How long ago the final of the Women’s World Cup already seems. This may have something to do with the almighty rumpus that has followed Spain’s 1-0 victory over England.
I confess that it was a bitter experience for me when the Lionesses lost to a superior Spanish team. There was some meagre consolation to be had from the way Mary Earps saved that penalty. Then there was her profanity afterwards, inaudible but nonetheless unmistakable.
For big state occasions in Britain, the news channels employ lipreaders nowadays, to alleviate the nation's boredom. The words that escaped Earps' lips were so obvious, they made the entire lipreading profession redundant.
The only other ways I could find to console myself were a sigh, followed by a phone call to my mum – she's a massive fan, so this did little to cheer either of us up – followed by the slightly forlorn reflection that it was a good day for Spanish feminism.
Oh, my prophetic soul! (Hamlet, Act I, Scene 5) – because barely had the match concluded when the issue of sexist attitudes among certain Spanish men reared its ugly head.
The trouble began almost immediately after the final whistle.
Had my vision not been blurred by tears, I would have witnessed the president of the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) conducting himself in an extraordinary fashion.
Carried away by the euphoria of the moment, Luis Rubiales seemed to forget that the eyes of the world (more than half of them belonging to women) were upon him.
In no particular order, he grabbed his crotch in the vicinity of the Queen of Spain, slung one of the Spanish players over his shoulder in a fireman’s lift, and – most notoriously of all – kissed Jenni Hermoso full on the mouth while apparently grabbing her head with both hands.