Yorkshire Post

Women’s football heading for game-changing moment

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IN CASE it has passed you by this summer, women’s football is a big deal right now. The UEFA Women’s Euro 2017 tournament saw record numbers tuning in to watch the matches on Channel 4.

England may have lost in the semifinals to Holland, who went on to win the tournament, but it drew the biggest-ever UK audience for a women’s football match of four million. The Lionesses, whose squad included former Leeds Beckett students Lucy Bronze and Jade Moore, smashed Scotland 6-0 in their opening game and Jodie Taylor scored the first hat trick by an English footballer since Gary Lineker in 1986. The quarter-final saw their first victory over France in 43 years.

“To see such powerful, athletic and talented women performing on an internatio­nal stage is nothing short of inspiratio­nal,” says Lisa Pearce, chief executive of the London Football Associatio­n, the first woman to hold the position.

It’s an exciting time for women’s football – and not just profession­ally. In the face of dated stereotype­s that sadly still hang around, the likes of captain Steph Houghton, Taylor and Bronze campaign tirelessly to grow the profile of women’s football and drive participat­ion at grassroots level.

But if you were never encouraged to play football as a child, donning a full strip and jumping on a fullsized football pitch for 90 minutes of dribbling, tackling and heading a football might seem like a pretty alien concept.

Running for 90 minutes is always going to be good for anyone’s fitness, but the twists, turns, sprints, kicks and stop-start nature of the game have additional benefits. A 2010 study by Copenhagen University found football “provides a broad spectrum of health and fitness effects that are at least as pronounced as for running, and in some cases even better”.

There are nearly 6,000 women and girls’ football clubs at the moment and the FA are aiming to double that by 2020, and this year there’s a big push to make that happen through recreation­al football opportunit­ies and at club level.

Lisa says: “Women’s football is the fastest growing sport in the UK in terms of participat­ion for a reason and there’s no easier sport that you can pick up and play. Whatever age or ability you are, all you need is a football and a free bit of grass area, even in the privacy of your back garden, and you can get going on the basics of the game.”

Kelly Simmons MBE, the FA’s participat­ion and developmen­t director, says the Lionesses are fully aware of their importance in promoting the sport. “They all want this generation of girls to play and we know we have to break down barriers.

“You very rarely see things you don’t want to see on the pitch – if they’re fouled, they get up straight away. If you were a parent, you’d think that’s a sport that has good values and ‘I’d like my daughter to play it’.”

Kelly says that now 96 per cent of primary school boys play football, compared to 41 per cent of girls. “It is a bit of a postcode lottery,” she says. “We have got girls’ football teams in primary and secondary schools, but it’s not universal.”

Kelly adds: “There are parents who still think football is for boys and we know there are girls who think, ‘I really like football, but it’s for boys’.” There’s been a lot of research into the barriers to girls playing football. But if we don’t get them by eight or nine, then they think, ‘It’s a boys’ sport’ or ‘I don’t want to make a fool of myself ’.

“It’s about giving every girl the opportunit­y to play whatever sport they fall in love with, because we know there are a lot of girls who don’t do anything. And others are desperate for strong, positive role models.”

To find a women’s football club near you, visit www.thefa.com/womensgirl­s-football/get-involved.

 ??  ?? Former Yorkshire student Lucy Bronze is an important member of the England team.
Former Yorkshire student Lucy Bronze is an important member of the England team.

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