Key events
The teams!
Team news is in, and Keira Walsh makes her 100th England appearance in the team’s 499th game, with both sides looking most likely to line up in a 4-3-3:
England: Hampton; Bronze, Wubben-Moy, Morgan, Greenwood; Kendall, Walsh, Stanway; Hemp, Russo, James.
Spain: Neck; Batlle, Paredes, Mapi Leon, Carmona; Caldentey, Guijarro, Putellas; Lopez, Gonzalez, Pina.
Referee: Tess Olofsson (Sweden).
Preamble
Hello! Gird thy loins, world – it’s a hugely massively enormous World Cup qualifier!
Involved are the sides ranked first (that’ll be Spain) and fourth in the world by Fifa (no other group in League A has more than one top 10 side, notably), and the two finalists of last year’s Euros. Unlike England, downed 2-1 by Brazil in a friendly in their first game after winning that title, Spain haven’t lost since, but the two teams’ aggregate scores in six post-Euros matches – England 22-3 Opponents; Spain 14-2 Opponents (and with a much higher standard of opposition) reveal the quality of these sides.
The two teams are competing for one direct qualifying spot for next year’s finals in Brazil, with the other three sides – Iceland and Ukraine round out the group, both of them currently pointless after two matches – booted into various parts of a complicated play-off system. They’ll both want to avoid that if at all possible, and ergo would ideally win tonight. The question is whether one or indeed both of them will concentrate not on winning but on not losing.
Pre-match reading! Here’s Tom Garry’s preview:
Eight-and-a-half months after they locked horns in the final of Euro 2025, England and Spain meet again on Tuesday night in front of more than 70,000 at Wembley. This time it is in qualifiers for the Women’s World Cup, another tournament in which they met in the final last time out.
Despite the relatively brief period since the game in Basel, Spain have a noticeably fresh look with a new head coach and a crop of emerging young players. They have already won a trophy under Sonia Bermúdez, who led them to the Nations League title after replacing Montse Tomé, and, unlike England, are unbeaten since the Euros with five wins and a draw in six matches.
“They have some other players, but their DNA stays the same,” said the England head coach, Sarina Wiegman. “I don’t think that’s going to change.”
Much more here:
