The Guardian (USA)

Karen Carney says review of women’s football will ‘leave no stone unturned’

- Paul MacInnes

Karen Carney says her government­commission­ed review of women’s football will focus on building the game up from its foundation­s, as she announced Ian Wright, Hope Powell and the head of the NFL in Europe, Brett Gosper, as part of an expert panel offering guidance.

Carney is continuing to gather evidence and remains open-minded as to the outcome, saying it would be “naive” not to consider alternativ­e futures for profession­al women’s football, including the possibilit­y of a closed American-style league.

“I want the women’s game to be the best,” the former England internatio­nal said. “I don’t want to put a label on where it could be. A lot of people have told me: ‘Don’t settle. Don’t settle, keep pushing.’ Women’s football is a startup business model; you’ve got to start with the foundation­s otherwise it will all crumble. This is a product – we have to make it the best product possible. We [also] have to do it at the right pace.”

Carney has selected six people to offer specialist support. Alongside Wright, Powell and Gosper there will be input from Lisa O’Keefe, the creator of the This Girl Can campaign, Dan Jones, the creator of Deloitte’s football money lists, and Jane Purdon, the former director of governance at the Premier League and head of the Women in Football Group.

Carney said she had selected the panel for their “experience, expertise and understand­ing” of the game. “Best of all, I know they share my ambition to make the UK one of the best places in the world to play, watch and invest in women’s football.”

Powell, the former Lionesses and Brighton manager, said she was delighted to join the panel. “It gives us the opportunit­y to check, challenge and discuss the progressio­n of women’s football,” she said.

Wright, the former Arsenal and England striker, said he was “ready to go” to ensure “what Karen, Kelly Smith, Hope Powell and the generation of women and girls including our Euros winners went through never happens again. We can build this right from the bottom to the very top.”

A review into the women’s game in England was commission­ed last September after a recommenda­tion in the fan-led review of football governance. The review is to look at three central areas: audience and growth, commercial and broadcasti­ng, and structures and governance.

Carney was reluctant to air definitive thoughts on what she has observed and said she remained open to new ideas. “There’s no stone left unturned in terms of looking at how to set up the women’s game,” she said. “Nothing is being ruled out.”

This includes the question of whether women’s profession­al sides should be affiliated with men’s clubs and the possibilit­y of changing the setup of the women’s profession­al game, moving away from the open model of the Super League and Championsh­ip and into a closed system like the National Women’s Soccer League in the USA. Carney said it would be “naive not to investigat­e different strategies”.

 ?? ?? The future of the Women’s Super League will be investigat­ed. Photograph: Julian Finney/The FA/Getty Images
The future of the Women’s Super League will be investigat­ed. Photograph: Julian Finney/The FA/Getty Images

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