The Prince of Wales, a renowned football fan who follows Aston Villa, is set to depart the UK for Switzerland as he cheers on the Lionesses tomorrow.
The Prince of Wales, a renowned football fan who follows Aston Villa, is set to depart the UK for Switzerland as he cheers on the Lionesses tomorrow.
Prince William is preparing to depart the UK after Kate Middleton’s cancer update. The Prince of Wales, a renowned football fan who follows Aston Villa, is set to depart the UK for Switzerland as he cheers on the Lionesses tomorrow.
William will depart the UK to Basel, Switzerland, to cheer on the Lionesses as they face Spain the Euro 2025 final on Sunday. “Brilliant performance @Lionesses! One game from glory,” Prince William wrote on Twitter/X after the semi-final.
Buckingham Palace has confirmed William will be in attendance – after the Band of the Grenadier Guards assembled on the palace grounds to play a rendition of Three Lions to send Wills off to Europe this week.
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“Fever is gripping the nation as we prepare for the UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 Cup Final on Sunday,” a Royal Family post confirmed. They added: “This morning the Band of the Grenadier Guards were certainly feeling football focused… will it be England or Spain to lift the trophy?”
Wills leaves England after the Princess of Wales has spoken candidly about the life-changing long-term challenges of recovering after chemotherapy, as she visited a hospital in Essex.
Catherine said during treatment “you put on a sort of brave face” but afterwards it can still feel “really difficult”.
She told patients at the hospital about life after cancer treatment: “You’re not able to function normally at home as you perhaps once used to.”
She said: “You put on a sort of brave face, stoicism through treatment, treatment’s done – then it’s like ‘I can crack on, get back to normal’.
“But actually the phase afterwards is really difficult, you’re not necessarily under the clinical team any longer, but you’re not able to function normally at home as you perhaps once used to,” said the princess.
“But it’s life-changing for anyone, through first diagnosis or post treatment and things like that, it is a life-changing experience both for the patient but also for the families as well.
“And actually it sometimes goes unrecognised, you don’t necessarily, particularly when it’s the first time, appreciate how much impact it is going to have.”
