Luis Rubiales vows to fight on after suspension as 11 coaches resign

  • 8/26/2023
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Nearly all the coaching staff for Spain’s women’s team have resigned, citing the “unacceptable attitude” of Luis Rubiales, who vowed to prove his innocence after his provisional suspension as president of the Spanish FA. On Saturday, 11 coaches and technical staff released a joint statement in which they condemned Rubiales’ conduct towards forward Jenni Hermoso, six days after he grabbed her by the head and kissed her on the lips at the end of the Women’s World Cup final. “The undersigned, in light of the unacceptable attitude and statements made by the head of the federation, have taken the decision to resign from their positions,” the statement said. The staff – who include assistant managers Montse Tomé, Javier Lerga and Eugenio Gonzalo Martín, along with physio Blanca Romero Moraleda and goalkeeper coach Carlos Sánchez – also claimed that they had been ordered to attend Rubiales’ speech on Friday. “This was particularly hurtful,” it added, “as many of the female members of the coaching staff were obliged to sit in the front row,” so as to suggest that they agreed with the remarks made by Rubiales, the statement claimed. The resignations leave the team’s controversial head coach, Jorge Vilda, increasingly isolated. The joint resignation statement came hours after Fifa said Rubiales would immediately be suspended “from all football-related activities at national and international level” for an “initial period of 90 days, pending the disciplinary proceedings” that were opened against him earlier this week. The Fifa disciplinary judge, Jorge Palacio, said “in order to preserve, among other factors, the fundamental rights” of Hermoso, Rubiales was also ordered “to refrain, through himself or third parties, from contacting or attempting to contact” her and those close to her. The statement also said the Spanish football federation, which earlier threatened to take legal against Hermoso, had been ordered to refrain from contacting her and those close to her. The Fifa decision came after a tumultuous Friday in which a defiant Rubiales refused to resign and sought to cast himself as the victim, prompting Hermoso to stress that she did not consent to the kiss and the women’s team to announce that they would not take part in national matches until the federation changes its leadership. Fifa added that the decision – which the Associated Press noted was far-reaching enough to prevent Rubiales from having contact with other officials – was communicated to Rubiales on Saturday. The federation confirmed soon after that its vice-president, Pedro Rocha Junco, would become the federation’s interim president. In a statement, it added: “Luis Rubiales has stated that he will defend himself legally in the competent bodies, he has full confidence in the Fifa bodies and reiterates that, in this way, he is given the opportunity to begin his defence so that the truth prevails and his complete innocence is proven.” There was no immediate comment from Uefa, where Rubiales is a vice-president, a position that comes with an annual income of €250,000 plus expenses. The Fifa committee said it would not provide any further information on the disciplinary proceedings until a final decision is taken. There was no timeline given as to when this decision – which could bring about sanctions that range from a warning to suspension – will be made. News of Fifa’s suspension was welcomed by many in Spain, after days of uproar that threatened to overshadow the incredible accomplishments of La Roja. “And finally someone did something,” Vero Boquete, a player described by the Guardian in 2018 as “Spain’s first lady of football”, wrote on Twitter, now known as X. The president of Spain’s women’s league, Beatriz Álvarez, said she believes the furore will mark the end of Rubiales’s football career. “Luis Rubiales is finished. He has dug his own grave with his acts and his words,” she said. “Whether it is because of the action of Fifa or the Spanish government, I am sure that Luis Rubiales won’t spend another minute as president of the Spanish federation.” On Saturday, British football pundit Gary Lineker shared news of the suspension on X with the message “Por fin [At last]”, while fellow pundit Ian Wright criticised the “silence from Uefa”. “No solidarity. No comment on the behaviour of their vice-president,” he wrote on X. The men’s national team coach, Luis de la Fuente, released a statement condemning Rubiales’ actions, one day after he was seen on camera applauding as Rubiales refused to resign and railed against “fake feminism”. “I want to state my absolute repudiation of any act of machista [sexist] violence,” he said. Across much of Spain, it was impossible to untangle the unsolicited kiss and Rubiales’ crotchgrab from the deep divide, laid bare in recent years, between Spain’s football establishment and its female players. Last year 15 players refused to play for the head coach, Jorge Vilda, complaining about his tactics, training methods and management style. Vilda said at the time of the boycott the accusations were “unjust” and the country’s football federation maintained its support for him. Three players subsequently returned and, during the tournament, Vilda tried to steer attention away from the dispute and maintain focus on the football. At the centre of the feud was the sentiment that the federation – led by Rubiales – did not truly believe in women’s football. Hermoso sought to contextualise Rubiales’ conduct within this long-running feud in her statement on Friday. “This type of incident joins a long list of situations that we players have been denouncing in recent years,” she said. “This incident is just the straw that broke the camel’s back and one that everyone has been able to see. But attitudes like this have been part of the national team’s daily life for years.”

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