Lucia Kendall found the net within six minutes of just her second England start.
“She celebrated as if she had won the Champions League,” noted England manager Sarina Wiegman with a smile.
And for Lucia Kendall, it was a near-equivalent experience.
This comment came as Wiegman spoke about the young midfielder’s elated reaction to her maiden England goal – six minutes into a triumph over Ghana at St Mary's Stadium.
“They are still doing some treatment on the grass!” she quipped, in reference to Kendall’s perfect knee slide.
Rising to her feet within her celebrating colleagues, the young player showed an expression of utter disbelief.
Kendall was “part of the furniture” at Southampton – a club where she had been for ten seasons, coming through their academy and playing 103 games before moving to Villa in July.
Therefore, scoring at St Mary's upon her return and during just her third international match felt extraordinarily special.
“To do it here, where I was raised, was an immensely special moment. This place made me into the player I am,” Kendall remarked.
“It seemed destined to happen. It was so special. I got flooded with emotion really.”
While Southampton played a key role in her development, a life-altering choice at 15 set her on her path.
The gifted youngster was also a avid cricketer – her dad Will played for Hampshire – but eventually had to choose between the sports just as she was earning a place in Southampton's first-team squad. She chose football.
“It was an interesting one. There was no time for me to do both anymore,” Kendall said in a October media conference.
“Growing up, I had a passion for cricket. The decision was genuinely tough. I went back and forth, but when the time came, I understood I enjoy football a bit more.”
Growing up admiring Chelsea and Frank Lampard’s goal-getting midfield exploits, Kendall is embarking on her own path with comparable attacking output.
Balancing her football at Southampton with university studies in psychology showcased the focus and ambition needed to excel.
The club did their utmost to keep her, but with her deal up, Villa seized the opportunity to introduce her to the top flight.
Her rapid progress has seen her become a WSL regular and an England international in a short space of time.
“She shows consistency and that's not easy when you just come into a new environment and into the WSL with Aston Villa,” admitted Wiegman.
“Things have gone so quickly so fast, but she just keeps up her levels and shows she is a good player - and that is impressive.”
Kendall certainly enjoyed herself at St Mary's, striking the crossbar later in the first half and almost teeing up Villa team-mate Missy Bo Kearns for a goal, before Alessia Russo added a second with an injury-time penalty.
She was substituted after an hour to a roar from the home crowd and the excited voice of the stadium announcer boasting that she was “Southampton's very own”.
Having scored 29 times for Southampton during her long tenure, she reflected, “My early exposure to senior football there from 16 provided a solid base.
“It was the consistent trust they showed in me as a player and the belief. I felt like I was ready for [the next step].
“I knew that I had to go in [to England] and prove why I should be playing at this level. The speed of the game is quicker and it was like going up a division.”
Prior to her 2025 transfer, Kendall played 103 games for Southampton.
Her seamless transition to the international stage has led to praise for her innate midfield qualities and natural demeanour.
While mindful of protecting her young star, Wiegman is unworried due to Kendall’s grounded and focused attitude.
In her early interactions with the press, she emphasized her willingness to fulfill any role for the benefit of the team.
According to Russo, Kendall’s assimilation was so smooth it seemed she’d was a veteran presence.
“{This team's just gone on to win back-to