England’s football ladies don’t care about the royal rule: let yourself be pressured, Prince William! | entertainment
English footballers mock the royal referee |
Allow yourself to squeeze, William!
Royal protocol? In these seconds whistling – do not bother.
Sunday evening, 8:32 pm (German time) at Wembley: Germany lose 2-1 after extra time and one non-match. Hand penalty kick against England. As tears of sadness fall on our footballers, British footballers are in triumph. They are the European champions!
And with all the fruits of happiness, sports stars forgot an important royal rule. They hugged and hugged the heir to the throne, Prince William (40), madly. In fact, this is forbidden. Oops!
The Queen’s grandson initially watched the European Championship final at Wembley from the stands with the eyes of an eagle and was delighted with a team like Paul when the final whistle blew. Then these scenes: William – the head of the English Football Association – presented the trophy to the “H” team.
Footballers got too close to the royal anyway. And according to the motto “If a real prince stood before me …”, I hugged him. And William called them with great laughter and participated cheerfully.
Pictures? A wonderfully delightful breach of protocol. Because the Queen and her heirs should never be incubated. In those seconds it was all forgotten.
The heart of every British fan trembled when the “lionesses” ran towards William one by one. Even the rational-headed William was afflicted with all the joy.
The Queen’s grandson and daughter Princess Charlotte, 7, cheered on the English women in a clip just hours before the final. “We both wish the ducks the best of luck tonight. You played really well in the tournament and we always cheered you on.” Little Charlotte added, “Good luck! I hope you win!”
So William kept his fingers crossed – and the players ended up holding him.
By the way, if you were wondering where the Duchess Kate (40) was on Sunday evening: William’s wife moved away from the legendary Wembley Stadium and went sailing. There was a simple reason: It was a job appointment.
Kate raced in the English Channel with a British sailing team. Wearing a wetsuit, she finished before Team New Zealand at sea off Plymouth on Olympic champion Ben Inslees’ F50 Foil Catamaran. Thousands of fans watched the friendly competition from the beach on Sunday.
The Duchess was in the port city in southwest England as patron of the 1851 Trust. Helps young people aged 11-16 gain experience in science, technology, and engineering.
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