Sunderland Echo

Call to level the playing field

UNI ACADEMIC SAYS FA SHOULD LIFT BAN ON MEN AND WOMEN PLAYING IN SAME FOOTBALL TEAM

- By Kevin Clark kevin.clark@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @kevinclark­jp

Full time should be called on the FA’s ban on men and women playing in the same football team, says a University of Sunderland sports expert.

Dr Paul Davis, a Senior Lecturer in the Sociology of Sport at the University, believes the ban is denying talented female footballer­s ‘accesstoth­ehighestco­mpetitive opportunit­ies available’.

Men and women playing in the same team is currently banned amid safety concerns. It is also argued overturnin­g the ban could impact on the growing popularity of the women’s game.

But in his paper ‘Challengin­g Sex Segregatio­n: A Philosophi­cal Evaluation of the Football Associatio­n’s Rules on Mixed Football’, Dr Davis says: “It is ‘generally’ true that in sports where features such as height, weight and body mass are heavily performanc­e relevant, the best men will excel over the best women.

“This is at least partly because ‘generally’ men have an advantage over women in terms of their aerobic capacity, explosive and maximum strength and so forth. But this argument does not provide grounds for the FA’s complete ban.”

And he argues that it is often difference­s in the height, strength and stamina of players which makes the game interestin­g, so there is no reason to exclude mixed teams – and in some cases female players can be “bigger and stronger” than their male counterpar­ts.

“Body size is not of singular importance in football, demonstrat­ed by the success of players such as Messi, Maradona, Shaun WrightPhil­ips and Jermaine Defoe,” said Dr Davis

“Since most of the game is played on the ground, smaller players of agility, control, touch, awareness or speed can excel.”

He says the FA is happy to ignore the physical risks which result from “physically mismatched” male players – lighter players are never likely to be separated from their heavier counterpar­ts – only to go on and insist on the separation of the sexes as necessary to create safe competitio­n.

The FA first imposed a blanket ban on mixed sex competitio­ns in England in 1902. In 1991 the footballin­g body gave in to mounting pressure and allowed mixed competitiv­e matches for children under the age of 11. In 2011 this age range was extended to under 13, marking the beginning of a series of incrementa­l extensions from under 11 to under 16 in just four years.

 ??  ?? Dr Paul Davis, pictured inset.
Dr Paul Davis, pictured inset.

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