The Guardian
·8 Oktober 2025
Baltimore penalty spares Chelsea blushes after Twente threaten WCL shock

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsThe Guardian
·8 Oktober 2025
The Champions League is Chelsea’s white whale. They want it. They want it badly. However, their title credentials took a knock in the Netherlands, a 1-1 draw against Twente far from the ideal start to a tournament they long to dominate.
Despite Chelsea’s dominance in possession it was the home team that took the lead through their captain, Danique van Ginkel, before Sandy Baltimore converted from the spot for the equaliser.
“It’s not a good result at all,” said Sonia Bompastor, speaking to Disney+. “We wanted to start the campaign with three points and a victory. Tonight, out of possession I am quite happy with the performance, even if we conceded a goal. In possession, when you play this game you need to show more desire especially when you are in the box.”
Every piece of silverware is valuable but, for the team that has repeatedly won it all domestically, the desire for the final piece of the puzzle is strong. It eluded them during Emma Hayes’s tenure, defeat to Barcelona in the 2021 final the closest they came. Three back-to-back semi-final defeats to Barcelona, including losing 8-2 on aggregate to the Catalan giants last season, have stung each and every time.
Bompastor flexed the muscles of her squad for the trip to Enschede, with only four of the team that started their 1-1 draw with Manchester United on Friday night on the pitch, but it proved costly as they started their Champions League campaign in a new era of the competition – the group stage replaced by a league phase akin to the men’s tournament.
These two teams met in last season’s group stage, Chelsea inflicting a 9-2 aggregate defeat on the Dutch side. Van Ginkel suggested things would be different one year on. “I hope we’ve matured a bit and can address what we did wrong,” she said.
At De Grolsch Veste that maturity showed. Twente did not try to match Chelsea’s press or compete one-on-one; they were an efficient unit, frustrating the visitors, who threw wave after wave of attacks at the home team, the Belgium goalkeeper Diede Lemey doing her bit to thwart the Women’s Super League leaders.
Afterwards, Van Ginkel said: “We made big, big steps. We fought as a team, the plan was good. We defended a lot but I am really proud.”
It was the home side who took the lead, having twice failed to make the most of opportunities to do so beforehand. Chelsea would rue their own profligacy when Jill Roord’s cutback found Van Ginkel and the captain shifted on to her right foot and lashed past Livia Peng – the goalkeeper handed a start ahead of the Yashin Trophy winner Hannah Hampton.
Chelsea kept up their dominance. They may not have delivered thrilling performances this term but they have delivered results and in the Netherlands they continued to fuel that narrative as they launched a comeback. Lynn Groenewegen’s step on the foot of Guro Reiten gave the visiting team a penalty, and they could arguably have had one moments earlier when a late boot went into Erin Cuthbert’s shin. Baltimore converted to level the scores.
A winner eluded them and frustrations will be high. “In the first half we had multiple situations in the box and we had 18 crosses, only six times we were first on the ball. This is not enough when you play a Champions League game,” said Bompastor.
Chelsea have opportunities to steady the ship against Paris FC and St Pölten before they play their old foes Barcelona, Roma and then the two-time champions Wolfsburg, but there is work to be done.
Mentality will be “crucial”, said Bompastor. “Sometimes you talk a lot about tactics, but the main thing in football is to have the right mentality, the right intensity when you have the ball. We tried and tonight it’s tough, but we need to take the learnings from this game.”
Header image: [Photograph: Leiting Gao/SPP/Shutterstock]