England very optimistic Leah Williamson will be fit for semi-final โ€“ Esme Morgan


England defender Esme Morgan insisted the Lionesses were โ€œvery optimisticโ€ captain Leah Williamson would be fit to play in Tuesdayโ€™s Euro 2025 semi-final against Italy after she was forced off in their dramatic last-eight triumph over Sweden.

Williamson rolled her ankle and left Thursdayโ€™s contest in the first period of extra-time โ€“ after goals from Lucy Bronze and Michelle Agyemang snatched the Lionesses a late 2-2 draw after 90 minutes โ€“ before they booked a last-four spot following a dramatic penalty shootout.

Morgan was introduced as part of a 70th-minute triple change and is prepared to play any role for the defending champions in Geneva โ€“ including stepping in for the skipper, if necessary.

But, she stressed: โ€œWe are very optimistic that Leah will be available. She seemed in very high spirits this morning, and I want whatโ€™s best for the team and thatโ€™s absolutely having our captain on the pitch for us.

โ€œThe same as every single game, Iโ€™m going to be prepared to play if Iโ€™m needed. Iโ€™ll know the role and just be absolutely ready to train at at high level over the next few days, but weโ€™re very optimistic Leah will be fine.โ€

England boss Sarina Wiegman revealed after the Sweden victory that Williamson would be assessed on Friday, though no further updates were yet provided on the captainโ€™s status ahead of what will be Englandโ€™s sixth-consecutive major tournament semi-final.

Williamson was spotted in a boot and using crutches immediately after the match, which was understood to have been a precautionary measure.

Morgan said her mother was โ€œsobbingโ€ when she came on for her first major tournament appearance, tasked with delivering a now-viral note to Bronze and Williamson she swears she did not read, suspecting it simply contained the formation but joking later on her Instagram account that it read โ€œsave us GOATโ€, in reference to Bronze.

And thatโ€™s what the seven-time major tournament veteran ultimately did, when she sent what became Englandโ€™s winning penalty โ€“ with their seventh attempt โ€“ down the middle, before slamming the ball down in celebration.

โ€œI donโ€™t think (how important Bronze is) can be put into words,โ€ said Morgan. โ€œSheโ€™s such an incredible leader on this team. Weโ€™re all inspired by her mentality.

โ€œSheโ€™s a freak, really. She has so much passion, energy, fire and she infects everyone else with it. That note might as well have said that, because apparently thatโ€™s what she read on it.โ€

There was, admitted Morgan, a fleeting moment, when England were 2-0 down at the end of the first half, that she entertained the possibility their campaign could be coming to an end.

โ€œI thought, โ€˜Iโ€™ve not packed anything. My wardrobes are full right now. Iโ€™ve not got anything in my suitcases readyโ€™,โ€ added Morgan.

โ€œBut I really had a sense throughout the game, even when we were down, that it wasnโ€™t our time to go.

โ€œI think sometimes you just have a sense of calm, which, I canโ€™t explain why itโ€™s there, but just a relief, really, that weโ€™re not going to let this happen.

โ€œI always had faith that we were going to be able to turn it around and thankfully that happened.โ€

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