Hermoso: Spanish football icon against sexism after forced kiss

Spain's player Jennifer Hermoso (L) leaves after testifying about Spanish football chief Luis Rubiales kissing her at the Women's World Cup trophy ceremony. (AFP)
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Updated 31 January 2025
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Hermoso: Spanish football icon against sexism after forced kiss

BARCELONA: Spain attacker Jenni Hermoso lifted the Women’s World Cup in August 2023 but her joy was curtailed in the aftermath as she unexpectedly became the leader of a stand against sexism in Spanish football.
Luis Rubiales, the then-Spanish football federation president who later resigned in disgrace, forcibly kissed Hermoso on the mouth during the medal ceremony in Sydney, provoking a global wave of criticism.
Hermoso, 34, denied Rubiales’s claim the kiss was consensual and he stands trial starting February 3 for alleged sexual assault.
Rubiales, as well as former women’s team coach Jorge Vilda and two former federation officials, are also accused of coercion for allegedly pressuring Hermoso to say the kiss was consensual.
The world initially took the fight to Rubiales on Hermoso’s behalf while she was away on holiday with her team-mates celebrating the World Cup win, which she called “the best feeling” she has ever had in football.
After Rubiales produced a defiant speech in which he refused to step down, the situation exploded and Hermoso issued a strongly worded statement in which she clarified she felt the “victim of an assault, a macho act.”
Hermoso and 80 other Spain players announced a strike from the national team until the leadership changed, and world football’s governing body FIFA suspended Rubiales.
Eventually he resigned in September, while Vilda was sacked by the Spanish football federation.
Although all that followed overshadowed Spain’s success, the World Cup victory remains the crowning glory of Hermoso’s sporting career.
The grand-daughter of former Atletico Madrid goalkeeper Antonio Hernandez, Madrid-born Hermoso started at youth level with Atletico.
She enjoyed watching Fernando Redondo and Zinedine Zidane, who were then at Real Madrid, but had no real idol of her own until she joined Atletico.
There she met women’s team player Ana Fernandez, known as “Nervy,” and immediately looked up to her.
With no budget for scouts, the senior women players fulfilled that role and Nervy selected Hermoso and one other player from a field of 50 youngsters to join the club.
“She is left-handed like me, she played in the same position as me and I loved the way she was, she had a lot of charisma,” Hermoso told newspaper El Pais in 2020.
In 2010 she joined Rayo Vallecano, where she won the Spanish title, before a brief stint in Sweden with Tyreso, where she played alongside Brazil legend Marta.
Hermoso moved to Barcelona in January 2014, where she went on to become the women’s team’s all-time top scorer with 181 goals in 224 matches, across two spells.
In the summer of 2017 she moved to Paris Saint-Germain for a season before rejoining Atletico Madrid, and then returning to Barcelona in 2019.
Hermoso was part of Barcelona women’s first ever Champions League victory in 2021, winning a penalty in the final as her side romped to a 4-0 win over Chelsea.
She signed for Mexican side Pachuca in 2022 — which some suggested amounted to stepping away from the top level — and joined Tigres in 2024 in the same division.
“I was retired and I won the World Cup,” Hermoso sarcastically fired back at her detractors on social media platform X after Spain’s World Cup triumph.
However a far deeper controversy was already brewing after Rubiales’s forced kiss on Spain’s leading women’s scorer of all time, with 57 goals.
It led to the fall of Rubiales and Vilda, as well as the Spanish government overseeing the football federation “in response to the crisis in the organization.”
Hermoso took some time to find her own football idol, but for many of the next generation, she is already that figure.


Euro 2028 to kick off in Cardiff, final set for Wembley

Updated 13 November 2025
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Euro 2028 to kick off in Cardiff, final set for Wembley

  • The semifinals and one quarter-final will also be held at Wembley
  • “At UEFA EURO 2028, we will all speak football – loud, clear and united,” UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin said

LONDON: Cardiff will host the opening match of the 2028 European Championship on June 9, with the final scheduled for London’s Wembley Stadium on July 9, tournament organizers UEFA announced on Wednesday.
The tournament, co-hosted by England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland, will feature 51 matches involving 24 nations across nine venues in eight cities, also including Birmingham, Dublin, Glasgow, Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle.
The semifinals and one quarter-final will also be held at Wembley, while the other last-eight matches will be staged in Dublin, Glasgow and Cardiff.
Matches in the round of 16 will be distributed across all host venues, with the exception of Wembley. Host nations that qualify for the tournament directly will see their group-stage matches played on home soil.
“At UEFA EURO 2028, we will all speak football – loud, clear and united,” UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin said in a statement.
“The host nations, where the game first took shape, are eager to welcome millions of fans into legendary stadiums...
“In the way matches are staged – including a new, more convenient kick-off time for the final ... we want to maximize the fan experience.”
UEFA has confirmed three kick-off times for the tournament: 1400 GMT, 1700 GMT and 2000 GMT.
The tournament is projected to generate 3.6 billion pounds ($4.83 billion) in socio-economic benefits for the UK and Ireland between 2028 and 2031, according to an independent assessment, UEFA said.
These benefits include job creation, regional prosperity and spending from international visitors.
The UK Government, Scottish Government, Welsh Government and Government of Ireland have collectively pledged up to 740 million pounds ($993.15 million) in funding to ensure the “event is safe, secure and offers a world-class experience” for fans and host communities alike.
“The scale of the tournament will have a really positive impact on communities throughout the country,” England FA CEO Mark Bullingham said.
“This will be a tournament for the fans, with their experience at the heart of our planning.”
In May, Europe’s soccer governing body UEFA said England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales would participate in qualifying for Euro 2028, with only two spots reserved if they do not make it to the tournament.
England finished runners-up at Euro 2024 while Scotland were knocked out in the group stage. Wales and Ireland did not qualify for last year’s tournament hosted by Germany.
Belfast has been chosen to host the Euro 2028 qualifying draw, scheduled to take place in Northern Ireland’s capital on December 6, 2026.