{"id":145117,"date":"2025-07-23T09:45:00","date_gmt":"2025-07-23T07:45:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/weisetech.dev\/fc-barcelona-noticias\/en\/spain-vs-germany-in-the-semis-of-the-women-euro-cup_313674_102\/"},"modified":"2026-04-16T09:34:19","modified_gmt":"2026-04-16T07:34:19","slug":"spain-vs-germany-in-the-semis-of-the-women-euro-cup_313674_102","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.fcbarcelonanoticias.com\/en\/womens-football\/spain-vs-germany-in-the-semis-of-the-women-euro-cup_313674_102.html","title":{"rendered":"Spain Faces Germany in the Semifinal of the Women’s Euro Cup"},"content":{"rendered":"

Spain vs. Germany: La Roja seeks to make history in the Women’s Euro Cup this Wednesday, at 9:00 PM, on La 1 and RTVE Play<\/h2> \r\n
\r\n \r\n \r\n Calendar of FC Barcelona <\/a>\r\n<\/div>

Spain wants to break the German wall and make history in the Women’s Euro Cup<\/a><\/strong>. History often repeats itself. But sometimes, it is also rewritten. And that is precisely what the Spanish women’s national football team intends to do this Wednesday (9:00 PM, on La 1 and RTVE Play)<\/strong>: rewrite a narrative in which Germany has always held the pen and Spain, the final stop.<\/p>

They have crossed paths seven times in official competitions, and the same stubborn statistic has survived seven times: zero Spanish victories<\/strong>. Four defeats, three draws, and an open wound that has not yet fully healed.<\/p>

But if there is one thing this Spain has, it is that it does not believe in curses. Nor in ghosts, nor in fatalism. It believes in the ball, in the block, in the idea. It believes in Alexia Putellas and in the lucid calm of Montse Tom\u00e9<\/strong>. It believes that history, although it weighs like a slab, can also be blown to pieces like an old gate in the face of a revolution.<\/p>

Germany vs Spain: A challenge with a taste of revenge<\/strong><\/h2>

The match against Germany in the semifinals of the 2025 Euro Cup<\/strong> is not just a game. It is an outstanding issue. A kind of emotional roller coaster whose journey always ends with the Germans celebrating at the top while Spain wonders what went wrong. But this time there is a different air. A turning point.<\/p>

“We love pushing ourselves to the limit,” said Alexia Putellas<\/strong><\/em>, with that gesture of someone who knows what it feels like to lose and also what it feels like to resist. She was referring to the missed penalties against Switzerland, but she could well be talking about years of struggle, of evolution, of a women’s football that has gone from the shadows to the center of the stage.<\/p>

Montse Tom\u00e9<\/strong><\/em>, for her part, was serene but determined: “This is the tournament where we are feeling most comfortable”<\/strong><\/em>. A simple phrase, yes, but with the aroma of a declaration of intent. Like someone saying “we are ready” without needing to raise their voice.<\/p>

An unequal battle in names, not in spirit<\/strong><\/p>