Spain’s reign over women’s football is no longer emerging — it is established reality. With three major title victories from their last four finals, Spain have built a dynasty that now defines the global game. Their only blemish across this extraordinary run came in a penalty shootout loss to England at 2025 European Championship, preventing what could have been a perfect sweep.
Spain have won the 2023 Women’s World Cup, the 2024 Women’s Nations League, and now the 2025 Women’s Nations League, defeating three different European superpowers along the way — England, France and Germany. A new hierarchy has taken hold, and Spain sit firmly at the top of it.
On Tuesday night in Madrid, their dominance was on full display again as La Roja dismantled Germany 3–0 in the second leg of the Nations League final, sealing back-to-back titles and issuing the clearest statement yet that women’s football has entered a Spanish era.
Dominance despite adversity
The achievement carried even more resonance given the absence of their heartbeat and three-time Ballon d’Or winner Aitana Bonmatí, who broke her leg in training on Sunday and will miss five months. A loss of that magnitude might have shaken any other team. Instead, Spain responded with conviction and purpose — proof that their strength runs far deeper than any single star.
Pina leads the new generation’s charge
After more than 150 minutes without a goal across the two legs, Claudia Pina provided the breakthrough in the 61st minute, cutting inside, exchanging passes with Esther González and firing past Ann-Katrin Berger. Seven minutes later, Vicky López curled home a stunning second. Pina then sealed the night with a sensational long-range strike in the 74th, igniting a roar from more than 70,000 fans.
Remarkably, this was only Spain’s second-ever win over Germany, the previous coming last summer in the European Championship semifinals when Aitana Bonmatí struck in extra time to secure a 1–0 win before Spain fell to England on penalties in the final — the only disappointment in their four-tournament surge.
The new benchmark
“It is a very ambitious group,” head coach Sonia Bermúdez said. “We knew we would have the support of the people here… so it is a day to enjoy.”
But enjoyment is merely the surface. Beneath it is steel, clarity and a hunger that shows no sign of stopping.
Spain are not just winning.
They are redefining dominance.
Three finals conquered. Three giants beaten. Youth at the core. Depth proven even without their brightest star.
The future of women’s football is here —
and the world is now chasing Spain.



















Discussion about this post