Euro 2022 began with organizers defending the choice of small venues, but 25 days later a record European Championship attendance of 87,192 at Wembley for the final witnessed England at last win a major international tournament.
The Lionesses' legacy could change the face of the women's game in England for future generations.
A record television audience for a women's football match in the U.K. of 17.4 million tuned in to watch Sunday's tense 2-1 victory in extra time over Germany, as Chloe Kelly scored the winner.
Sarina Wiegman's squad changed perceptions on top of winning the hearts of the host nation.
An Ipsos poll published Monday found that 44% of the British public – and 64% of football fans – said they are more interested in watching women's football following Euro 2022.
England's women now have a platform their predecessors could only dream of and they used it to push the message of equality off the pitch.
"In most workplaces across the world, women still have a few more battles to face," said captain Leah Williamson.
"For every change of judgment or perception or opening the eyes of somebody who views women as somebody with the potential to be equal to her male counterpart, I think that makes change in society.
"That's a powerful message that we have the power to send, in a typically male-dominated environment."
Bridging the gap
There remains a huge income gap for women's football to close on the men's game.
Prize money of 16 million euros ($17 million) for the 16 competing teams at Euro 2022 pales in comparison with the 331 million euros handed out to the 24 nations at the men's Euro 2020 last year.
UEFA defended that gulf by saying it would make a "significant loss" in running the tournament due to a five-fold increase in spending on infrastructure and facilities.
But a tournament of record crowds – with total attendance more than doubled from Euro 2017 in the Netherlands – and TV audiences will ripple around the rest of the continent.
"We expected a lot but to be honest we didn't expect so much," UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin said at a women's football forum Sunday.
"The numbers are amazing, but it's not only the numbers that are important. The matches are great and the technical skills have been unbelievable.
"Maybe some people – sponsors, broadcasters and everyone else – should start thinking that it's worth investing in women's football."
World Cup to come
With less than a year to the start of the 2023 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand, the Euro has revived some of the momentum lost for the women's game during the coronavirus pandemic.
The 2019 World Cup in France was also seen as a launching pad for the popularity of the women's game. However, just a year later, it was often treated as an afterthought as associations, clubs and leagues scrambled to get the men's game back up and running during lockdowns.
Euro 2022 itself was supposed to take place in 2021 but was moved back to accommodate a 12-month delay to the men's Euro 2020.
England's women did not play a match for nearly a year between March 2020 and February 2021.
Such a scenario is now unthinkable with a new generation of girls idolizing the likes of Beth Mead, Alessia Russo and Ella Toone just as much as Harry Kane or Raheem Sterling.
"The moral purpose of what we have tried to do here in England is just as important as the business purpose of winning teams," said the English Football Association's (FA) director of women's football, Sue Campbell.
"We think we can improve the lives of girls and women in society by the way we deliver football in the community and on the international stage."
Even Queen Elizabeth II joined in the congratulations to label the Lionesses "an inspiration for girls and women today, and for future generations".
The last time England won a major tournament, at the 1966 World Cup, women's football was still banned by the FA.
Now its time to thrive has come.