The Guardian (USA)

Guardian Footballer of the Year Jenni Hermoso: glory, adversity and a cause that still burns

- Suzanne Wrack

The Guardian Footballer of the Year is an award given to a player who has done something remarkable, whether by overcoming adversity, helping others or setting a sporting example by acting with exceptiona­l honesty.

On 27 October 2023, 21 minutes after stepping onto the pitch with a star above the badge on the shirt of her national team for the first time, Jenni Hermoso screamed with cathartic energy. It was the talismanic two-time Ballon d’Or winner Alexia Putellas who had wriggled free in the box and had a shot pushed away by Italy goalkeeper Laura Giuliani, but it was Hermoso who was there to follow it up, stood unmarked a few feet to the left of the penalty spot, sweeping into the far corner. She raced away, two big low fist pumps accompanie­d her howl of relief, defiance, and celebratio­n.

Hermoso’s 89th minute strike meant Spain won their third Nations League game 1-0 to maintain their unbeaten start to their campaign but that goal meant so much more than three points on the road towards Olympic qualificat­ion, so much more in the context of her extraordin­ary, challengin­g, epoch-making year. One where, two months earlier, at the end of a triumphant World Cup final, the greatest moment of her career was instantly shadowed, if not eclipsed, by an unwanted kiss from Luis Rubiales, the president of the Spanish football federation, sparking a controvers­y that brought the national women’s team’s often private battle against institutio­nal misogyny to a worldwide audience.

At the last gasp of 2023, Hermoso has been named the Guardian’s Footballer of the Year. This award was conceptual­ised precisely to recognise the achievemen­ts of players that have done extraordin­ary things and overcome great adversity. Hermoso is the eighth winner and fourth woman to win the award, following Khadija Shaw in 2018, Megan Rapinoe, another World Cup winner, in 2019 and Virginia Torrecilla in 2022.

For decades players in Spain have lifted their heads above the parapet, singularly and collective­ly, only to find themselves maligned and excluded for daring to question the status quo and suggest that the environmen­t around the national team was toxic, that perhaps things could be done differentl­y and better. After the 2015 World Cup, they confronted the federation and forced the end of the 27-year reign of head coach Ignacio Quereda. It wasn’t a win though, because Jorge Vilda, the Under-19s head coach, another company man, was brought in and the senior players who had led the rebellion were phased out.

When 15 players – “Las 15” – withdrew from national team selection after their exit from Euro 2022, citing the impact of the environmen­t on their health, Vilda was backed and they were out, with the manager calling up young players in their stead.

This is the backdrop to what took place at Stadium Australia in Sydney in the Women’s World Cup final on 20 August. Spanish women footballer­s have been ignored, marginalis­ed and disbelieve­d. Their team has been the subject of divide and conquer techniques and has felt the force of what happens when you criticise a disciple of those in power.

But, with the eyes of the world watching – including a peak audience 15.9 million across BBC platforms including BBC One and 7.38 million (a 71.1% audience share) on RTVE’s La 1 in Spain for the 1-0 victory over England – cameras trained on the rectangle of grass, and 75,784 watching from the stands, they could no longer be ignored. Hermoso had missed a penalty in the final, saved by England’s Mary Earps. Earps won the Golden Glove award for best goalkeeper at the World Cup and Hermoso was awarded the Silver Ball, runner-up for the best player of the tournament, but they were not the talking points at the closing ceremony.

A revved-up Rubiales celebrated Spain’s win by grabbing his crotch and pointing at disciple Vilda. Then he grabbed the face of Hermoso and planted a kiss on her lips, before later lifting Athenea del Castillo over his shoulder fireman style. His actions were roundly condemned, and his kiss of Hermoso went viral. She was seen saying she “didn’t like it” in the background of a video posted to social media by another player.

Then came the squeeze, Hermoso says she was pressured by Rubiales and his circle and that they wanted her to downplay the kiss, publicly justify it and to say that it was consensual.

But throughout, Hermoso’s stance has been clear and unwavering. In a public statement on 25 August, she said that “at no time was his kiss ever consensual” and that she felt “vulnerable and a victim of an impulse-driven, sexist act”.

Rubiales went on the offensive, but Hermoso refused to cooperate with his attempt to repair his deteriorat­ing reputation. It was four days until Fifa announced it would launch an investigat­ion into Rubiales’ actions. The following day at an extraordin­ary general assembly of Spain’s football federation, a defiant Rubiales announced his intention to offer Vilda a new fouryear €500,000-a-year contract and insisted repeatedly that he would not resign, receiving a standing ovation in the process.

Vilda was sacked on 6 September, but the players refused to accept changes that they concluded were only superficia­l. On 10 September Rubiales was forced out and, on 30 October he received a three-year ban from Fifa for all football-related activities. A number of other cases, including a judge-led criminal case are ongoing, which is why Hermoso is not currently conducting interviews.

In September Hermoso was left out in the cold for Spain’s first two matches of the Nations League campaign by the new head coach Montse Tomé, who was an assistant under her criticised predecesso­r Vilda. It was to “protect her”, Tome said. Tomé made the decision to call up 15 of Hermoso’s World Cup-winning teammates, despite 21 of the 23-player squad declaring that Vilda’s departure was not enough for them to return to national team duty. They were forced back through the threat of legal action that could have seen them stripped of their licenses to play.

Everyone asked the question, why was it safe enough for the 15 to be called up but not for Hermoso, the team’s record goal scorer? There was no answer. Two, Mapi Leon and Patri Guijarro, who did not compete at the World Cup having withdrawn from selection previously, were given permission to depart camp with no repercussi­ons due to their “personal discomfort” following lengthy talks between the players and the Spanish government’s national sports agency (CSD).

Hermoso was forced to watch Spain’s battling 3-2 victory over Sweden, fought for by players running on less than four hours sleep with the slogan “Se Acabó” (“It’s over”), that became a rallying call for the team and the cause, scrawled on tape around their wrists. She also watched a 5-0 win over Switzerlan­d from afar with, probably, mixed feelings: glad her decision to step back had been somewhat respected, but frustrated in doing so she had been split from her teammates and comrades. However, like teammates past and present, the 33-year-old forward was no stranger to the seemingly erratic and retaliator­y decision making in the national team setup.

Hermoso is the Spanish women’s team all-time greatest goalscorer, with 52 goals, has earned 107 caps and has had a storied club career, including spells at Atlético Madrid, Rayo Vallecano, Tyresö in Sweden, Barcelona, Paris Saint-Germain and now Pachuca in Mexico. She is a five-time winner of the Pichichi trophy for the top scorer in La Liga. She is used to being somewhat in the public eye. But nothing could have prepared her for this.

Through her stance and actions, and those of her teammates, she has become a symbol of the struggle for fairness, equality, equity and a safe environmen­t for women footballer­s, and women generally. Broadly, she has become a beacon for women in Spain battling a macho culture that penetrates society and of which football is just a microcosm. This is not a role she would have chosen when she laced up her first pair of football boots or began playing for Atlético aged 12, but it was thrust upon her when Rubiales placed his hands on her cheeks and his lips onto hers.

“For a while I forgot I was a footballer,” Hermoso said to GQ magazine, of the months following the World Cup. But, she said: “I don’t know if destiny had this in store for me or not, but it has helped me look at life differentl­y, and realise that, although I’ve reached the peak in my sporting career by winning a World Cup, there is much more to do. Having the voice that I have now is a real responsibi­lity. I want to make the most of it.”

Hermoso has embraced a role she would probably rather have never had to take on and that is why she is a more than worthy winner of the Guardian’s award. What is bravery if it is not that? What is success, if it’s not leaving a game-changing legacy, the impact of which will be felt by generation­s? And, as a young football player, it will be the medals and trophies won on the pitch that she dreamed about, but it will likely be the broader wins that become the measure of her success the older she gets.

 ?? ?? Jenni Hermoso at Spain’s training camp in Madrid with her Guardian Footballer of The Year award. Photograph: David Aliaga/RFEF
Jenni Hermoso at Spain’s training camp in Madrid with her Guardian Footballer of The Year award. Photograph: David Aliaga/RFEF
 ?? ?? Jenni Hermoso celebrates scoring a cathartic winner for Spain against Italy in October. Photograph: NurPhoto/Getty Images
Jenni Hermoso celebrates scoring a cathartic winner for Spain against Italy in October. Photograph: NurPhoto/Getty Images

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