‘Like a Champions League win’ - Kendall’s special night for England
Lucia Kendall hit the net within six minutes of just her second England start.
“She reacted like a Champions League winner,” remarked England coach Sarina Wiegman with a grin.
For Lucia Kendall, the feeling was comparable.
This comment came as Wiegman recalled the young midfielder’s ecstatic reaction to her maiden England goal – during the opening stages of a 2-0 victory over Ghana at St Mary's Stadium.
“The ground staff might need to repair that turf!” she quipped, in reference to Kendall’s immaculate knee slide.
Getting up from her slide, Kendall looked around with an amazed expression and a huge grin.
A Scripted Moment at a Familiar Ground
Having been “an integral part” of Southampton for a decade, where she came up through the youth ranks to play over a century of games, her summer switch to Villa was a major move.
Therefore, scoring at St Mary's upon her return and during just her third international match felt extraordinarily special.
“It was a truly special moment to achieve this here, in my hometown. This place shaped the player I am,” Kendall said.
“It seemed destined to happen. It was so special. I got consumed by emotion really.”
A Meteoric Ascent
Southampton laid the groundwork, yet a formative decision made when she was 15 shaped her destiny.
The gifted youngster was also a keen cricketer – her dad Will played for Hampshire – but eventually had to choose between the sports just as she was breaking into Southampton's first-team squad. She opted for football.
“It presented a dilemma. Juggling both became impossible,” Kendall explained in a October media conference.
“I loved playing cricket growing up. It was a really difficult decision. I went back and forth, but when the time came, I understood I enjoy football a bit more.”
A Chelsea supporter, her childhood hero was the prolific England midfielder Frank Lampard, and Kendall’s early career is following that goalscoring trend.
Balancing her football at Southampton with university studies in psychology demonstrated the discipline and ambition needed to excel.
The second-tier club retained her for as long as they could, but when her contract expired in the summer, Villa pounced to put her in the Women's Super League spotlight.
Her meteoric rise has seen her become a WSL regular and an England international in a short space of time.
“Displaying consistency is challenging for any new arrival in the WSL, but she has managed it,” noted Wiegman.
“The pace of her rise has been breathtaking, yet she maintains her performance standard, proving her quality impressively.”
Her performance was eye-catching; she struck the woodwork and nearly crafted another chance, preceding Russo’s spot-kick.
Her substitution on the hour mark was met with a resounding reception from fans and an announcer proudly declaring her local roots.
Kendall scored 29 goals for the club in more than a decade of service and added: “Being at Southampton for so long, I played regular senior football from the age of 16 and that was incredibly beneficial.
“It was the consistent trust they showed in me as a player and the belief. I felt like I was ready for [the next step].
“I understood the need to justify my selection at international level, where the tempo is higher, akin to moving up a league.”
Acknowledgment of Her Football Intelligence
Kendall’s time at Southampton concluded after 103 outings in 2025.
At the highest level, she has appeared comfortable, described as a gifted midfielder who “gets it”.
Wiegman is eager to protect her, saying the media can play a role in that and so can Villa, but she has no concerns because of how “humble” Kendall conducts herself.
Days after being called up by the Lionesses for the first time, Kendall was sitting in front of the media saying she was eager to impress, but also understood the need for the team's greater good and whatever role she needed to play in that.
According to Russo, Kendall’s integration was so smooth it seemed she’d been part of the group for ages.
“{This team's just gone on to win back-to