The Herald on Sunday

Ranks set to be bolstered for SPFL subsidiary model

- ALAN CAMPBELL

AS outlined here last Sunday, the 10 SWPL 1 clubs have opted not to affiliate to Scottish Women’s Football next season. They will instead switch to a subsidiary model run by the SPFL.

Less predictabl­y, they will be joined by all seven teams in SWPL 2 and potentiall­y three more from the Championsh­ip. The tentative proposal for 2022-23 is to have a top league of 12 teams and an eight-team second tier.

Should that prove to be the case, there would be no relegation from SWPL1 at the end of this season, and the top two in SWPL2 will be promoted. Three Championsh­ip teams would be required to join the new step up under this scenario – although, at this very early stage, none of the above is set in stone.

The new era for elite women’s football was decided over two meetings on Tuesday evening. The first was attended by the 17 clubs, the SWF board and chief executive Aileen Campbell, SPFL chief executive Neil Doncaster, and the Scottish FA head of girls’ and women’s football, Fiona McIntyre.

The second meeting was for the clubs alone, with all 17 agreeing, albeit at different levels of conviction, that their future lay with the SPFL model.

There has been no announceme­nt as yet because some of the clubs had to get ratificati­on from their main boards. All 17 had to also formally write to the SWF confirming they will not be affiliatin­g next season, and similarly inform the SPFL of their intentions. Public confirmati­on of the switch is, however, expected within the next 48 hours. It is a momentous decision, and one which will leave the SWF with only the Scottish Cup of the three elite competitio­ns to run.

The fourth round is being played today, with Celtic v Rangers the headline tie.

Unpalatabl­e though the recent developmen­ts must be for the SWF, the organisati­on has been aware since last summer that one of the key aims of the SFA’s women’s strategy was the requiremen­t to implement an improved governance model for the elite competitio­ns by 2022-23.

Ultimately it was the SPFL who were more proactive in offering proposals which could elevate the top end of the game to a new profession­al level.

IT is now 25 days short of two years since Scotland celebrated winning the Pinatar Cup. They won all three games, including the against higher-ranked Iceland.

At that point the bitter disappoint­ment of failing to qualify for the knock-out stages of the World Cup, which would have been a first for any Scottish senior side, was starting to recede. The team were on a five-game winning run but, because of the pandemic, it was a further seven months before there was the opportunit­y to play again.

The run stretched to six with a 3-0 Euro qualifying win against Albania at Tynecastle, but it was not a good performanc­e and after that it went rapidly downhill. The English-based players, in particular, will feel the pain of failing to qualify – or even coming close – when the Euros get underway on July 6 with the hosts playing Austria at Old Trafford.

Nor, it has to be said, has there been much conviction about the opening 2023 World Cup qualifiers. Neverthele­ss, Scotland sit comfortabl­y second in Group B with the key match for the play-offs in Ukraine on April 7, assuming the political situation does not deteriorat­e further.

Scotland play Wales at the Pinatar Arena on their return to Murcia on Wednesday, but will almost certainly be without Erin Cuthbert. The Chelsea midfielder underwent a scan yesterday after going off with what looked like a bad hamstring injury in Friday night’s 0-0 draw with Arsenal.

Pedro Martinez Losa is already without the injured Lisa Evans, Rachael Boyle and Rachel McLauchlan, while Celtic goalkeeper Chloe Logan is another injury doubt.

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