Rubiales crisis hangs over UEFA ahead of gala award ceremony in Monaco

Luis Rubiales won’t be at the high-end ceremony in Monte Carlo where the awards for best player and coach will be made because he has been suspended by FIFA, the sport’s ultimate governing body.

Published : Aug 30, 2023 15:45 IST - 3 MINS READ

REPRESENTATIVE PHOTO: The UEFA logo is pictured on a backdrop before a news conference after a UEFA Executive Board meeting in Nyon, Switzerland, December 9, 2016.
REPRESENTATIVE PHOTO: The UEFA logo is pictured on a backdrop before a news conference after a UEFA Executive Board meeting in Nyon, Switzerland, December 9, 2016. | Photo Credit: DENIS BALIBOUSE/ REUTERS
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REPRESENTATIVE PHOTO: The UEFA logo is pictured on a backdrop before a news conference after a UEFA Executive Board meeting in Nyon, Switzerland, December 9, 2016. | Photo Credit: DENIS BALIBOUSE/ REUTERS

The governing body of European football (UEFA) heads to its annual awards gala on Thursday in Monaco amid turmoil created by its vice president from Spain.

Luis Rubiales won’t be at the high-end ceremony in Monte Carlo where the awards for best player and coach will be made because he has been suspended by FIFA, the sport’s ultimate governing body. Spain could sweep the prizes for women’s football.

RELATED: Luis Rubiales refuses to resign, says kiss was ‘mutual’, accuses media, officials of social assassination

FIFA suspended Rubiales, who is both the president of the Spanish football federation and a vice president at European football body UEFA, for at least 90 days while it investigates the kiss he forced on Women’s World Cup winner Jenni Hermoso and the ongoing fallout from his overall conduct at the final in Sydney, Australia.

UEFA has stayed publicly silent in the 10 days since Rubiales provoked a furore in Spain and elsewhere, later fuelled by his defiant refusal to resign.

Even after FIFA formally opened a disciplinary case on Thursday, UEFA did not say if it had taken action against Rubiales, who makes 250,000 euros ($270,000) annually as a vice president of the organization.

“No solidarity,” former England forward Ian Wright said of UEFA in a social media post, using an expletive to show his dismay with how the organization is treating women’s football. “These are the same people in charge of leading the future of women’s football.”

Players of Mexico’s America and Spain’s Barcelona, hold a banner that reads in Spanish “You are not alone,” and a T-shirt that reads “Jenni for you and all of us,” in support of Spain’s Jennifer Hermoso, before a friendly match at Azteca stadium in Mexico City, Tuesday, Aug. 29, 2023.
Players of Mexico’s America and Spain’s Barcelona, hold a banner that reads in Spanish “You are not alone,” and a T-shirt that reads “Jenni for you and all of us,” in support of Spain’s Jennifer Hermoso, before a friendly match at Azteca stadium in Mexico City, Tuesday, Aug. 29, 2023. | Photo Credit: Eduardo Verdugo/ AP
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Players of Mexico’s America and Spain’s Barcelona, hold a banner that reads in Spanish “You are not alone,” and a T-shirt that reads “Jenni for you and all of us,” in support of Spain’s Jennifer Hermoso, before a friendly match at Azteca stadium in Mexico City, Tuesday, Aug. 29, 2023. | Photo Credit: Eduardo Verdugo/ AP

On Thursday, either Aitana Bonmatí or Olga Carmona of Spain is likely to be named as the women’s player of the season in Europe for 2022-23. The other candidate is Australia forward Sam Kerr.

Bonmatí’s season ended as a World Cup champion, a Golden Ball winner as the best player at the Women’s World Cup and a Champions League winner with Spanish football club Barcelona.

But it started by signing a letter from 15 national team players who said they no longer wanted to play for Spain coach Jorge Vilda because he was bad for their mental health.

Vilda kept his job with support from Rubiales but he is now at risk of being fired by the federation’s interim leadership before the UEFA ceremony. He is among three candidates for the coaching award in women’s football.

Voting for the awards was done by coaches of leading clubs and national teams in women’s football, plus media, and the candidates were announced Friday just as Rubiales was refusing to resign at an emergency meeting of the Spanish federation.

FIFA suspended Rubiales the next day and ordered him and the federation not to contact Hermoso amid concerns about their confrontational tactics, including threats of legal action.

Barcelona coach Jonatan Giráldez and England coach Sarina Wiegman — the only woman nominated in the category — are up against Vilda for the UEFA coaching award. The Champions League draw will also be held at the event.

UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin is expected to be on stage at the ceremony and will give a personal lifetime achievement award to former Germany great Miroslav Klose.

Ceferin, however, is not scheduled to take questions about the Spanish issue. Separately, the Spanish federation is leading a UEFA-backed bid to host the 2030 World Cup with Portugal, Morocco and possibly Ukraine.

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