Lebanon Daily News

GROWING THE GAME

Diana Flores helps sport make gains across globe

- Ken Maguire

Diana Flores has starred in a Super Bowl halftime ad, signed a deal with Under Armour and even coached girls at a clinic in Morocco.

Mexico’s flag football quarterbac­k did not see this coming.

“For a Mexican girl who fell in love with a very American sport at the age of 8, I never imagined that all of this could even be a possibilit­y for me,” she said.

The possibilit­ies – for Flores and other young women around the world – now include the Los Angeles Games in 2028 since flag football has been added to the Olympic program.

When it comes to gold medals, the women’s side seems better positioned to crack American dominance as NFL fans pencil in Patrick Mahomes and Tyreek Hill for a U.S. men’s dream team in Los Angeles.

Mexico routed the United States 39-6 in the women’s final of the 2022 World Games in Birmingham, Alabama. However, quarterbac­k Vanita Krouch and the Americans avenged that loss with a 2621 win in July over Mexico for gold in the Americas tournament of the Internatio­nal Federation of American Football.

The top teams are turning their focus to the world championsh­ips in Finland next August. The U.S. women are twotime defending champions – the men’s team has won gold in four straight editions – but the competitio­n looks wide open.

“Finland 2024 looks very, very competitiv­e,” said the 26-year-old Flores, who eluded some NFL stars in her Super Bowl halftime ad. “Right now, we’re kind of the ones to beat, I could say, which puts a lot of responsibi­lity on our shoulders, not only performing at the highest level but also to keep growing the game.

“Of course the United States, they are always a fierce competitor, so is Canada, Panama. Those are the leaders here in America.”

In Europe, Britain and its American quarterbac­k Brittany Botterill, whose father is English, defeated defending champion Spain in the continenta­l final in August. The prior two champions had been Denmark in 2017 and Austria in 2015.

Italy finished sixth at the World Games.

“We are getting so much better,” Nausicaa Dell’Orto said.

Dell’Orto, a co-founder of Italy’s first women’s tackle football team more than a decade ago, plays in a flag league that has 35 teams and is “growing exponentia­lly.”

The Olympic designatio­n should allow Italy and other federation­s to fund more training camps. Right now, the players pay for their own travel and carve out time from their jobs or studies to compete at internatio­nal tournament­s.

Mona Stevens, who plays both tackle and flag football for Germany, was a physiother­apist for a men’s team before taking up the sport. Her teammates include nurses and police officers. She wants to see kids starting at a younger age.

“We need more informatio­n about the school programs to bring more people into contact with it,” Stevens said at an NFL event in Frankfurt earlier this year. “There are so many more women coming into the sport and finding the passion of football.”

Flag football getting on the Olympic program is a big victory for the NFL, which has been aggressive­ly pushing into internatio­nal markets in search of more fans and consumers. A star player from outside the U.S. like Flores is an extra bonus for the league – Flores, Dell’Orto and Stevens are all NFL and IFAF global ambassador­s for flag football.

While Germany has become a vital market for the NFL, a teachers’ union in the German state of Hesse raised concerns about protecting children from commercial­ization of heavily branded flag programs.

Still, the game’s overall popularity is growing. Stevens traded jerseys with Mahomes, her idol, when the Kansas City Chiefs came to Frankfurt.

The first Asia-Oceana championsh­ips were held in Malaysia in October. Japan beat Australia for gold on the women’s side backed by tournament MVP Chihiro Iwata, who was dubbed the “Diana Flores of Asia.”

A total of 65 men’s and women’s teams from 37 countries competed in the tournament­s this year, IFAF said, making it the biggest internatio­nal cycle for flag football. The world championsh­ips in Finland will feature 10 teams each in men’s and women’s competitio­n.

Flores, who is studying for a master’s degree, recently finished the season with her university team – they were training for three hours each morning – and is now preparing for a January camp with the national team.

“We are going to see different kinds of matchups now in Finland 2024,” she said. “That’s just very exciting to see how the game is growing and how it is developing new athletes all around the globe. This is just the beginning for the sport.”

“That’s just very exciting to see how the game is growing and how it is developing new athletes all around the globe. This is just the beginning for the sport.”

Diana Flores Quarterbac­k for Mexico’s flag football team

 ?? KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Diana Flores, center, talks with Buffalo Bills receiver Stefon Diggs (14) and Jacksonvil­le Jaguars quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence ahead of the Pro Bowl Games on Feb. 4, 2023.
KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY SPORTS Diana Flores, center, talks with Buffalo Bills receiver Stefon Diggs (14) and Jacksonvil­le Jaguars quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence ahead of the Pro Bowl Games on Feb. 4, 2023.
 ?? GINNETTE RIQUELME/AP ?? U.S. first lady Jill Biden speaks next to Flores, right, a superstar of Mexican flag football known as “Tochito,” at the residence of the U.S ambassador in Mexico City on Jan. 9, 2023.
GINNETTE RIQUELME/AP U.S. first lady Jill Biden speaks next to Flores, right, a superstar of Mexican flag football known as “Tochito,” at the residence of the U.S ambassador in Mexico City on Jan. 9, 2023.

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