Current:Home > StocksOne man's ugly behavior interrupted Spain's World Cup joy. Sadly, it's not surprising. -Keystone Wealth Vision
One man's ugly behavior interrupted Spain's World Cup joy. Sadly, it's not surprising.
View
Date:2025-04-26 09:01:29
They call soccer the beautiful game, but it truly has deserved another title across the decades, one far less uplifting but certainly more honest: the misogynistic game.
Over the past four weeks, during the most exhilarating Women’s World Cup ever staged, soccer tried so hard to not be itself, with all that goodness emanating from Australia and New Zealand, showing girls and women around the world (and boys and men too) the power and possibility of sports.
But that robust message of female empowerment wasn’t destined to last long, not in international soccer, not with its long history of ignoring women, not paying women equally and not particularly caring about the women’s game.
In fact, it took just over 30 minutes after the final whistle sounded for “a form of sexual violence” to occur on the stage during Spain’s victory celebration, in the words of the Spanish minister of equality, Irene Montero.
That was the moment when Spain’s soccer federation president Luis Rubiales planted an unwanted kiss on the lips of Spanish star Jenni Hermoso as she worked her way through the congratulatory receiving line.
WORLD CUP CENTRAL: 2023 Women's World Cup Live Scores, Schedules, Standings, Bracket and More
“Eh, yeah, I did not enjoy that,” Hermoso told broadcasters afterward.
“We shouldn’t assume that kissing someone without their consent is something that just happens,” Montero wrote Sunday on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter. “It is a form of sexual violence that women suffer on a daily basis, and which has been invisible so far, and which we should not normalize.”
Spain’s acting minister for sports and culture Miquel Iceta also chimed in, saying “it is unacceptable to kiss a player on the lips to congratulate her.” The world players’ union called Rubiales’ action “deeply lamentable … the inappropriate conduct of an individual in a role carrying so much responsibility.”
In another development, cameras captured Rubiales grabbing his crotch immediately after Spain’s victory over England. The guy had quite a half hour.
As of now, Rubiales still has a job, and, soccer being soccer, he probably will be promoted. But for forcibly kissing a subordinate, hijacking the Spanish players’ celebration and stealing their headlines for nearly 36 hours and counting, he should be banished from the game, just as coaches and executives were fired or left the NWSL due to the unveiling of systemic abuse and misconduct within the women’s pro game in the United States.
Spain appears to want to take a different approach. In a page out of an old Soviet-style public relations playbook, Hermoso has delivered yet another comment on the forced kiss, this one conveniently issued by the Spanish federation.
“It was a totally spontaneous mutual gesture due to the immense joy of winning a World Cup,” Hermoso said in words the federation said she said.
Rubiales himself appeared in a video statement released by the federation Monday in which he said he “surely made a mistake” in “a moment of maximum effusiveness. … When you are president of an institution as important as the federation, you have to be more careful.”
That the Spanish soccer federation is bumbling along in the midst of this controversy entirely of its own making should be no surprise to those who have been watching the federation ignore the concerns of its top players for nearly a year now.
In September 2022, 15 members of Spain’s senior women’s team sent personally signed letters via email to the federation, announcing they would no longer play for the national team unless wholesale changes were made to the coaching staff. The players were concerned about the treatment of injuries, a lack of support services and head coach Jorge Vilda’s heavy-handed training approach, among other issues.
Instead of listening to its players, the federation rejected their request and punished them, dropping all but three from the eventual World Cup roster. Lucky Spain, it clearly has a bench so deep it could win without 12 of its best. That embarrassment of riches eventually led to the utter embarrassment of Rubiales’ unwanted kiss, which we now see was very much in keeping with the Spanish federation’s strategy for controlling its women’s team any which way it wants.
But there is a silver lining to this Spanish awfulness. If they were trying to get away with it, they picked the worst possible time to do so. Never has there been more interest in women’s soccer than there was when Spain was winning so brilliantly on the field and losing so spectacularly off it. The Women’s World Cup is all about introducing the world to the women’s game. Consider the world introduced to it all.
veryGood! (86333)
Related
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- Stock market today: Asian shares mostly decline, while Tokyo again touches a record high
- Draft RNC resolution would block payment of candidate's legal bills
- 8 killed after head-on crash in California farming region
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Proof Reese Witherspoon Has TikToker Campbell Pookie Puckett on the Brain at 2024 SAG Awards
- How to watch and stream 'Where is Wendy Williams?' documentary on Lifetime
- SAG Awards 2024 winners list: 'Oppenheimer' wins 3, including outstanding ensemble cast
- Sam Taylor
- Story of Jackie Robinson's stolen statue remains one of the most inspirational in nation
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- 8 killed in California head-on crash include 7 farmers in van, 1 driver in pick-up: Police
- Jodie Turner-Smith Breaks Silence on Joshua Jackson Divorce
- Brooklyn preacher goes on trial for fraud charges prosecutors say fueled lavish lifestyle
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- Inside the SAG Awards: A mostly celebratory mood for 1st show since historic strike
- Traveling With Your Pet? Here Are the Must-Have Travel Essentials for a Purrfectly Smooth Trip
- Single-engine plane crashes at a small New Hampshire airport and no injuries are reported
Recommendation
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
Inside the SAG Awards: A mostly celebratory mood for 1st show since historic strike
Olympic champion Suni Lee's rough Winter Cup day is reminder of what makes her a great
Why do we leap day? We remind you (so you can forget for another 4 years)
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
'Oppenheimer' looks at the building of the bomb, and its lingering fallout
Former NFL player Richard Sherman arrested on suspicion of DUI, authorities in Washington state say
Video shows 7 people being rescued after seaplane crashes near PortMiami: Watch