Spain enjoyed an excellent qualifying campaign. La Roja booked their place by finishing top of Group D, six points ahead of the Czech Republic. No one could get close to the Spaniards. They registered seven wins, one draw and no defeats, scoring 48 goals and conceding just once. A team dominated by Barcelona players, it was one that the head coach, Jorge Vilda, sought to make more direct than usual. The style bore fruit in the form of big wins such as the 10-0 and 13-0 thrashings of Moldova and Azerbaijan respectively.
“We’re very happy and very proud of the work the players have put in,” Vilda says. “We’ve qualified for the biggest continental competition, the Euros. That’s an achievement. The way we managed it is also an achievement. There are high hopes for this team, and that’s all down to the way the players have performed. We’ve had good results, but I would say we’re contenders, rather than favourites. There are other teams that are favourites; I’ll leave that tag to them.”
However, losing Alexia Putellas to an ACL injury soon after Jenni Hermoso was ruled out of the tournament is a huge blow. Putellas is the world’s best player and it remains to see if her teammates can recover from that set-back.
Spain go into the Euros having already booked their ticket to the next World Cup in Australia and New Zealand next year. For the last nine years, Spain have not missed a major finals, be it the Euros or the World Cup. Vilda’s side have also risen to seventh in the world rankings – their highest ever position. The likes of Irene Paredes, Hermoso, Patri Guijarro, Aitana Bonmatí, Sandra Paños and Putellas have taken Spanish women’s football to the next level. They are a team that commands respect, boasting major names known across Europe and the world. The arrival of Real Madrid’s team in 2020 has also played its part in the exponential growth of the women’s game in Spain. Now it remains to be seen if they can go far without Putellas and Hermoso.
The coach
Jorge Vilda took charge of Spain in 2015 after Ignacio Quereda was forced out following the World Cup in Canada. The 40-year-old previously worked with Spain’s age-group teams, coaching the Under-17s between 2010 and 2014, and the Under-19s between 2014 and 2015. Before his promotion to the senior job, he masterminded the Under-19s’ run to the final of the Uefa Women’s Championship. This will be his second Euros, while he also led Spain at the World Cup in 2019 – where they exited at the last-16 stage. He is the son of Ángel Vilda, fitness coach under Johan Cruyff at Barcelona. In 2018, he was among the 10 nominees for Fifa’s The Best Women’s Coach award.
Star player
With Putellas out Aitana Bonmatí picks up the baton. When introducing the Barcelona midfielder, it’s important to begin with the story behind her name. Bonmatí, the first of her two surnames, is taken from her mother. In Spain, people traditionally use their paternal surname first, but her parents were pioneers in the movement to change it. “In a lot of situations, women are given a secondary role,” Bonmatí says. “I’ve never let myself be pushed to one side.” A 1m58cm battler, she has always refused to allow her diminutive stature to get in her way. Xavi Hernández was her inspiration and like the World Cup winner she has spent her whole life at Barça, playing the Cruyff way – so successfully, indeed, that she was named player of the match in the 2020-21 Champions League final.
Wildcard
Clàudia Pina is Spain’s great hope for the future. Aged just 20, the forward is already a major figure in the Barcelona team and working hard to follow in the footsteps of her great idol, Putellas. Having made her debut for the Blaugrana at only 16, Pina then went on loan to Sevilla in order to continue her development. She returned to the Camp Nou a year later, and this season has established herself for club and country. Pina belongs to a generation of players that won the Under-17 World Cup in 2018. She was named the tournament’s best player and finished as joint-top scorer, and Vilda has followed her closely ever since.
All-time hero
Vero Boquete has been the great trailblazer for women’s football in Spain. When the domestic top flight, the Liga Iberdrola, was still a pipe dream, the midfielder took the plunge and moved abroad. Tyresö (Sweden), the Utah Royals (NWSL), Bayern Munich and Frankfurt (where she won the Champions League in 2015), PSG, Milan … The list is long and now, at 35, she’s still going, at Serie A side Fiorentina. Her goal sealed Spain’s qualification for the 2013 Euros in Sweden. That is where the national team really began to grow, with Boquete as its captain and beating heart. She also led the team at their first ever World Cup, in Canada in 2015.
Euros history
Spain have appeared at the Euros three times. They’ve never won it, or indeed reached the final. Their best performance to date came at their first Euros in 1997, where they made it to the semi-finals. It wasn’t until 2013 that La Roja returned to the finals, but they haven’t missed out since. They lost 3-1 to Norway in the 2013 quarter-finals, and fell at the same stage in the Netherlands four years later, losing to Austria on penalties. Now, though, Spain are a very different proposition, and look ready to make a deep run at a major tournament.
Realistic aim this summer
Spain’s first goal is to make it out of their group, having been drawn with Germany, Denmark and Finland. Second place may have to do in order to reach the knockout stages. Reaching the semi-finals for the first time in 25 years would be a dream outcome but may be difficult now after Putellas injury.