New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

World Cup to feature a number of female play-by-play voices

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The World Cup will sound different this year.

Jacqui Oatley will become the first woman playby-play commentato­r for U.S. World Cup telecasts, heading one of Fox's five broadcast teams for the tournament in Qatar that opens Sunday.

Pien Meulenstee­n, Vicki Sparks and Robyn Cowen are among the broadcaste­rs for matches on BBC in Britain.

“Loads of people will have negative comments about women and women commentato­rs and that's because that's just the way that they think. They're not open to hearing anything different,” said Meulenstee­n, the 25-year-old daughter of former Fulham manager and current Australia assistant coach René Meulenstee­n.

“I've loved football since I was a kid. I grew up in a footballin­g house, My dad works in football. My two brothers play football, and we all talk about the same thing, so why not have a female talking about it?” Pien Meulenstee­n said. “And I'm hoping in time, as well, that we'll just be accepted. It won't be seen as like, ‘oh, wow, there's a woman that's doing commentary.' This should be a normal thing to have females talking about football, just as much as men.”

Oatley, 47, worked the 2018 World Cup for Britain's ITV as a studio presenter and sideline reporter. She and Meulenstee­n have become regulars on the Premier League's world feed, heard in the U.S. on NBC's networks.

“I found the American audience in particular are fantastic,” Oatley said. “They seem to be so much more worldly wise and up to date and modern in their thinking and acceptance of women. And I guess that's because you have such a successful national team over the years and that you don't have that history of gender prejudice that we have in the UK and traditiona­lly in parts of Europe and elsewhere in the world, South America, Africa, as well.”

World Cup broadcast booths were long dominated by male voices. That started to change four years ago, when in-game analysts included Aly Wagner on Fox, Viviana Vila on Telemundo, Sparks on BBC and Claudia Neumann on Germany's ZDF.

FIFA is using color commentato­rs for the first time on its English-language world feed. Its six crews include San Diego Wave coach Casey Stoney and Lucy Ward, both former England players.

Oatley will be paired on Fox with former England defender Warren Barton starting with Denmark's match against Tunisia on Tuesday.

“They bring knowledge and expertise,” said 77year-old Martin Tyler, about to broadcast his 12th World Cup. “They only get the work because they're very good. It's very important to have the connection with the audience, and they bring their own connection. The most important thing is how good they are.”

Five of ESPN's six playby-play announcers in 2014 were British but Fox used just one among six in 2018, Derek Rae. This time, three of five are British, with Rae joined by Oatley and Ian Darke.

“We want the best person available regardless of their gender, regardless of their nationalit­y. Jackie has operated the highest level in the Premier League in England. You don't have to convince anybody of her qualificat­ions,” said David Neal, executive producer of Fox's World Cup coverage. “She captures the emotion of the moment. Some playby-play people are so good and so focused on the technical aspect of what they're calling that they don't pay enough attention to what's going on in the building.”

Oatley grew up in Wolverhamp­ton listening to Barry Davies, Brian Moore and John Motson. She attended the University of Leeds and was a midfielder for Chiswick's women's team when she dislocated her left knee and ruptured ligaments when trying to keep a ball in play. She was on crutches for 10 months.

Around Christmas in 2001, she decided her job as an accounts manager for an intellectu­al property company was unfulfilli­ng. She searched the Internet for how to get into broadcasti­ng, took a one night-aweek job doing sports report for hospital radio and enrolled in evening courses in radio production and print journalism. She gave up her day job and her apartment and stayed with friends while learning her new trade and in September 2002 enrolled in a postgradua­te journalism program at Sheffield Hallam University. Oatley wrote to local BBC radio stations and when visiting Leeds made contact with the radio sports editor, Derm Tanner

“I'm a mature student in a hurry,” she told him.

She started freelancin­g, giving match reports on non-league matches and in 2003 broadcast her first game for BBC Radio Leeds, between Wakefield & Emley and Worksop Town in the seventh tier Northern Premier League.

Charles Runcie hired her for BBC Radio 5 Live, first for women's matches and then the 2005 Women's European Championsh­ip. On April 21, 2007, she became the first woman to broadcast BBC One television's “Match of the Day,” between Fulham and Blackburn.

 ?? Kirsty Wiggleswor­th / Associated Press ?? Jacqui Oatley of Britain's Sky Sports will become the first woman play-by-play commentato­r for U.S. World Cup telecasts, heading one of Fox's five broadcast teams for the tournament in Qatar that opens Sunday.
Kirsty Wiggleswor­th / Associated Press Jacqui Oatley of Britain's Sky Sports will become the first woman play-by-play commentato­r for U.S. World Cup telecasts, heading one of Fox's five broadcast teams for the tournament in Qatar that opens Sunday.

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