The Guardian (USA)

Women’s World Cup players highlight lack of rest before and after tournament

- Suzanne Wrack said.

Two-thirds of players at the Women’s World Cup this year feel they were not at their physical peak during the tournament and a similar number have criticised the lack of recovery time after it, with one describing their quick return to club football as “mentally exhausting”.

In a report by the players’ union, Fifpro, which surveyed 260 players from 26 of the 32 teams that took part in the tournament in Australia and New Zealand, 53% said they did not have enough rest before their opening fixture and 60% said their post-tournament rest was insufficie­nt.

Among the respondent­s, 86% said they were given less than two weeks off before restarting work at their clubs. Fifpro guidelines recommend an offseason break of four weeks and retraining period of six weeks. “I was trying to rest and prepare at the same time, which doesn’t really work,” one player

Concerns have also been raised about the standard of support staff in team delegation­s. Ten per cent of the players said they did not have a pretournam­ent medical examinatio­n and 22% said they did not have an ECG, both of which are part of Fifa’s tournament regulation­s. Meanwhile, 60% of players said they lacked mental health support.

“Anything below 100% when it comes to access to an ECG or undertakin­g a pre-tournament medical is not acceptable,” said Fifpro’s head of strategy and research for women’s football, Dr Alex Culvin. “All players need to complete these important checks before they compete, and the regulation­s need to be applied and adhered to in full.

“Players need an environmen­t that supports their holistic wellbeing – from mental health through to tournament conditions, so they have the platform to be at their competitiv­e best.”

The survey also found that one in three of the players earns less than $30,000 (£23,600) a year from football, and one in five supplement their income with a second job.

 ?? Photograph: Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/Reuters ?? Among 260 players surveyed by Fifpro, 22% said they did not have a pre-World Cup ECG, which is required in Fifa’s tournament regulation­s.
Photograph: Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/Reuters Among 260 players surveyed by Fifpro, 22% said they did not have a pre-World Cup ECG, which is required in Fifa’s tournament regulation­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States