Culture | The sports page

Spain’s footballers, cream of the Euros, reflect a changed nation

Sport can express fierce rivalries—but it can also heal

Nico Williams of Spain celebrates scoring his team's third goal with teammate Lamine Yamal during a UEFA EURO 2024 match.
Photograph: Getty Images
|London and Madrid

FOOTBALL FANS have much to thank Spain for. Over the past month in Germany, its national team has decorated an otherwise largely pedestrian European championship with fast, flowing football and undisguised joy in the game. They go into the final against England in Berlin on July 14th as favourites. Back home in Spain, their success so far has united, at least temporarily, a diverse country whose venomous politics, tribalised media and angry public discourse have contributed recently to a sense of ungovernability. And in a backhanded tribute, England have even begun to show glimpses of Spanish flair on the field.

Explore more

More from Culture

An illustration of a stack of books that make up the American flag.

Want to spend time with a different American president?

Five presidential biographies to distract you from the news

Eames House, Chautauqua Drive, Pacific Palisades, California

Los Angeles has lost some of its trailblazing architecture

How will it rebuild?


A worker takes down a sign saying "shareholders", immediately after the UBS General Assembly which followed the emergency takeover of Credit Suisse

What firms are for

The framework for thinking about business and capitalism is hopelessly outdated, argues a new book


Greg Gutfeld, America’s most popular late-night host, rules the airwaves

The left gave him his perch

Why matcha, made from green tea, is the drink of the moment

Is it really a healthy alternative to coffee? Not the way Gen Z orders it