
Redemption and restitution: Both England and Spain look to exorcise ghosts in the Euro 2025 final
England
, the last Women's World Cup final remains a kind of open wound. The mistake by Lucy Bronze that allowed Spain's Olga Carmona to score the only goal of the game; Lauren Hemp hitting the crossbar; the opportunities not taken; the surges of momentum not rewarded; the sense of a golden inheritance slipping inexorably through their fingers.
For the players who remain, and for coach Sarina Wiegman, Sunday's
European Championship
final offers a chance for redemption.
If all this is normal and regular enough, then what is perhaps more unusual is that much of the above is also true for their victorious opponents.
Restitution, revenge, a chance to erase painful memories, a collective resolve that this moment will not be taken from them, the chance to secure a meaningful legacy: these will be the stakes for Spain in Basle, Switzerland. Winning the World Cup in 2023 was a monumental achievement for them, but was immediately tarnished by the actions of their federation. This final, by contrast, feels like more of a clean slate.
READ MORE
Spain should win. They have been the outstanding team of the tournament so far, effortlessly gifted on the ball, ruthlessly disciplined without it, adding layers of complexity to their famous passing game, defending gallantly when the situation has demanded it.
There has also been a sense of quietly building momentum to them, not just in the tournament itself but through the year as a whole: pieces falling into place, players becoming more comfortable in their roles.
But as Montse Tomé's players have consistently made clear, Spain are competing for more than trophies. The bitter legal and public battles fought with their federation, the RFEF, are part of a longer struggle for recognition and equality, for respect and dignity. After all, if the greatest moment of their careers could be so cruelly taken from them, then what ultimately was the point of it?
Alexia Putellas, Cristina Martin-Prieto, Alba Redondo and Olga Carmona of Spain celebrate beating Germany in the semi-final. Photograph: Charlotte Wilson/Getty
The 2023 World Cup was not the unifying moment for Spanish football that it could have been. For the players in New Zealand, marooned on the other side of the world, split between those who had chosen to play and those who had chosen to step away, a begrudging truce had been maintained with their disliked coach Jorge Vilda and the suits above him. It was a fragile show of unity, maintained only by their quest for a first major trophy. Once it had been secured, all hell broke loose.
In hindsight, the unwanted kiss that
Luis Rubiales
, then Spanish FA president, planted on the lips of Jenni Hermoso was simply the trigger. The unresolved issues and grievances within Spanish football had lain unresolved for decades, and probably would not have been purged in any other way. The actions of Rubiales himself were egregious enough; what really hurt was the way the mechanisms of power and influence instinctively mobilised to protect him.
Hermoso was urged to appear in a video publicly defending him; after she refused, a statement insisting the kiss was consensual was written and published by the federation without her knowledge. 'While the world has seen this, attitudes like this have been part of our team's daily life for years,' she wrote on social media.
When Rubiales finally resigned in an interview with Piers Morgan, having blamed 'false feminism' for the storm of protest against him, he did so not out of genuine remorse or contrition but – as he admitted – out of a desire not to hamper Spain's bid for the 2030 men's World Cup. A Spanish court found him guilty of sexual assault in February and, after ignoring an appeal from prosecutors who sought a jail sentence, fined him €10,800.
Luis Rubiales, then Spanish FA president, after Spain's Women's World Cup final victory in 2023. Photograph: Isabel Infantes/PA
Has anything really changed? Rubiales is gone, as are many of the figures around him when he was at the RFEF. Vilda was sacked after the tournament, but will take charge of Morocco in Saturday's Women's Africa Cup of Nations final. But the moment they shared and the platform it could have provided has gone forever.
Keira Walsh was a Barcelona player at the time and saw first hand how the Lionesses effect of 2022 summarily failed to materialise in Spain in 2023. 'The way our league jumped after we won the Euros, if you compare it to Spain it probably wasn't the same,' she said this week. 'After the game there was a lot of controversy and I don't think enough spotlight on how incredibly they played.'
But of course the enduring excellence of this Spanish generation is that it can always generate more opportunities. Bronze remembers playing training games at Barcelona and countering 'like, clones and clones and clones of these amazing, technical, intelligent players'. And the 11 who will take the field against England on Sunday are the very best of them.
It is not just the World Cup fallout for which Spain are trying to atone. Twelve months later they travelled to Paris as the overwhelming favourites for Olympic gold, only to be stunned 4-2 by Brazil in the semi-finals after a performance littered with defensive errors. They didn't even win bronze, Germany beating them in the third-place playoff. Goalkeeper Cata Coll was inconsolable afterwards, but here has talked about how 'life has given us a second chance'.
This is a better team than 12 months ago, arguably a better team than two years ago, 'like a steamroller' as Carmona describes them, albeit with an occasional habit of getting stuck in neutral. Capitalising on these fleeting passages is England's best hope of upsetting the odds, picking their moments to attack, using their press, their physicality and their technical ability to rattle Spain off their game.
And perhaps for a country for so long indifferent to women's football, where the sport was banned until 1980, where the women's team have often been treated as an afterthought, Spain can finally enjoy their moment in the spotlight. There are big screens being erected across the country from the Parque de Berlin in Madrid to the Plaza del Pilar in Gran Canaria. This is a team united and content again, longing above all for a chance to write their own story. – Guardian
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Irish Sun
11 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Championship away end to be EMPTY live on Sky Sports with fans set to launch furious protest
QUIET CORNER Championship away end to be EMPTY live on Sky Sports with fans set to launch furious protest THE Sheffield Wednesday Supporters Trust has announced plans to protest against club owner Dejphon Chansiri at Sunday's opening Championship fixture at Leicester. Chansiri is under mounting pressure to sell the club as a spiralling financial crisis left players and staff unpaid on time last week for a third successive month. Advertisement 2 Sheffield Wednesday fans are set to boycott the start of Sunday's match against Leicester at the King Power Stadium in protest of the club's ownership Credit: Getty 2 Owner Dejphon Chansiri is refusing to sell the spiralling club for less than £100m Credit: PA The Trust has called on fans to delay entry to their seats until five minutes after kick-off, while a large banner will be displayed in "a visibly empty away end" at the King Power Stadium. Details of "stronger action" at the Owls' first home game of the season against Stoke on August 16 will be announced soon, the Trust said. A Trust statement read: "With (Sunday's) match live on Sky Sports, a visibly empty away end will highlight the seriousness of our club's plight to a national audience. "An additional impactful, visual large-scale display has been arranged for the day, which we hope will make a huge statement. Advertisement READ MORE IN FOOTBALL GART TO GO Man Utd fans demand Ruben Amorim sells £50m star after shocker against Everton "While we are aware stronger action is required this season, we do not feel this is the correct fixture, the opportunity for nationwide coverage is too good to miss. "Further details for stronger action at our first home game against Stoke City, will be provided very soon. "We thank supporters for their incredible backing in these difficult times." Chansiri, who bought the club for a reported £37.5million from Milan Mandaric in 2015, is trying to sell up and recently confirmed he turned down a £40million bid, while talks with various other interested parties have stalled. Advertisement CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS The club has been sanctioned by the EFL for various financial breaches since 2017 and are currently under three embargoes relating to late payments to HMRC, unpaid debts over transfer fees and failing to pay players and staff on time. Under a registration embargo, Wednesday are unable to sign players, including free agents, in this summer's window or the following two in 2026. Sheffield Wednesday star Jamal Lowe breaks silence on threat to strike as Championship club's crisis deepens Staff wages were paid late in March, May, June and July, while a behind-closed-doors friendly against Burnley on Saturday was cancelled after players refused to play. Advertisement Josh Windass and Michael Smith had their contracts terminated by mutual consent this summer to allow them to join Wrexham and Preston and it has been reported that defender Max Lowe has handed in his notice. There is growing concern within the EFL over whether the Owls will be able to play their first game of the season, while the club has also been forced to close the North Stand at Hillsborough after the Safety Advisory Group refused to issue a safety certificate until renovation work had been completed.


Irish Independent
29 minutes ago
- Irish Independent
Euro draws: Shelbourne face potential rematch against Linfield
Two all-island clashes could happen in European competition this month as Shelbourne and Shamrock Rovers could potentially play cross-border rivals Linfield and Larne.


Irish Times
37 minutes ago
- Irish Times
England beaten in thriller as India secure series draw with six-run victory
India completed one of the most dramatic Test match victories ever seen on Monday at The Oval, squaring the series with a stunning six-run victory after Chris Woakes attempted to carry England over the line with a dislocated shoulder. England arrived on the final day of a classic Test summer needing 35 runs to complete a remarkable chase of 374 but were blown away on a morning of unbearable tension and true sporting drama. They lost four for 28 as Jamie Smith, Jamie Overton, Josh Tongue and Gus Atkinson succumbed to searing pressure at the Oval. Woakes, who is expected to be out for several months with the injury he sustained in the field on Friday, answered his country's call by coming out at number 11 to try and finish the job. READ MORE Holding the bat in hand, with his left arm bundled up in a sling under his sweater, he joined the fray with 17 runs still needed and was grimacing in pain throughout his brief stay. In the end he did not face a ball as Mohammed Siraj clean bowled Atkinson to secure a sensational result and a 2-2 series draw. The drama unfolded across 57 unforgettable minutes that tested the courage, character and cricketing will of both sides to the limit. Had Woakes played his part in edging England to their target, batting left-handed and against all medical good sense, it would have gone down in the pantheon of great moments at this famous ground. As it was it a near miss. Mohammed Siraj celebrates the match-winning wicket of Gus Atkinson with India wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel on day five of the fifth Test at The Oval. Photograph:It was also a fitting conclusion to see the inaugural Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy shared between two teams who have pushed each other to the physical and psychological depths over the course of seven gripping weeks. Ben Stokes's team may not travel for this winter's Ashes as favourites but they will go having been pushed all the way in a five-match marathon that has challenged them like never before. Even so, they will reflect with regret on squandering a winning position of 301 for three on the third afternoon, with Joe Root and Harry Brook both sitting pretty on centuries. Before bad light and rain halted play on Sunday, England's scoring had ground to a complete halt with the ball zipping around merrily and beating the bat at will. The rollercoaster continued to throw up surprises on Monday as Overton hit the first two balls to the boundary. Prasidh Krishna's first ball was short but a full-blooded pull shot still came as a surprise given the precarious nature of the situation. The second was a win for the bowler, jagging into the inside edge and skimming past leg stump, but the result was the same. Having shaved the target down to 27, the battle switched to Siraj versus Smith. This time it was India who landed a blow, Smith's feet in cement as he wafted outside off to his first two balls then nicked the third. There was a brief delay as the umpires checked the dismissal but it was a clean nick and safe catch from Dhruv Jurel, sparking riotous celebrations among the large contingent of away fans. The tension was almost unbearable as Atkinson arrived in the middle and came within a couple of inches of a golden duck. It was a horrible welcome delivery from Siraj, who was convinced the ball was carrying to KL Rahul at second slip. In apparent slow motion, it hit the turf agonisingly in front of his outstretched hands. India's Dhruv Jurel hugs Ravindra Jadeja after the win over England at The Oval. Photograph: Henry Nicholls/AFP via Getty Images England's insistence of playing at everything continued, a high-risk response that brought several more fresh-air shots and near misses as well as seven runs before the next gut punch. It was Siraj again, ducking one in and pounding the front pad. An ear-splitting appeal appeared to be falling on deaf ears but umpire Kumar Dharmasena waited an age before slowing raising his finger. Overton had already charged through to the non-striker's end seeking a leg bye and signalled for DRS as he ran through the crease line. Ball-tracking showed it clipping leg stump on umpire's call, ushering in another explosive reaction in the stands as the 20 remaining runs began to feel like five times as many. They eked out three more as Atkinson attempted to protect Tongue from the strike but he was soon exposed, Krishna railing a full ball through his defences to scatter the stumps. That meant only one thing: Woakes would need to answer the call. He came down the steps to a rousing reception, received a pat on the back from Rahul, and began his mission impossible. Atkinson decided playing for time was not an option and made an audacious move, swinging for the fences at Siraj and smashing him high and handsome towards long-off. It carried to Akash Deep but was travelling furiously and he fumbled it for a six. The game of cat and mouse now began. Siraj tossed the last ball of the over wide in the channel, Atkinson missed but set off instantly anyway. Jurel missed an underarm run-out to win the match as Woakes scrambled through in serious pain, leaving 10 to win. Atkinson knew he had to get things done quickly, but it was Siraj's story to finish as he rattled the stumps to complete a five-for.