Spain celebrate Women’s World Cup at home with Carmona remembering her late father

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Spain women's national football team's players celebrate on stage their 2023 World Cup victory in Madrid on Monday. Spain won the 2023 Women's World Cup final after defeating England at Stadium Australia in Sydney on Aug. 20, 2023. (AFP)
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Spain women's national football team's players lift Olga Carmona as they celebrate on stage their 2023 World Cup victory in Madrid Monday. (AP)
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Updated 22 August 2023
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Spain celebrate Women’s World Cup at home with Carmona remembering her late father

  • Carmona and her teammates  paraded on an open-air bus past some of Madrid’s most iconic sites, dancing and waving to fans who lined up along the streets of the capital
  • The 23-year-old Real Madrid player was named the final’s most valuable player and became the first player since American Carli Lloyd in 2015 to score in a World Cup semifinal and final

MADRID: Spain celebrated their Women’s World Cup title at home with Olga Carmona being thrown up into the air by her teammates in front of thousands of fans who welcomed the newly crowned champions on Monday.

Carmona, who scored the winning goal in Sunday’s final against England, participated in the celebrations despite being told after the match that her father had died following an illness. Her family decided to wait until the match was over to inform Carmona.

“Today is a very special day for the entire country, but it’s also a bit complicated for me,” Carmona told the fans who greeted the players a day after La Roja’s 1-0 win over England in Australia.

“Yesterday was a day of mixed emotions for me,” she said. “At one point it was the best day of my life, but then it became the worst. I’m really moved to be able to offer this joy for the entire country. Now you have the star that you all wanted so much, and not only the one that we will carry on our chests, but also all the ones that are in the sky and that accompanied us.”

Carmona had been thrown up in the air by her teammates shortly after she entered the stage prepared for the team’s celebrations in Madrid. Fans chanted her name repeatedly, “Olga, Olga, Olga...”

Carmona’s father was ill and died while her mother and other relatives traveled to Australia to watch her in the final. The 23-year-old Real Madrid player was named the final’s most valuable player and became the first player since American Carli Lloyd in 2015 to score in a World Cup semifinal and final.

Carmona and her teammates earlier paraded on an open-air bus past some of Madrid’s most iconic sites, dancing and waving to fans who lined up along the streets of the capital carrying Spain flags and wearing the nation’s red-and-yellow colors.

The players arrived at the celebration spot near midnight local time, some three hours after their plane had landed. A DJ, local musicians and other attractions were in place to entertain fans as they waited for the players at the Madrid Rio park.

The celebrations ended some four hours later with confetti being sprinkled onto the stage and players, staff and fans singing “We Are The Champions.”

During the charter flight to Madrid, players celebrated and chanted together with the World Cup trophy. Captain Ivana Andres gave a speech on the passenger address system. The flight also included federation officials, sponsors, and journalists.

A Spain flag was waved outside a plane window at Adolfo Suarez Madrid-Barajas. A couple of flight attendants came out of the front door carrying a flag, then Andres, coach Jorge Vilda and federation president Luis Rubiales came out offering the trophy. The group came off the plane and posed for a photo with the trophy and their winners’ medals.

Rubiales had been harshly criticized throughout the day for kissing a player on the lips during the medal ceremony after the final, drawing allegations of inappropriate conduct in a sport that has struggled to overcome sexism. The outspoken federation president later released a video apologizing for his actions. He did not appear to be at the celebration venue.

Vilda, who endured a rebellion by players who didn’t like his methods less than a year ago, received a lukewarm welcome by fans. He had been jeered by some during a viewing party in Madrid during the final.

“Without your energy and support, this wouldn’t have been possible,” he told fans. “We said that we were going to take you to the streets, and today we are celebrating what we achieved.”

Spain hadn’t celebrated a soccer world title since the men’s team won their lone World Cup trophy in 2010 in South Africa.

Only Germany have also won the women’s and men’s World Cups.


Rodrygo’s winner lifts Real Madrid past Alaves to end losing streak

Updated 15 December 2025
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Rodrygo’s winner lifts Real Madrid past Alaves to end losing streak

  • The victory keeps Real second in the standings on 39 points, four adrift of Barcelona, while Alaves are 12th on 18 points

VITORIA-GASTEIZ, Spain: Rodrygo secured Real Madrid a crucial 2-1 victory over Deportivo Alaves on Sunday in LaLiga, ending a dismal run of form and keeping them within four points of leaders Barcelona.
Real, under pressure after two straight losses in all competitions, broke the deadlock through Kylian Mbappe’s stunning first-half strike.
However, a resilient Alaves levelled in the 68th minute through Carlos Vicente. The visitors restored their lead eight minutes later, courtesy of a counter-attack led by Vinicius Jr, whose assist was converted by Rodrygo.
The victory keeps Real second in the standings on 39 points, four adrift of Barcelona, while Alaves are 12th on 18 points.
The narrow triumph in the Basque Country provided manager Xabi Alonso with much-needed breathing space after a run of two wins from their previous eight matches across all competitions.
Sunday’s victory demonstrated Real’s resilience and ongoing weaknesses. Despite taking a 24th-minute lead through Mbappe’s spectacular strike, they found themselves outplayed by an Alaves side roared on by a sold-out Mendizorrotza stadium.
Mbappe had opened the scoring in trademark fashion after Jude Bellingham threaded a long pass to the French forward, who ran down the left channel before cutting inside and unleashing a bullet strike into the top corner from the edge of the box.
Despite Real’s early lead, Alaves grew dominant as the first half progressed. The hosts pressured Real’s makeshift defense, which featured 19-year-old academy graduate Victor Valdepenas in his senior debut at left back.
Alaves’ pressure was eventually rewarded in the 68th minute when substitute Vicente, introduced moments earlier, latched onto Antonio Blanco’s long ball and surged past Real’s high defensive line to finish into the top corner.
Initially flagged offside, Vicente’s goal was awarded after a VAR review confirmed the forward had timed his run perfectly.
Real’s winner came as Vinicius wrestled past a defender on the left flank before driving into the penalty area and delivering a low cross, finding Rodrygo, who slid in to steer the ball home from close range.
“It was a tough, very competitive match,” Alonso told a press conference.
“We started well and took the lead, but then we lost control and, as a result, we didn’t finish well. We had chances in the second half, but we conceded from the only mistake Valdepenas made and Carlos Vicente took advantage of that, after a great pass.
“But the team continued to fight hard, battling it out in a difficult stadium against a very intense opponent. That second goal gave us the three points and we’re leaving here very happy.”