BETH MEAD’S former coach, Andy Cook, has hailed the “standout” star as England prepare to go for glory in the Euro 2022 final against Germany on Sunday.

Now manager at Nottingham Forest’s women’s side, Cook coached the England and Arsenal winger during her six years at Middlesbrough’s Centre of Excellence, before she secured a move to Sunderland in 2011.

After beating Sweden 4-0 in the semi-finals, the chance of an inaugural Euro victory is at stake for England when they face eight-time European champions Germany at Wembley.

Mead has been a pivotal part of Sarina Wiegman’s squad since the Dutchwoman took over in September 2021 and has continued to shine at this summer’s tournament, scoring six goals and providing five assists so far, but her success comes as no surprise to Cook.

“She was standout, she was a standout player then in the Under-14s, she was one of the older players in terms of the second year in that age group, but she was one of the standout players,” said Cook. “It was a case of trying to set the environment up so she could kind of excel really, you’ve got a group of 16 players, two goalkeepers, 14 outfield players, and ultimately you’re having to stretch and challenge Beth, while also making sure that those who maybe aren’t at her level are also getting a right challenge as well.

“A lot of the work was obviously trying to extend Beth’s quality while also helping everybody else out.”

The Whitby-born forward, who was raised in the small village of Hinderwell, spent six years with Sunderland Ladies before swapping the North-East for north London with a move to Arsenal in 2017 and has cemented herself as a key goalscorer and assist-maker with the Gunners.

Last season in the Women’s Super League, Mead scored 11 goals and provided eight assists, and her talent has always been evident according to Cook, who fondly reminisced about one of her best performances with Middlesbrough.

He said: “We played against North Yorkshire Centre of Excellence, Beth’s got six (goals) that day, and I think I’ve said this before for people like my dad, for example, who doesn’t really watch women’s football or doesn’t really know much about it, if you mention a male player he’ll understand the link.

“So I said back in the day she was similar to Thierry Henry in that she’d play up front, but float out to the left, pick the ball up and she would then run at the defence, cut inside and then invariably hit it with the inside of her foot and it would curl into the far post.

“In this one particular game, she’s picked up the ball, she’s literally done that six times – she’s literally ran at the defence, cut inside, got into the box and curled it in.

“I remember being stood there and, this is bad probably saying it out loud, but you’re almost laughing because it was like this almost seems too easy for her and yet this is meant to be the best of the North-East and it was too easy.”

Mead opened her account at the tournament with a lobbed shot against Austria before following up with a hat-trick in England’s 8-0 thrashing of Norway and one against Northern Ireland in Group A.

She scored the first of four against Sweden on Tuesday, meaning she is now tied with Alexandra Popp in the race for the tournament’s Golden Boot after the Wolfsburg striker put two past France to send Germany into the final.

“Those players that end up winning those kinds of awards are usually the very, very best,” Cook added. “From that shy girl that we saw as a 13, 14, 15-year-old to be doing what she’s doing is unbelievable.”