Martin Rogers
FOX Sports activities Insider
It’s coming.
For somebody, and their workforce, and their nation, a now-and-forever-more year is only a pace away. It takes an entire workforce to win a identify however somebody from both Spain, England, Australia or Sweden goes to discover a distinctive more or less destiny smiling upon them.
They’ll grow to be a Girls’s Global Cup hero. Their crucial intervention will pluck their society to its first-ever championship.
And not anything will ever be the similar once more.
For that particular person and her place of origin, it is going to be the an identical of the Brandi Chastain year, as we comprehend it in the US. Even though you weren’t born but when Chastain smashed house her 1999 penalty kick and ripped off her jersey, it doesn’t topic, you almost certainly nonetheless know all about that undying snapshot of historical past.
Brandi Chastain relives her penalty, the best Girls’s Global Cup year ever
It’s suspended nonetheless, iconic, virtually indescribable in its virtue to all that got here next it, to the expansion of ladies’s football, plus the societal situation of the USWNT and the function it occupies in American sports activities.
For those who’re German, it’s the Nia Kuenzer year. Within the 2003 ultimate towards Sweden, Kuenzer produced a lavish header within the 8th slight of extra-time for what rest – most likely all the time – as the one males’s or girls’s Global Cup ultimate made up our minds via “golden goal,” with that experimental legislation abolished quickly later on.
The celebrations in Germany had been joyous nearest – and lingering of their have an effect on. Rapid-forward to nowadays, and Germany has a booming home league, a investment pipeline for the ladies’s sport that’s the envy of maximum alternative nations, and is a playground the place girls’s football avid gamers get the type of rightful reputation this is nonetheless, unfortunately, extra of a effort in other places. It’s the most effective workforce, except for for america, to have crowned the FIFA girls’s scores.
For those who’re Eastern, it’s the Homare Sawa or the Saki Kumagai moment. Team Nadeshiko’s penalty shootout win against the United States in 2011 inspired a generation to follow and took on an almost mythical status, lifting the spirits of a nation devastated by the deadly earthquake and tsunami months earlier.
To this day, becoming a member of Japan’s national team squad is a gilded privilege that millions of young girls dream of. Sawa, she of the stunningly brilliant flick to equalize in extra-time and Kumagai, cool-headed scorer of the decisive PK, are Japanese sporting icons until the end of time.
If you’re from Norway, it is the Hege Riise moment, dating all the way back in 1995. Riise scored a beautiful individual goal in a 2-0 win over Germany in the final that year and as a result Norway became one of the first boom nations in women’s soccer. The triumph led to a huge influx of new players at youth levels and national stardom for Riise and her colleagues, alongside Olympic champions from the winter sports disciplines who typically occupied such roles.
F-16 fighter jets escorted the Norway team on its trip back home and despite a population of just 5.4 million, the Scandinavian country continues to churn out some of the best players in the world, including current star Ada Hegerberg – the all-time Women’s Champions League top scorer. That the 2023 team’s exit at “only” the round of 16 stage was considered a major disappointment speaks volumes for such a small nation.
What victory would mean in 2023 depends on which team achieves it. Spain meets Sweden on Tuesday in the first semifinal (coverage begins at 3 a.m. ET, with kickoff at 4 a.m. ET on FOX and the FOX Sports app), then Australia v. England on Wednesday (coverage begins at 5 a.m. ET with kickoff at 6 a.m. ET on FOX and the FOX Sports app). The player who has the starring role becomes a never-to-be-forgotten figure. Heck, even Chastain’s sports bra became one of the most famous pieces of sports memorabilia in modern American history.
Spain’s Salma Paralluelo, England’s Alessia Russo lead the quarterfinals biggest moments
The wider impact? The specifics remain to be seen, but if the past is anything to go by it will be monumental.
If Australia is crowned champion it would be one of the most significant sporting peaks for a nation that has a proud history of athletic excellence. Sam Kerr and her teammates spoke before the tournament of replicating a Cathy Freeman scenario, referencing how the 400-meter ace inspired a generation of girl athletes with her win at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.
[Australia’s historic World Cup run uniting a continent: ‘So much more to give’]
For Sweden, this would be rare air. The country has fielded excellent teams on both the men’s and women’s side going back decades, but the closest thing to World Cup glory came when the men made the 1958 final and the women did the same in 2003.
For England, phew. What a question. A country that tortures itself through the adventures of its men’s team every two years at European Championships and World Cups, sparked largely by the jingoistic tabloid media, might find out through the Lionesses that international soccer doesn’t always have to hurt so much.
Things could get regal. Of the England men’s team that won its only major title at the 1966 World Cup, hat-trick scorer Geoff Hurst, midfielder Bobby Charlton and head coach Alf Ramsey were all knighted, to be known thereafter as Sir Geoff, Sir Bobby, etc. Expect King Charles to bestow the equivalent, a Damehood, upon the likes of Rachel Daly or Keira Walsh if the title is secured at Stadium Australia on Aug. 20.
Of the remaining teams, what might happen if Spain wins is the truly fascinating option. Remarkably, the soccer giant did not qualify for the Women’s World Cup until 2015, but is now making a massive mark in the women’s game. Barcelona is one of the best, biggest, most successful and highest-spending club teams in the world. Real Madrid, its hated rival, plans to do something about that success rate.
[Spain talking a big game, backing it up with run to World Cup semifinals]
Money is pouring into the game and Spain could be the place more than any other where crowd figures take a seismic leap. For sports clubs work different over there. If you’re a fan of Madrid or Barca, you bleed their colors on a number of different levels, not just the men’s soccer team, but perhaps also the basketball team, the handball team, the rugby team.
It is already a growing part of the culture that men’s and women’s games are more frequently arranged so that season ticket-holders can attend both, and the world record women’s attendance of 91,648 is held by Barcelona.
A dramatic triumph for Spain, behind a charismatic figure like Salma Paralluelo or Aitana Bonmati, and further growth would become turbocharged.
Winning the World Cup is what every player seeks. Sometimes, they dare to allow their mind to think of it.
“Pressure is a privilege,” Kerr said recently. “And I love pressure.”
“Magical,” said Bonmati, when asked what a World Cup win might feel like.
“You notice from home there has been a big uproar,” Sweden Johanna Rytting Kanerud told Expressen, explaining how becoming aware of the patriotic fervor at home was unavoidable.
“Dare to dream” was forward Alessia Russo’s message to England fans.
It is a dream alright, a fantasy without comparison. And though it feels within touching distance there’s still a lot of work to do.
But for someone, and who knows who the soccer gods will choose, it is about to become reality.
Martin Rogers is a columnist for FOX Sports and the author of the FOX Sports Insider newsletter. Follow him on Twitter @MRogersFOX and subscribe to the day by day publication.
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