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Published 20:33 9 Jun 2019 BST
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It did not.
This is partly because the pay equity was not a request by the women's team.
After the humiliation in the Netherlands, the Norwegian Players' Association - which represents all Norwegian football players - asked the NFF to increase the marketing budget for the women's team.
Instead of doing this, the NFF decided to cut male players' pay by a small amount, and double the pay for women. It was seen by some as a cynical ploy to create the facade of equality - an initiative which failed to address the lack of attention to care and detail that the NFF pays to the women's team, a side which is historically much more successful than their male compatriots.
"The decision isn’t just a consequence of the Euros,” said Hegerberg in her initial statement on her decision. "It’s based on my experiences with the national team over a long period of time."
"I always feel that I have been a worse player when I have gone home from the [national team] selection and it should not be so," she added, in a damning indictment on the structural and organisational failings of the NFF.
In a February interview with Norwegian football magazine Josimar, which was published by the outlet once again this month, she further explained her stance: "We weren’t taken seriously as a women’s national team. There was no culture for training with quality or wanting to get better."
At this stage, the impasse between both parties is unlikely to change any time soon.
After Hegerberg made her decision publicly, the NFF stated that he had never aired her grievances to them prior to her retirement and that, if she had, they would have been willing to change things.
She vehemently disagreed, claiming that she had, on numerous occasions, raised concerns over the level of commitment the federation shows the women's team, and the women's game in general.
After her most recent highlight of a career full of them - the Champions League final win - Hegerberg draped herself in the Norway flag as she celebrated with teammates.
"I miss playing for my country," she said, in a comment that may have brought about renewed hope were it not for the comment that immediately followed it. "But not for my federation."Quiz: Can you guess these iconic 2000’s World Cup players
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