BBC’s New Women’s Euros Spot Is a Rally Cry for a New Era in Sport

Get ready to remember some names.

By R. Larsson, Advertising Week

The BBC just dropped its campaign for the UEFA Women’s Euros 2025, and it’s not just a promo — it’s a pulse-check on the future of football. Titled Names Will Be Made,” the spot is a high-energy celebration of the players who are about to explode onto the scene—and a signal that women’s sports are done playing second string. They’re here to headline.

This isn’t your average sports trailer.

Directed by Molly Burdett, the film blends grit and beauty, showing girls training in the dark, pushing boundaries, and stepping into greatness. It’s cinematic. It’s personal. It’s loud with ambition. And it hits hard in all the right ways.

The vibe is pure anticipation. It’s about those electric before-the-storm moments—right before the world learns a new name, right before someone becomes a legend. There are no recycled highlight reels here. This is fresh energy, built around the idea that the next big thing in football is probably someone you’ve never heard of… yet.

And the BBC isn’t merely hyping a tournament—they’re giving it the star treatment. 25 games will be broadcast across BBC One, BBC Two, BBC iPlayer, and BBC Sport. That’s full-court coverage, no corners cut. This isn’t just inclusion—it’s investment. And it says a lot about how seriously the BBC is taking the Women’s Euros.

But beyond the screen time, this campaign is all about the feels. It’s for the girls juggling school and training. It’s for the fans who’ve been shouting into the void for more visibility. And it’s for every young player watching at home, realizing that greatness isn’t a pipe dream—it’s a path.

Women’s football is on fire right now. The 2022 tournament smashed viewership records and rewrote what the world thought women’s sport could be. And now, with Switzerland hosting the 2025 showdown, the bar is even higher—and the excitement is next-level.

“Names Will Be Made” doesn’t just promote a tournament. It taps into a cultural shift. This is about giving women the spotlight they’ve earned, the platform they deserve, and the hype they’ve waited far too long for.

It’s bold. It’s brilliant. It’s overdue.

If this is the energy we’re bringing into the Euros, one thing’s for sure: history’s not just being made—it’s being remixed.