The Lionesses interrupt press conference with Sarina Wiegman, Manager of England, after the UEFA Women's Euro 2022 win. Photo / AP
In football-mad England, which sees itself as the home of the world's game, women and girls finally have a team full of heroes who look like them.
About 7000 singing, dancing, flag-waving fans — many of them mothers and daughters — jammed into central London's Trafalgar Square to celebrate England's victory in the 2022 women's European championship, the first major football victory by any England team in 56 years.
The tournament, hosted by England and watched by record audiences on television and in stadiums across the country, was the culmination of years of investment in women's football that organisers hope will spur more girls to play the game.
Madison Fullerd-Jones is already on board.
The 9-year-old from Maidstone, southeast of London, got up early and came to the capital with her mother, aunt, two sisters and a cousin to celebrate with the Lionesses, as England's football team is known. Wearing an England shirt and waving a flag bearing the national Cross of St George, Madison said she hoped to play for England someday, just like her favourite player, Georgia Stanway.
"The legacy of the tournament was... what we've done for young girls and women who can look up and aspire to be us," she said, still wearing the winner's medal that was draped around her neck Sunday night by Prince William. "I think England have hosted an incredible tournament, and we've changed the game in this country, and hopefully across Europe, across the world."
England beat Germany 2-1 Sunday night in an overtime game watched by 87,192 fans at Wembley Stadium, a record for any European championship final, men's or women's. The tournament as a whole attracted 574,875 spectators, more than double the previous record of 240,055 set in 2017 in the Netherlands.
Many more watched on TV, with the final achieving a peak audience of 17.5 million viewers and an average audience share of 66 per cent, according to Ratings UK.
The figures underscore the resurrection of women's football in England, where the men who ran the game once banned women from using their facilities for 50 years until the early 1970s.
After previous generations of women football players were forced to support themselves by working outside the sport, today's players are able to focus on the game fulltime after the creation of a fully professional league in 2018-19.
Now supporters are targeting increased participation at the grassroots level to spur continued success.
The Football Association, the sport's governing body in England, is campaigning for schools in England to provide equal opportunities for boys and girls to play football as part of the curriculum. A recent study found that 72 per cent of primary schools provided equal instruction to boys and girls, but that figure fell to 44 per cent in secondary schools.
"This generation of ladies have had to fight and scrap and do everything," Ian Wright, a former England player, said on the BBC. "Everybody's in tears because this is the culmination of a lot of hard work, a lot of suffering, a lot of parents, a lot of people doing a lot work to get them here. It's up to the FA to take over grassroots and get rid of all those barriers."
The match also prompted immense interest in Germany, where many feel that not enough is being done to support female athletes.
"It's a concern of the government as a whole to do more for sport, including women's football," government spokesman Wolfgang Buchner said.
He praised the German team for being such positive role models for young people.
"Perhaps you could say, especially during a summer with so much depressing news, that the wonderful performance of the German women's team at this European Championship has done many people in Germany good," Büchner said.
Supporters of women's football hope this victory will energise the sport the way the US victory in the 1999 World Cup boosted the sport in America. That game ended with Brandi Chastain's knee-sliding, sports bra-revealing celebration after the penalty shootout that sealed the US win over China at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena.
England's Chloe Kelly reprised that scene in the closing minutes of Sunday's final, when she ripped off her jersey to celebrate her tie-breaking goal in the closing minutes of the win over Germany.
Kelly joked about her ecstatic celebrations when she spoke to the crowd, saying: "The shirt's staying on!"
"I'm proud to wear this badge," Kelly told the crowd, referring to the England shield on her team shirt. "But I'm even more proud to share the pitch with such an unbelievable group of players."