first Champions League final, Emma Hayes labelled her gutsy side “mentality monsters”. They went on to lose the final to Barcelona by a humbling 4-0 scoreline. However, the “mentality monsters” moniker stuck and has been reaffirmed in three back-to-back FA Cup wins and two consecutive WSL titles, with a third in sight. After the Blues beat Manchester United 1-0 to win the FA Cup at Wembley on Sunday, Hayes had a new label for her side. “What the team has become is the most flexible team,” she said. “Our team has become ‘hybrid monsters’. We can float between things in ways that takes years to master. They are so adaptable.”
There can never be any doubting of Sam Kerr. Ever. Most players would hesitate before brazenly stating that they had “never been [to Wembley] and not won a trophy” on the eve of a FA Cup final, no matter how true. Those are words that could come back to bite and haunt, but for Kerr, the queen of visualisation, there was never any doubt that she would be lifting aloft a third successive FA Cup in front of a record crowd of 77,390 fans, or that she would be the one to step up, once again, and deliver in a season where she has been so heavily relied upon.
H eading into May, the gap between the Women’s Super League leaders, Manchester United, and second-placed Chelsea was four points and United had a goal difference superior by 10. Now, with the teams preparing to face each other in Sunday’s FA Cup final at a sold-out Wembley, that gap is one point and their goal difference is level. Chelsea played an additional game and still have one in hand.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.