logo
From hospital bed to hero status - Bonmati 'could write a book'

From hospital bed to hero status - Bonmati 'could write a book'

BBC News7 days ago
"I could write a book about that," said Aitana Bonmati after Spain beat Germany in extra-time to seal their spot in the Euro 2025 final.The midfielder had just been asked a question about how it felt to go from almost missing the tournament because of illness to scoring a semi-final winner.Bonmati was discharged from hospital days before the Euros started after suffering from a bout of viral meningitis.While she recovered quickly, the two-time Ballon d'Or winner was made to wait for her chance in Switzerland - coming off the bench in Spain's first two games.But now the 27-year-old looks to be back to her world-class best as she skilfully side-stepped over Athenea del Castillo's pass before rifling past Ann-Katrin Berger at the near post."If Spain are going to win a game, it will be a player like Bonmati that is able to take the game by the scruff of the neck in these moments and get that goal," former England midfielder Fara Williams said on BBC One.
'Scoring in games like this is super special'
Spain had dominated possession, but they had struggled to break through a resilient defence in Zurich as Christian Wuck's side dug deep to force extra time.But with the game looking destined for a penalty shootout, Bonmati stepped up when it mattered - sending Spain to their first Women's Euro final."It was not easy for [Bonmati] at the beginning of the tournament but she has a special personality to be at the maximum level," said Spain boss Montse Tome.Bonmati had cleverly darted into space between Germany defenders Rebecca Knaak and Franziska Kett, before receiving Del Castillo's pass on the half-turn.Despite the tight angle, she buried the ball in at the near post."Top-class players turn up in the moments and that's what Spain needed. That's why Bonmati is a Ballon d'Or winner," ex-Scotland defender Jen Beattie said on BBC Radio 5 Live.Former England defender Steph Houghton added: "I honestly thought from Spain's point of view she was definitely their best player and she's got them through to their first-ever European Championship final."The goal sent the Spanish fans at Stadion Letzigrund into pandemonium, while the scorer was immediately embraced by members of La Roja's bench."When the ball was in, I started running and I saw the bench standing so I celebrated with them," said Bonmati."Scoring in a game like this one is super-special. If I can help the team write history, it's very special."She added: "I was confident in my mentality and my physical situation. I wanted to get to this game at my best level. Thanks to all people who were next to me to help me reach this level."
'We wrote history again'
To set up an encounter with England in Sunday's final, Spain had to do something they had never done before - beat Germany.They had failed in their eight previous attempts, and had lost the past four without scoring."Today I feel we wrote history again. For the first time we were able to make the final of the women's Euros and beat Germany, which we hadn't in the past," said Bonmati."We feel proud to be a generation of players to win so many things."Spain are now on the cusp of adding a European crown to their World Cup trophy from 2023.They arrived at the tournament as favourites, with stats experts Opta giving them a 25% chance of going all the way in Switzerland.And, having defeated the Lionesses in the 2023 World Cup final thanks to Olga Carmona's first-half goal, they will once again be favourites on Sunday."Today we can enjoy. Tomorrow we have to start thinking of England," said Bonmati.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Luke Shaw says Man Utd have ‘no stragglers anymore' as he praises Ruben Amorim
Luke Shaw says Man Utd have ‘no stragglers anymore' as he praises Ruben Amorim

The Independent

time24 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Luke Shaw says Man Utd have ‘no stragglers anymore' as he praises Ruben Amorim

Luke Shaw fully supports Ruben Amorim's demanding approach as the Manchester United head coach seeks to transform what the defender admits has at times been a 'toxic' environment. The 30-year-old is the longest-serving player at Old Trafford having joined from Southampton in 2014 for what was at the time a world-record fee for a teenager. Shaw has experienced plenty of down moments among the positives during his time at United, with Amorim the fifth different permanent manager the England international has worked under. The left-back said the whole squad needed to consider whether they were good enough to play for the club after May's Europa League final loss to Tottenham and feels standards have been raised in pre-season. 'It's not hard to see from the outside what it's been like,' Shaw told reporters on their US tour. 'A lot of the time I've been here over the last few years, it's been extremely negative. It can be quite toxic, the environment, it's not healthy at all. 'We need an environment that's healthy, that's positive, that's got good energy and happiness. 'I think when you have all those things, you feel free, and you express yourself more on the pitch.' Shaw says Amorim has the full backing of United's squad as the head coach demands 100 per cent in everything. 'His mentality, his demands – he's extremely tough on the group,' Shaw said. 'He leaves no stone unturned, and I think there's no stragglers in this group anymore. I think everyone has to put the team first. He's made that very clear. 'I think he's picking players on how he feels will be best for the team and that's his choice. 'Us as players, we're fully behind him and fully behind his ideas and what he wants to implement in this team. 'We feel like a real team, especially this pre-season. Since I've been back, the group is so together and that's something we need to keep, to make us more of a family and everyone all together and we're all driving in the same direction.' United finished 15th last season and are currently taking part in the Premier League Summer Series in America. Amorim's side beat West Ham 2-1 in New Jersey at the weekend and are taking on Bournemouth at Soldier Field in Chicago on Wednesday evening local time, before facing Everton in Atlanta on Sunday.

Super League expansion may put vital partnership with Sky Sports in jeopardy
Super League expansion may put vital partnership with Sky Sports in jeopardy

The Guardian

time25 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Super League expansion may put vital partnership with Sky Sports in jeopardy

Super League's long-term partnership with Sky Sports that bankrolls the sport could be jeopardised by plans to expand the competition to 14 teams next season. The existing 12 Super League clubs voted in favour of expansion earlier this week following the recommendations of a strategic review led by the Rugby Football League chair, Nigel Wood, but the Guardian has learned that the plan has yet to be endorsed by their broadcast partner. Under the terms of the current deal, Sky broadcasts every Super League game live, but it is understood that the cost of televising an extra game across 27 rounds next year would be around £500,000. The Guardian has been told Sky is reluctant to pick up the additional cost for matches it did not buy in a tender process that concluded almost two years ago, and has no intention of increasing its rights fees to support two extra clubs. Sky's three-year deal to provide exclusive live coverage of Super League enters its final 12 months next season, and while there is no suggestion of the broadcaster terminating that contract, senior sources have indicated that the expansion could affect negotiations over future deals. RL Commercial officials are understood to have been locked in discussions with Sky since the vote on Monday about what expansion means for the existing contract, and have yet to receive the reassurances they are looking for. Sky has been Super League's broadcast partner since the competition launched in 1996 and around 170 games will be shown live this season, but the value of the contract has dropped significantly in recent years. Officials who were present at the meeting at Headingley that approved expansion have privately admitted that one of their big concerns was how the broadcaster would react to the decision, as well as how the extra games will be financed. Super League clubs are receiving a total of £21.5m from Sky this year compared to £40m in 2021. The comparison with other sports is also alarming, with their £21.5m rights fee less than Sky pays to televise just three Premier League games, while the broadcaster is investing around £20m a year in the Women's Super League from next season in rights fees and production costs. Sky's declining financial backing for rugby league is a major concern for the sport as it prepares to enter the final year of its TV deal, particularly given the limited interest from elsewhere and how reliant rugby league is on its income from the Sky Sports contract. TNT Sports made a speculative offer for the current rights, but it has since spent £200m on a new five-year deal for Premiership Rugby so may not bid again. IMG, the sports marketing agency that manages the grading process which determines Super League membership, are currently leading a tender process for the next broadcast cycle beginning in 2027. Sky declined to comment, but one source at the broadcaster said that rugby league was fighting for its future. In another complication, Sky also broadcasts Australia's National Rugby League, which has held talks about buying a 33% stake in Super League but made clear it sees it as a 10-team competition. Sources in Australia have indicated expansion to 14 teams effectively kills any hope of direct investment into Super League in the near future. With no additional TV money forthcoming following expansion, the Super League clubs have also yet to decide how the extra two teams will be funded next season. A number of clubs are understood to have argued strongly that they will not accept a cut in their own central payments from the Sky deal. Some Championship clubs vying for promotion as part of expansion plans have indicated they would be willing to enter the competition with no central distribution for one season in 2026. Such a move would expose newly promoted clubs to potential financial risk, as well as raise further concerns about the Super League's competitiveness. Financially-troubled Salford were thrashed 82-0 by St Helens at the start of the season, and have conceded 50 points on two more occasions. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion As reported by The Guardian, Hull FC and Hull KR voted against expansion in a meeting at Headingley on Monday, while Wigan abstained amid confusion over the criteria to be used by the RFL panel who will select the two extra teams for next season's competition.

Murray 'buzzing' with Pressley's ideas but 'patience' required
Murray 'buzzing' with Pressley's ideas but 'patience' required

BBC News

time25 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Murray 'buzzing' with Pressley's ideas but 'patience' required

New captain Simon Murray says the Dundee squad are "buzzing" with the new ideas Steven Pressley is implementing but admits "patience" is required from the tenure began with a League Cup group-stage exit as back-to-back defeats to Airdrie and Alloa were followed by wins over Bonnyrigg and Dark Blues get the new Premiership campaign under way on Sunday with the visit of Murray, who was appointed skipper by new boss Pressley last month, told Sky Sports: "It's a privilege to be named captain."It's been great so far. The boys have been buzzing in terms of the ideas and the way that we want to play."When you change the system, it's just getting that practice all the time, keep doing it and just getting used to it. When we get results, we'll all be happy."There's been change in the summer, and it's just new ideas."We've had some players come in, so it's just building these relationships and trying put into play what the manager wants, and that will take time. He knows that."It's just asking the supporters for some patience. We've got an exciting season to look forward to starting on Sunday."We're working hard on the training ground, getting the ideas in, working, building the relationships with our team-mates. Hopefully it will come good."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store