Evening Standard
·7 August 2023
Evening Standard
·7 August 2023
E
ngland hung on with ten women against Nigeria and then won on penalties, and their goalkeeper Mary Earps had a big part to play in the victory.
The Lionesses’ number one had already reached legendary status for her heroics in helping the team win last year’s Euros. But it was on the back of a tough period for the Manchester United number one, who had been at the point of giving up the game.
Earps will be a key figure once more for the Lionesses as they move forward to face either Jamaica or Colombia in the semi-finals.
This is why Earps has become indispensable for club and country.
Not literally, but the Manchester United goalkeeper went through a rough time.
“I was down and out,” she told GQ. Having played for several clubs up to 2019, she signed for the Red Devils on the back of a World Cup campaign where she was the third choice.
But Man U could only give her a salary that was beneath what she could afford to live on, and she soon also found herself dropped from the national side.
“There was no way my career was going to be resurrected. It was dead and gone. Run over 3,000 times and trampled by a million elephants.”
England’s manager recalled Earps to the squad in 2021, and she took over from Karen Bardsley as the number one goalkeeper.
Earps played her first match since 2019 in September 2021 and has not lost her place since.
“I’m very ambitious about wanting to push myself to reach my absolute maximum potential and change the landscape of female goalkeeping. You know, just small goals,” she told GQ.
Earlier in 2023, she was named Fifa’s best goalkeeper in the world following her exploits at Euro 2022 when she kept four clean sheets to help England to the final.
And then, in the final, it was Earps who made a fingertip save against Germany as the Lionesses brought football home.
The 30-year-old is known for pushing herself to do her best but also for maintaining a sense of humour.
The goalie told GQ that “I’m very much a goofball” and maybe that was reflected in her post-victory celebrations when she climbed onto her manager’s desk and danced to Three Lions with her teammates, forming a conga line behind her.
She has told Vogue: "A lot has changed since our Euros win, including the profile of the game.
“I’m trying to adjust to and enjoy the attention that comes with success. Not that I would have it any other way."
When not playing football, partying or travelling - she also has an interest in the wider work world and has gained a degree in information management and business studies.
Earps is a lot of fun to follow on social media. On TikTok, she has 644,000 followers - where she is seen pranking teammates and messing around a training ground.
Another insight into her life through social media is her love for travel, as Earps has been pictured in Spain, Greece and other picturesque places.